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Posted (edited)

I would also watch out for Ostapenko, who looked really strong beating Gauff. She and Rybakina will be an interesting matchup today, even as a visual contrast (the fire hydrant versus the telephone pole).

Edited by Charlie
Posted
17 hours ago, Charlie said:

I would also watch out for Ostapenko, who looked really strong beating Gauff. She and Rybakina will be an interesting matchup today, even as a visual contrast (the fire hydrant versus the telephone pole).

The telephone pole beat the fire hydrant pretty easily.  Do my eyes deceive?  I could swear that Ostapenko, who appears to have gained 20 (30?) pounds since winning Roland Garros, is faster than the beanpole Rybakina.  Either you were blessed with fast-twitch muscles, or you weren't. 

Novak absolutely crushed De Miñaur, allowing the Aussie only 5 games.  De Miñaur has no chance against Novak because the two play a very similar style, except that Novak does everything (tons) better.  Much to my relief, Novak commented post-match that he didn't feel the hamstring at all while playing *knockwood*

Bummer!  Jessica Pegula lost to Vika Azerenka in the QF.  Azarenka drives me crazy with that shriek (orgasm? stabbing?) she makes with every shot.  Pegula has improved a ton, but alas, back to the grindstone.

I'm curious to see how Ben Shelton fares in his QF.  His game looks huge (140mph serve, big forehand, great movement), but he hasn't faced a seeded player yet.  How will he fare against stiffer competition?  To think, he was ranked #569 this time last year and is already up to #43 in the live rankings.  The guy's clinched Newcomer of the Year, and it's not even February yet.

Posted

Pegula's career seems to rise and fall with the fortunes of the Buffalo Bills. They lost on Sunday.

Azarenka's last major title came at the Aussie Open ten years ago; it must be some kind of record if she does it again.

Posted (edited)
8 hours ago, Charlie said:

Pegula's career seems to rise and fall with the fortunes of the Buffalo Bills. They lost on Sunday.

Azarenka's last major title came at the Aussie Open ten years ago; it must be some kind of record if she does it again.

Yeah, stinks for Pegula. She is undefeated in the round of 16 at majors but has never won a quarterfinal.

Edited by BuffaloKyle
Posted
On 1/24/2023 at 9:14 AM, Charlie said:

Azarenka's last major title came at the Aussie Open ten years ago; it must be some kind of record if she does it again.

When I googled "longest time between Grand Slam titles," almost all the results were the gap between a player's first Slam title and their last, for example, the 17 years 5 months between Serena's 1999 US Open and 2017 Australian Open titles.  For the longest dry spell between 2 Slams, a Reddit thread came up with Virginia Wade and Arthur Ashe.  Wade won the 1972 AO and didnt win another Slam until 1977 Wimbledon.  Ashe won the 1970 Australian, then 1975 Wimbledon.  Wade's dry spell is an eensy bit longer because the 1970 Aussie was held a couple of weeks earlier than the 1972 tournament.

Not sure that a Reddit thread is the ultimate authority on these matters, but I can't think of a longer drought between a player's Slams.  If Azerenka pulls this off, it will indeed be a heckuva feat.

Posted

Tommy Paul ended Ben Shelton's Cinderella run in the quarterfinals.  While Shelton's run was impressive, it was tough to gauge his true level because he hadn't faced a top 50 player.  Except for a hiccup in the 3rd set, Paul handled Shelton comfortably.  Nonetheless, Shelton, still wet behind the ears on the ATP tour, has a blazingly bright future. 

I'm so glad to see Tommy Paul finally living up to his potential.  Of the American foursome who came up together in the juniors (Fritz, Opelka, Paul, Tiafoe), many tennis insiders pointed to Paul as the most talented., even though he was often the lowest ranked of the four since they turned pro (2015).  Paul admits that he was immature in his early pro years, unwilling to work hard because success came easy for him in the juniors (Roland Garros boys singles winner, US Open boys singles finalist).  In 2020 he hooked up with coach Brad Stine, a stern taskmaster, and is now reaping the rewards.  Honestly, Novak will probably bulldoze him in their semi, but Paul's risen to a career-high ranking of #18 and can definitely get into the top 10 if he maintains the work ethic.

I haven't watched the Novak-Rublev match yet, but it looks like Novak crushed Rublev almost as bad as he did to De Miñaur.  De Miñaur won only 5 games off Novak, Rublev won 7, maybe Paul can get 9?  Even though Khachanov and Tsitsipas both improved a ton over the off-season, Khachanov has lost 7 straight matches to Novak (1-8 head to head) while Tsitsipas has lost 9 straight (2-10 h2h).  Unless that hamstring flares up, Novak looks destined for a 10th AO.

Posted (edited)
3 hours ago, BSR said:

When I googled "longest time between Grand Slam titles," almost all the results were the gap between a player's first Slam title and their last, for example, the 17 years 5 months between Serena's 1999 US Open and 2017 Australian Open titles.  For the longest dry spell between 2 Slams, a Reddit thread came up with Virginia Wade and Arthur Ashe.  Wade won the 1972 AO and didnt win another Slam until 1977 Wimbledon.  Ashe won the 1970 Australian, then 1975 Wimbledon.  Wade's dry spell is an eensy bit longer because the 1970 Aussie was held a couple of weeks earlier than the 1972 tournament.

Not sure that a Reddit thread is the ultimate authority on these matters, but I can't think of a longer drought between a player's Slams.  If Azerenka pulls this off, it will indeed be a heckuva feat.

These kinds of records are confusing partly because before the "Open era" began in 1968, the national championships (the "slams") were usually limited to amateurs, so players who started winning as amateurs and then turned pro were usually banned from competing. For example, Ken Rosewall won the US as an amateur in 1956, but turned pro the next year and couldn't play in the tournament again until 1968; he won it again in 1970 as a pro.

Edited by Charlie
Posted

Congratulations, Aryna Sabalenka!  She always had the big game to win a Slam but never the nerve.  I kept expecting her to crack, and almost did in that first set, but for the first time in her career she stayed strong mentally until the end.  She even kept it together after double-faulting on her first match point.  The old Aryna might have collapsed after DFing on such a critical point, but Aryna 2.0 took a deep breath, regrouped, and 3 championship points later, the trophy was hers.

Congratulations as well to Rinky Hijikata and Jason Kubler for winning the men's doubles.  Wow, hard to believe a wild card pair won a Grand Slam doubles title.  Maybe even harder to believe that a couple of 5'10"* guys won a Grand Slam doubles title.  I doubt we'll ever see it again.  Amazing too that an Aussie pair won the dubs 2 years in a row.

* Hijikata is fudging.  He's 5'9" on a good day.

Posted (edited)

I wasn't about to start watching the men's final live at 12:30am PST; I expected to watch the replay today, so I didn't watch or listen to any news when I woke up this morning.  When I started playing tennis at 7:45 this morning, I told the other three doubles players that if they knew what happened in the match, please don't tell me. Wouldn't you know that at 8am I heard someone on the next court blab out that Djokovic won in straight sets.

At least I was able to watch the Eagles beat the 49ers in live play just now.

Edited by Charlie
Posted

What hamstring?  Once you saw Novak moving as he always does, you knew Tsitsipas was going to have to come up with something special, a combination of serving great plus bullying Novak around with his forehand.  Stefanos did serve well (broken only twice), but made way too many unforced errors off his forehand (25).  In contrast, Novak made only 3 forehand UEs.  

Coach Goran's big project for the off-season was to beef up Novak's forehand, and it looks like he/they succeeded.  Novak's forehand last season averaged ~76 mph, but in the AO final, he averaged ~83 mph.  Tsitsipas has one of the biggest forehands on the tour, yet in the final his average forehand speed was actually slightly slower than Novak's.  Tsitsipas's average forehand speed for Sets 1/2/3 was 134/131/128 kph (134kph = 83.26mph) whereas Novak's forehand averaged 133/134/134 kph.  Great improvement for Novak, bad news for the rest of the tour.

Posted
3 hours ago, BSR said:

Tsitsipas's average forehand speed for Sets 1/2/3 was 134/131/128 kph (134kph = 83.26mph) whereas Novak's forehand averaged 133/134/134 kph.

An aside on this that you become familiar with when you've lived through a transition from one measuring system to another. 'Hard' and 'soft' conversions are different and you adapt over time. A 12oz can doesn't become a 340.19g can, it becomes 340g or perhaps 350g. Under consumer law, the mass doesn't need to be precise but it can't be less than what it says on the can. As they re-jig manufacturing, canners will adjust the size to a 'logical' i.e. rounded number, likely ending in 0 or 5g.

Consumer laws obviously aren't relevant but in the case of tennis speed radars 134km/h doesn't mean 134,000 m/h, it means 134km +/- 499m. 'About 83 mph' is about as precise a measurement as can be offered, but it's still interesting to see the precise conversion. The same thing applies in reverse at tournaments where the on-court speeds are in mph. The conversion to km/h is imprecise, and even less precise than conversions the other way because whole number mph speeds are less precise than whole number km/h ones. (And yes, technically I should have said 'velocity' not speed.)

Not saying you shouldn't convert to n decimal places, you live after all in a miles kind of place.

Posted
4 hours ago, mike carey said:

An aside on this that you become familiar with when you've lived through a transition from one measuring system to another. 'Hard' and 'soft' conversions are different and you adapt over time. A 12oz can doesn't become a 340.19g can, it becomes 340g or perhaps 350g. Under consumer law, the mass doesn't need to be precise but it can't be less than what it says on the can. As they re-jig manufacturing, canners will adjust the size to a 'logical' i.e. rounded number, likely ending in 0 or 5g.

Consumer laws obviously aren't relevant but in the case of tennis speed radars 134km/h doesn't mean 134,000 m/h, it means 134km +/- 499m. 'About 83 mph' is about as precise a measurement as can be offered, but it's still interesting to see the precise conversion. The same thing applies in reverse at tournaments where the on-court speeds are in mph. The conversion to km/h is imprecise, and even less precise than conversions the other way because whole number mph speeds are less precise than whole number km/h ones. (And yes, technically I should have said 'velocity' not speed.)

Not saying you shouldn't convert to n decimal places, you live after all in a miles kind of place.

I've watched enough tennis to get used to serve speeds in kph, but forehands in kph I can't wrap my head around.  I know that a 200kph serve is a pretty fast serve, 210kph is really big, and 220kph is monster.  But since a 134kph forehand meant nothing to me, I had to do the conversion.

If your forehand averages 75mph (Novak's average before this year), that's only slightly above average on tour.  85mph might not sound like much of a difference, but veeeeeery few guys hit their forehand that big -- Basilashvili, Theim pre-injury, del Potro pre-retirement.  Post-2022 US Open, Novak was already the best player in the world.  If he's added another 8mph on his forehand, that's downright scary.

I do wonder if Novak will continue to hit his forehand that big all the time or if he just mashed the accelerator because of the circumstances (fast court, low bounce, Tsitsipas's weak backhand). 

PS:  I found after posting about Hijikata & Kubler that 2022 men's dubs champions Kokkinakis & Kyrgios were also wild cards.  For wild cards to win a Slam once is a crazy fluke.  The odds that it happens 2 years in a row must be lottery-esque.

  • 1 year later...
Posted
On 1/31/2023 at 1:54 AM, BSR said:

veeeeeery few guys hit their forehand that big -- Basilashvili, Theim pre-injury, del Potro pre-retirement. 

Former world tennis No. 3 Juan Martin del Potro has detailed the heartbreaking toll injuries are taking on his day-to-day life.

The 36-year-old played his last professional match in February 2022 after years of battling to overcome debilitating knee injuries.

The Argentine ace fractured his right kneecap during the 2018 Shanghai Masters and while he made a successful return, he injured his knee again during the 2019 Queen’s Club Championships after slipping on the grass.

The 2009 US Open champion took to social media to share the “never-ending” nightmare he’s forced to endure daily after undergoing eight surgeries.

“Nobody knew this, but the day after I played my last match against [Federico] Delbonis (in 2022), I took a flight to Switzerland and I had my fifth knee surgery,” Del Potro said.

“Since that, I never made my surgeries public again as I found some peace in the press conference before that match against Federico, telling it would probably be my last match. People stopped asking me constantly when I would comeback and play again. I did all this process secretly and if it worked I would announce that I would come back.

“I was in Switzerland for two months in a village close to Basel trying to rehabilitate and it didn’t work. After two-and-a-half months, I had my sixth surgery. I went back to the USA. More rehab, over 100 injections everywhere. Infiltrations … daily suffering. It’s been my life since that match vs. Federico.

“When I had my first surgery in June (2019), the doctor told me I would play in three months. I even signed in for three indoor tournaments at the end of the year.

“After that first surgery until today, I’ve never been able to go up a set of stairs without pain. It hurts many times when I try to sleep, when I turn on my side, or when I wake up because I get these sharp pains. It’s like a never-ending nightmare that I’m trying daily to find solutions and alternatives for, but I can’t find them.

“It all started with that first surgery … every time I think about it, it stirs up so much bad emotion; it makes me really angry, very frustrated, but I can’t change it. My daily life isn’t what I would like it to be. I can’t play (soccer), I can’t play Padel. It’s terrible. They took me the chance to do what I loved the most, which was to play tennis.

“It’s very tough. There are moments where I have no more strength. I’m not indestructible. I have good things, bad things, but most of the times I have to fake it and put a good face, but many times I feel terrible.

“Every day when I wake up I have to take six or seven pills. Gastric protectors, anti-inflammatories, one for anxiety. Then the pills made me gain weight so they told me to stop eating some things.

“One thing are the (obstacles) that can appear in your way, like the injuries that can affect all athletes, but the other thing is the emotional pain. I felt so powerful when facing those obstacles, but after all I understood that I’m not that strong. That knee beat me.

“I had eight surgeries, with doctors all around the world. Every time they gave me the anesthetic, I hoped that the problem would be solved and after two to three months, I was always calling the doctors to tell them that the surgery didn’t work.

“There are doctors that tell me that I can put a prosthesis so I can regain some life quality. But others tell my that I’m too young for a prosthesis. They tell me to wait until I’m 50.

“But since I was 31, I can’t run, I can’t climb stairs, can’t kick a ball, never played tennis again. I need to wait 15 years more of this? It’s terrible. I hope this will finish someday, because I want to live my life without pain.”

Del Potro’s heartbreaking reveal quickly spread across the internet.

Journalist Jose Morgado wrote on X: “Juan Martin del Potro on Instagram telling the story of how his career had to end way earlier than he deserved. Strong and emotional. Tough not to cry.”

Tennis TV’s Bastien Fachan wrote: “Juan Martin del Potro once had the world on a string. He’d just become the first man to beat (Federer and Nadal) in the same Grand Slam. He was a first-time champion at 20. His tennis dreams long gone, he now wakes up in pain every day and is considering prosthesis surgery. Man, how unfair.”

Del Potro is now preparing to return to the court to take on friend and former rival Novak Djokovic in a farewell exhibition match in Buenos Aires on Dec. 1.

“I started my diet, I’m losing weight, I’m training. I want to arrive at that match in the best shape possible. It’s a match to say goodbye,” he said.

“Djokovic was very generous in accepting my invitation. I want to give him all the love possible. If at least for one, two or three hours I can be at peace and happy on a tennis court, it will be beautiful.”

Juan Martin Del Potro sitting in a chair, discussing his health struggles in an Instagram video

Posted
7 hours ago, samhexum said:

Former world tennis No. 3 Juan Martin del Potro has detailed the heartbreaking toll injuries are taking on his day-to-day life.

The 36-year-old played his last professional match in February 2022 after years of battling to overcome debilitating knee injuries.

The Argentine ace fractured his right kneecap during the 2018 Shanghai Masters and while he made a successful return, he injured his knee again during the 2019 Queen’s Club Championships after slipping on the grass.

The 2009 US Open champion took to social media to share the “never-ending” nightmare he’s forced to endure daily after undergoing eight surgeries.

“Nobody knew this, but the day after I played my last match against [Federico] Delbonis (in 2022), I took a flight to Switzerland and I had my fifth knee surgery,” Del Potro said.

“Since that, I never made my surgeries public again as I found some peace in the press conference before that match against Federico, telling it would probably be my last match. People stopped asking me constantly when I would comeback and play again. I did all this process secretly and if it worked I would announce that I would come back.

“I was in Switzerland for two months in a village close to Basel trying to rehabilitate and it didn’t work. After two-and-a-half months, I had my sixth surgery. I went back to the USA. More rehab, over 100 injections everywhere. Infiltrations … daily suffering. It’s been my life since that match vs. Federico.

“When I had my first surgery in June (2019), the doctor told me I would play in three months. I even signed in for three indoor tournaments at the end of the year.

“After that first surgery until today, I’ve never been able to go up a set of stairs without pain. It hurts many times when I try to sleep, when I turn on my side, or when I wake up because I get these sharp pains. It’s like a never-ending nightmare that I’m trying daily to find solutions and alternatives for, but I can’t find them.

“It all started with that first surgery … every time I think about it, it stirs up so much bad emotion; it makes me really angry, very frustrated, but I can’t change it. My daily life isn’t what I would like it to be. I can’t play (soccer), I can’t play Padel. It’s terrible. They took me the chance to do what I loved the most, which was to play tennis.

“It’s very tough. There are moments where I have no more strength. I’m not indestructible. I have good things, bad things, but most of the times I have to fake it and put a good face, but many times I feel terrible.

“Every day when I wake up I have to take six or seven pills. Gastric protectors, anti-inflammatories, one for anxiety. Then the pills made me gain weight so they told me to stop eating some things.

“One thing are the (obstacles) that can appear in your way, like the injuries that can affect all athletes, but the other thing is the emotional pain. I felt so powerful when facing those obstacles, but after all I understood that I’m not that strong. That knee beat me.

“I had eight surgeries, with doctors all around the world. Every time they gave me the anesthetic, I hoped that the problem would be solved and after two to three months, I was always calling the doctors to tell them that the surgery didn’t work.

“There are doctors that tell me that I can put a prosthesis so I can regain some life quality. But others tell my that I’m too young for a prosthesis. They tell me to wait until I’m 50.

“But since I was 31, I can’t run, I can’t climb stairs, can’t kick a ball, never played tennis again. I need to wait 15 years more of this? It’s terrible. I hope this will finish someday, because I want to live my life without pain.”

Del Potro’s heartbreaking reveal quickly spread across the internet.

Journalist Jose Morgado wrote on X: “Juan Martin del Potro on Instagram telling the story of how his career had to end way earlier than he deserved. Strong and emotional. Tough not to cry.”

Tennis TV’s Bastien Fachan wrote: “Juan Martin del Potro once had the world on a string. He’d just become the first man to beat (Federer and Nadal) in the same Grand Slam. He was a first-time champion at 20. His tennis dreams long gone, he now wakes up in pain every day and is considering prosthesis surgery. Man, how unfair.”

Del Potro is now preparing to return to the court to take on friend and former rival Novak Djokovic in a farewell exhibition match in Buenos Aires on Dec. 1.

“I started my diet, I’m losing weight, I’m training. I want to arrive at that match in the best shape possible. It’s a match to say goodbye,” he said.

“Djokovic was very generous in accepting my invitation. I want to give him all the love possible. If at least for one, two or three hours I can be at peace and happy on a tennis court, it will be beautiful.”

Juan Martin Del Potro sitting in a chair, discussing his health struggles in an Instagram video

I posted this in another thread, but it bears repeating here.  When del Potro's father died in 2021, besides dealing with the grief, Juan Martin got a rude shock:  he was flat broke.  JMDP, who had earned almost $26 million in prize money and many $millions more in endorsements, had his father manage all his money ... uh oh.

The day after his father's death, poor (literally) Juan Martin started getting getting phone calls from creditors demanding their money.  The $millions were gone, and delPo was actually in the red!

If managed properly, JMDP's net worth should have been around $30 million.  Yes, he dealt with almost innumerable injuries during his career, which is disappointing as hell, but $30 million buys a lot of solace.  Imagine the shock of finding out he was dead broke.  Now to hear that his last injury is far worse than anyone ever expected, holy sh!t, the guy just can't catch a break.

It warms my heart to hear that Novak is flying all the way to Buenos Aires to help out his friend.  Heckuva long way from Belgrade to BA.

Back on topic, Novak made big headlines when he announced that he has hired none other than 3-time Slam champ and 2-time Olympic gold medalist Andy Murray as his coach.  They will work together in the off-season until the Australian Open, perhaps longer if things work out.  I hear that several top players, both men and women, asked Sir Andy to be their coach, but Novak managed to snag him in the end.

Posted

Had no idea about JMDP's father and the $$$ - thanks for the info!

I love Delpo! Hope there are better times ahead for him.

I'm nervous about Djokurray - hopefully it will be mutually beneficial (and doesn't end badly).

  • 1 month later...
Posted (edited)

Madison Keys won the 2025 women's singles title, her first Grand Slam.   She's been around, playing good tennis, for a long time.  Nice to see her reach this level at the Australian open, especially against such a top player, Aryna Sabalenka.  Loved her podium speech.

image.thumb.jpeg.c5dec5981fd963599d9993075d556d3b.jpeg

Edited by TonyDown
Posted (edited)
7 hours ago, TonyDown said:

Madison Keys won the 2025 women's singles title, her first Grand Slam.   She's been around, playing good tennis, for a long time.  Nice to see her reach this level at the Australian open, especially against such a top player, Aryna Sabalenka.  Loved her podium speech.

image.thumb.jpeg.c5dec5981fd963599d9993075d556d3b.jpeg

I’m so happy for Madison!  She was one of my favorite WTAers, but to be honest, I kinda gave up hope that she’d win a Slam.  Big serve and lots of power from both sides, but it didn’t take much for her game to go off.  Her longtime boyfriend, now husband, Bjorn Fratangelo retired as a player after an injury in Aug 2023 and became her full-time coach.  Glad to see the arrangement paid off.

Keys will turn 30 in a few weeks.  Given that the sport’s superstars have won Slams in their mid-30s, Madison should have a good stretch left in her career.  I’d love to see her win another one.

Edited by BSR
Wording
Posted

I woke up and checked the score: 5-5 15-30 on Keys' serve. I was convinced this was about to be another Keys heartbreak and had no desire to watch or listen to it. Refreshed the live scores page shortly thereafter, and the match was no longer there. I figured Sabalenka had broken that game and served it out. I was THRILLED to see that Keys had won! I like Sabalenka too, but Keys getting her first slam was too good not to hope for. And man - what a draw she got through to get the title! Collins, Rybakina, Svitolina, Swiatek, Sabalenka... she truly earned it the hard way!

  • mike carey changed the title to Australian Open 2023 ... and 2025
Posted

Here’s hoping Madison stays healthy, doesn’t get pregnant (yet), and can keep it going for the rest of the year. With her game, she should be top 5 and a threat just about everywhere, except for maybe on clay. I’d love to see her and Sabalenka play more major finals this year and beyond. 

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