Tag: stan wawrinka

  • Age-Related Discussion

    Age-Related Discussion

    Feliciano Lopez
    One of my favorite topics is the relationship of age and career performance, questions such as: What are the different phases of a career? When is the most common peak range? Are players peaking later now? Etc.

    For the sake of context and perhaps a taxonomy that would be useful for discussion, as I’ve written quite a few times before, I’ve posited that the historical norm has four general phases:

    Developmental Phase: Age 17-21. Player rises towards peak level.
    Peak Phase: Age 22-26. Player maintains highest level of career.
    Plateau Phase: Age 27-31. Player remains at a very high level, but slightly below peak, with gradual decline.
    Decline Phase: Age 32+. Player declines rapidly and/or retires.

    Again, these are the norms, or the averages if you will. Every player is different – but historically, those are the general ranges that most players fall into, or near to.

    Now what is interesting in recently years is that quite a few players seem to be peaking later, more in what would normally be their plateau phase. David Ferrer is an example, with his best years being 2012-13 when he turned 30 and 31. Despite beating Andy Murray today, Ferrer has showed signs of slowing this year, so he may be entering his decline phase – or he could simply be dropping to a plateau.

    And then we have the inspiration for this thread, Feliciano Lopez, who is 33 years old and possibly having the best year of his life. While his highest ranking was achieved a couple years ago in 2012 (No. 15), he’s at No. 14 in the live rankings now and has a good chance of having his best year-end ranking (which is currently No. 20 in 2011).

    And then of course there is Stan Wawrinka, who won his first Grand Slam at age 28 and is amidst his best year at age 28-29, and will probably finish the year ranked No. 4, better than last year’s career best of No. 8.

    Marin Cilic is still in what is normally the Peak Phase, but he won his first Slam just before turning age 26 – on the older side.

    And then we have young players like Milos Raonic and Grigor Dimitrov. Grigor is 23 years old, having his best year, but there’s also the sense from many that he’s another year or so away from his peak. Milos is also 23, turning 24 in December, and may or may not be at his peak.

    One thing that strikes me is that these outliers from the career norms are all non-elite players. Roger Federer’s career follows the averages quite closely, as does Nadal’s, Djokovic’s, and Murray’s – although it is still too soon to tell if and when they’ve entered their Plateau. Certainly it seems that Rafa and Andy have; Novak had his best year in 2011 at age 23-24, but I’d have a hard time saying that he’s not still in his Peak phase (that is, best year shouldn’t be equated with Peak phase; the best year usually comes within the peak).

    Those are just some examples. A few questions to consider/discuss:

    • Are players really peaking later?
    • If so, why?
    • Is there a historical precedent for players having their best years in their 30s (e.g. Ferrer and Lopez)?
    • Is it only “second tier” talents that are peaking later? (As it certainly seems like we’ve seen the best of Nadal, Djokovic and Murray)

    And so forth. Any thoughts?

    [divider]

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    Cover Photo: Kiu Kaffi, Tennis Frontier Correspondent

  • US Open Day 3: Order of Play & Scores

    US Open Day 3: Order of Play & Scores

    US Open

    The third day of action at the US Open features an anticipated second-round meeting between Tomas Berdych, the #6 seed, against the dangerous veteran Lleyton Hewitt.  That match is second up on Ashe.  Also of interest is a meeting of two of the younger players, Grigor Dimitrov (7) and Ryan Harrison of the US.  The top seeds on the women’s side in action tomorrow are Simona Halep, Agnieszka Radwanska and Maria Sharapova.  Americans Venus Williams and Sloane Stephens also play their second round matches.

    The full schedule for Day 3 is listed below (Results to follow).  All times are local.

    [divider]

    Arthur Ashe Stadium — 11:00 A.M.  

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Johanna Larsson (SWE) d. Sloane Stephens (USA) (21) — 5-7, 6-4, 6-2

    Not Before: 1:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Tomas Berdych (CZE) (6) d. Lleyton Hewitt (AUS) — 6-3, 6-4, 6-3

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Maria Sharapova (RUS) (5) d. Alexandra Dulgheru (ROU) — 4-6, 6-3, 6-2

    Not Before: 7:00 P.M.

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Venus Williams (USA) (19) d. Timea Bacsinszky (SUI) — 6-1, 6-4

    Men’s Singles – Round 2
    Stan Wawrinka (SUI) (3) d. Thomaz Bellucci (BRA) — 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(1)

    [divider]

    Louis Armstrong Stadium — 11:00 A.M.  

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Shuai Peng (CHN) d. Agnieszka Radwanska (POL) (4) — 6-3, 6-4

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Marin Cilic (CRO) (14) d. Marcos Baghdatis (CYP) — 6-3, 3-1 (Ret.)

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Simona Halep (ROU) (2) d. Jana Cepelova (SVK) — 6-2, 6-1

    Not Before: 5:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Grigor Dimitrov (BUL) (7) d. Ryan Harrison (USA) — 6-2, 7-6(4), 6-2

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Bob Bryan (USA) (1) / Mike Bryan (USA) (1) d. Max Mirnyi (BLR) / Mikhail Youzhny (RUS) — 6-2, 6-3

    [divider]

    Grandstand — 11:00 A.M. 

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Feliciano Lopez (ESP) (19) d. Ivan Dodig (CRO) — 1-6, 7-5, 2-6, 6-4, 1-1 (Ret.)

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Jelena Jankovic (SRB) (9) d. Tsvetana Pironkova (BUL) — 7-5, 6-4

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Caroline Wozniacki (DEN) (10) d. Aliaksandra Sasnovich (BLR) — 6-3, 6-4

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Ernests Gulbis (LAT) (11) d. Kenny De Schepper (FRA) — 6-1, 6-4, 6-2

    [divider]

    Court 17 — 11:00 A.M.  

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Kevin Anderson (RSA) (18) d. Pablo Cuevas (URU) — 6-3, 6-7(3), 4-6, 6-2, 7-6(1)

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Tatsuma Ito (JPN) d. Steve Johnson (USA) — 6-2, 3-6, 5-7, 4-1 (Ret.)

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Sabine Lisicki (GER) (26) d. Madison Brengle (USA) — 6-4, 6-1

    [divider]

    Court 5 — 11:00 A.M.  

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Alize Cornet (FRA) (22) d. Daniela Hantuchova (SVK) — 6-3, 6-3

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Jerzy Janowicz (POL) d. Dusan Lajovic (SRB) — 6-3, 7-5, 5-7, 7-5

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Joao Sousa (POR) (32) d. Frank Dancevic (CAN) — 7-6(6), 3-6, 6-2, 4-6, 7-6(2)

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Sara Errani (ITA) (13) d. Anastasia Rodionova (AUS) — 6-2, 7-6(2)

    [divider]

    Court 11 — 11:00 A.M.  

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Belinda Bencic (SUI) d. Kurumi Nara (JPN) (31) — 6-4, 4-6, 6-1

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Angelique Kerber (GER) (6) d. Alla Kudryavtseva (RUS) — 6-2, 6-4

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Andrea Petkovic (GER) (18) d. Monica Puig (PUR) — 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(5)

    Men’s Singles – Round 2
    Blaz Kavcic (SLO) d. Jeremy Chardy (FRA) (30) — 6-2, 7-6(6), 6-3

    [divider]

    Court 13 — 11:00 A.M. 

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Teymuraz Gabashvili (RUS) d. Santiago Giraldo (COL) (27) — 6-3, 1-6, 7-6(6), 6-3

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Lucie Safarova (CZE) (14) d. Saisai Zheng (CHN) — 6-3, 4-6, 6-2

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Mirjana Lucic-Baroni (CRO) d. Shahar Peer (ISR) — 6-7(6), 6-3, 6-2

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Dudi Sela (ISR) d. Carlos Berlocq (ARG) — 1-6, 6-3, 6-2, 7-5

    [divider]

    Court 4 — 11:00 A.M.  

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Guillermo Garcia-Lopez (ESP) / Philipp Oswald (AUT) d. Julien Benneteau (FRA) (5) / Edouard Roger-Vasselin (FRA) (5) — 4-6, 7-6(7), 7-6(6)

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Alexander Kudryavtsev (RUS) d. Evgeny Donskoy (RUS) — 2-6, 7-6(6), 3-6, 6-3, 6-4

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Vania King (USA) / Lisa Raymond (USA) d. Julia Goerges (GER) (16) / Anna-Lena Groenefeld (GER) (16) — 6-3, 5-7, 7-6(2)

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Michael Mmoh (USA) / Francis Tiafoe (USA) d. Victor Estrella Burgos (DOM) / Teymuraz Gabashvili (RUS) — 6-3, 6-4

    [divider]

    Court 6 — 11:00 A.M.  

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Oksana Kalashnikova (GEO) / Olga Savchuk (UKR) d. Romina Oprandi (SUI) / Shelby Rogers (USA) — 2-6, 6-1, 6-0

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Martin Klizan (SVK) d. Steve Darcis (BEL) — 3-6, 2-6, 7-6(5), 7-5, 6-4

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    David Goffin (BEL) d. Niels Desein (BEL) — 6-1, 6-3, 6-3

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Lauren Davis (USA) / Renata Voracova (CZE) d. Nicole Gibbs (USA) / Maria Sanchez (USA) — 6-3, 4-6, 6-1

    [divider]

    Court 7 — 11:00 A.M.  

    Women’s Singles – Round 2
    Roberta Vinci (ITA) (28) d. Irina-Camelia Begu (ROU) — 2-6, 6-4, 6-1

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Marina Erakovic (NZL) / Arantxa Parra Santonja (ESP) d. Louisa Chirico (USA) / Katerina Stewart (USA) — 6-4, 6-3

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Zarina Diyas (KAZ) / Yi-Fan Xu (CHN) d. Raquel Kops-Jones (USA) (6) / Abigail Spears (USA) (6) — 6-4, 2-6, 6-1

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Dominic Thiem (AUT) d. Lukas Lacko (SVK) — 6-3, 6-3, 6-2

    Mixed Doubles – Round 1
    Yung-Jan Chan (TPE) / Ross Hutchins (GBR) d. Kristina Mladenovic (FRA) (4) / Daniel Nestor (CAN) (4) — 7-6(5), 3-6, 10-6

    [divider]

    Court 8 — 11:00 A.M. 

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Sorana Cirstea (ROU) / Pauline Parmentier (FRA) d. Tornado Alicia Black (USA) / Bernarda Pera (USA) — 2-6, 6-4, 6-3

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Gabriela Dabrowski (CAN) / Alicja Rosolska (POL) d. Ashleigh Barty (AUS) (10) / Casey Dellacqua (AUS) (10) — 6-2, 6-3

    Mixed Doubles – Round 1
    Sania Mirza (IND) (1) / Bruno Soares (BRA) (1) d. Tornado Alicia Black (USA) / Ernesto Escobedo (USA) — 6-2, 3-6, 10-5

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Marcel Granollers (ESP) (11) / Marc Lopez (ESP) (11) d. Nick Kyrgios (AUS) / Bernard Tomic (AUS) — 6-7(5), 7-5, 6-4

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Alison Riske (USA) / Coco Vandeweghe (USA) d. Silvia Soler-Espinosa (ESP) / Heather Watson (GBR) — 7-5, 6-3

    [divider]

    Court 10 — 11:00 A.M.    

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Illya Marchenko (UKR) d. Marco Chiudinelli (SUI) — 7-6(3), 4-6, 7-6(13), 7-6(4)

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Christina McHale (USA) / Anna Schmiedlova (SVK) d. Alison Van Uytvanck (BEL) / Yanina Wickmayer (BEL) — 6-3, 6-1

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Petra Cetkovska (CZE) / Katarzyna Piter (POL) d. Grace Min (USA) / Melanie Oudin (USA) — 6-3, 6-3

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Kimiko Date-Krumm (JPN) / Barbora Zahlavova Strycova (CZE) d. Irina Falconi (USA) / Anna Tatishvili (USA) — 7-5, 4-6, 6-3

    [divider]

    Court 12 — 11:00 A.M. 

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Mariusz Fyrstenberg (POL) / Marcin Matkowski (POL) d. Andre Begemann (GER) / Julian Knowle (AUT) — 6-3, 6-4

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Leander Paes (IND) (6) / Radek Stepanek (CZE) (6) d. Simone Bolelli (ITA) / Fabio Fognini (ITA) — 7-6(5), 6-2

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Ekaterina Makarova (RUS) (4) / Elena Vesnina (RUS) (4) d. Daniela Hantuchova (SVK) / Francesca Schiavone (ITA) — 6-2, 6-4

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Misaki Doi (JPN) / Elina Svitolina (UKR) d. Mona Barthel (GER) / Alexandra Panova (RUS) — 7-5, 3-6, 7-6(4)

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Martin Emmrich (GER) / Lukas Rosol (CZE) d. Santiago Gonzalez (MEX) / Oliver Marach (AUT) — 6-7(4), 6-2, 7-6(4)

    [divider]

    Court 14 — 11:00 A.M.  

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Cara Black (ZIM) (3) / Sania Mirza (IND) (3) d. Karolina Pliskova (CZE) / Kristyna Pliskova (CZE) — 6-3, 6-0

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Juan Sebastian Cabal (COL) (16) / Robert Farah (COL) (16) d. Pablo Andujar (ESP) / Pablo Carreno Busta (ESP) — 7-6(9), 6-3

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Robin Haase (NED) / Igor Sijsling (NED) d. Mikhail Elgin (RUS) / Philipp Marx (GER) — 6-1, 6-3

    Mixed Doubles – Round 1
    Alla Kudryavtseva (RUS) / Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi (PAK) d. Shelby Rogers (USA) / Bradley Klahn (USA) — 7-6(1), 6-3

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Robert Lindstedt (SWE) / Jurgen Melzer (AUT) d. Federico Delbonis (ARG) / Alejandro Falla (COL) — 6-3, 6-4

    [divider]

    Court 15 — 11:00 A.M.    

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Yen-Hsun Lu (TPE) / Jiri Vesely (CZE) d. Matthew Ebden (AUS) / Ivo Karlovic (CRO) — 6-7(1), 6-4, 6-4

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Kveta Peschke (CZE) (5) / Katarina Srebotnik (SLO) (5) d. Sharon Fichman (CAN) / Chanelle Scheepers (RSA) — 6-4, 7-6(3)

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Garbine Muguruza (ESP) (12) / Carla Suarez Navarro (ESP) (12) d. Alize Cornet (FRA) / Kirsten Flipkens (BEL) — 7-5, 6-4

    Women’s Doubles – Round 1
    Jarmila Gajdosova (AUS) / Ajla Tomljanovic (AUS) d. Kristina Barrois (GER) / Annika Beck (GER) — 7-5, 4-6, 6-2

    Men’s Doubles – Round 1
    Sam Groth (AUS) / Chris Guccione (AUS) d. Jonathan Marray (GBR) / Gilles Muller (LUX) — 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(5)

    [divider]

    Cover Photo (Creative Commons License): Kiu Kaffi

  • Roland Garros French Open Day 2

    Roland Garros French Open Day 2

    Day Two of the French Open kicks off with former champion Maria Sharapova playing Ksenia Pervak, a fellow Russian. Novak Djokovic, of Serbia, will begin his run to capture the elusive title in Paris by facing off against the young Portuguese Joao Sousa.

    The record eight-time Roland Garros champion Rafael Nadal will play the American veteran Robby Ginepri. Also in action on Monday will be Australian Open winner Stan Wawrinka, who is looking to become the first man to win back-to-back Majors in Australia and Paris since Jim Courier, in 1992.

    The full schedule for Day 2 is listed below (Results to follow)…

    [divider]

    Court Philippe Chatrier – 12:00 P.M.

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Maria Sharapova (RUS) (7) d. Ksenia Pervak (RUS) — 6-1, 6-2

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Novak Djokovic (SRB) (2) d. Joao Sousa (POR) — 6-1, 6-2, 6-4

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Alize Cornet (FRA) (20) d. Ashleigh Barty (AUS) — 6-2, 6-1

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Guillermo Garcia-Lopez (ESP) d. Stan Wawrinka (SUI) (3) — 6-4, 5-7, 6-2, 6-0

    [divider]

    Court Suzanne Lenglen – 12:00 P.M.

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Dominika Cibulkova (SVK) (9) d. Virginie Razzano (FRA) — 7-5, 6-0

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Gilles Simon (FRA) (29) d. Ante Pavic (CRO) — 6-1, 6-1, 6-3

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Rafael Nadal (ESP) (1) d. Robby Ginepri (USA) — 6-0, 6-3, 6-0

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Petra Kvitova (CZE) (5) d. Zarina Diyas (KAZ) — 7-5, 6-2

    [divider]

    Court 1 – 12:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Martin Klizan (SVK) d. Kei Nishikori (JPN) (9) — 7-6(4), 6-1, 6-2

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Facundo Bagnis (ARG) d. Julien Benneteau (FRA) — 6-1, 6-2, 1-6, 3-6, 18-16

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Sloane Stephens (USA) (15) vs. Shuai Peng (CHN) — Canceled

    [divider]

    Court 2 – 12:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Mikhail Kukushkin (KAZ) d. Nicolas Mahut (FRA) — 6-3, 6-7(4), 6-3, 6-4

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Samantha Stosur (AUS) (19) d. Monica Puig (PUR) — 6-1, 6-1

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Dominic Thiem (AUT) d. Paul-Henri Mathieu (FRA) — 6-4, 7-6(3), 6-2

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Svetlana Kuznetsova (RUS) (27) vs. Sofia Shapatava (GEO) — Canceled

    [divider]

    Court 3 – 12:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Kenny De Schepper (FRA) d. Albert Montanes (ESP) — 3-1 Ret.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Jurgen Melzer (AUT) d. David Goffin (BEL) — 6-4, 5-7, 7-5, 6-4

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Ernests Gulbis (LAT) (18) d. Lukasz Kubot (POL) — 4-6, 6-4, 7-5, 6-1

    [divider]

    Court 4 – 12:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Tobias Kamke (GER) d. Miloslav Mecir (SVK) — 7-5, 7-6(2), 7-6(1)

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Paula Ormaechea (ARG) d. Romina Oprandi (SUI) — 7-5, 6-2

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Leonardo Mayer (ARG) d. James Duckworth (AUS) — 5-7, 6-2, 6-4, 7-6(2)

    [divider]

    Court 5 – 12:00 P.M.

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Mona Barthel (GER) d. Karin Knapp (ITA) — 6-4, 6-0

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Eugenie Bouchard (CAN) (18) d. Shahar Peer (ISR) — 6-0, 6-2

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Thomaz Bellucci (BRA) d. Benjamin Becker (GER) — 6-2, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 6-2

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Teliana Pereira (BRA) vs. Luksika Kumkhum (THA) — Canceled

    [divider]

    Court 6 – 12:00 P.M.

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Sabine Lisicki (GER) (16) d. Fiona Ferro (FRA) — 6-1, 7-5

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Tommy Robredo (ESP) (17) d. James Ward (GBR) — 4-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Karolina Pliskova (CZE) d. Mathilde Johansson (FRA) — 6-1, 7-6(5)

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Andrea Petkovic (GER) (28) d. Misaki Doi (JPN) — 6-3, 6-3

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Kevin Anderson (RSA) (19) vs. Stephane Robert (FRA) — Canceled

    [divider]

    Court 7 – 12:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Benoit Paire (FRA) d. Alejandro Falla (COL) — 6-3, 6-4, 7-6(4)

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Pauline Parmentier (FRA) d. Roberta Vinci (ITA) (17) — 3-6, 6-3, 6-2

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Fabio Fognini (ITA) (14) d. Andreas Beck (GER) — 6-4, 6-4, 6-1

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Jelena Jankovic (SRB) (6) vs. Sharon Fichman (CAN) — To finish: 5-7, 5-1

    [divider]

    Court 8 – 12:00 P.M.

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Tamira Paszek (AUT) d. Alison Van Uytvanck (BEL) — 6-2, 7-6(5)

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Marcel Granollers (ESP) d. Ivan Dodig (CRO) — 2-2 Ret.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Teymuraz Gabashvili (RUS) d. Vasek Pospisil (CAN) (30) — 6-4, 6-2, 6-3

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Julia Goerges (GER) d. Michelle Larcher De Brito (POR) — 6-2, 6-3

    [divider]

    Court 9 – 12:00 P.M.

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Timea Bacsinszky (SUI) d. Maryna Zanevska (UKR) — 6-1, 6-4

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Alejandro Gonzalez (COL) d. Michael Russell (USA) — 6-2, 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-1

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Donald Young (USA) d. Dudi Sela (ISR) — 6-1, 2-6, 6-1, 6-0

    [divider]

    Court 10 – 12:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Jiri Vesely (CZE) d. Lukas Rosol (CZE) — 6-2, 7-6(6), 7-5

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Roberto Bautista Agut (ESP) (27) d. Paolo Lorenzi (ITA) — 6-3, 7-5, 6-2

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Kurumi Nara (JPN) d. Anna Tatishvili (USA) — 6-1, 6-4

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Polona Hercog (SLO) vs. Jana Cepelova (SVK) — Canceled

    [divider]

    Court 14 – 12:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Robin Haase (NED) d. Nikolay Davydenko (RUS) — 7-5, 6-4, 6-2

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Feliciano Lopez (ESP) (26) d. Damir Dzumhur (BIH) — 6-3, 7-6(8), 6-3

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Marina Erakovic (NZL) d. Nadiya Kichenok (UKR) — 6-2, 6-1

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Bojana Jovanovski (SRB) vs. Camila Giorgi (ITA) — Canceled

    [divider]

    Court 16 – 12:00 P.M.

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Marin Cilic (CRO) (25) d. Pablo Andujar (ESP) — 6-0, 6-3, 7-6(6)

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Elena Vesnina (RUS) (32) d. Christina McHale (USA) — 7-6(0), 4-6, 6-3

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Taylor Townsend (USA) d. Vania King (USA) — 7-5, 6-1

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Axel Michon (FRA) vs. Bradley Klahn (USA) — Canceled

    [divider]

    Court 17 – 12:00 P.M.

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Flavia Pennetta (ITA) (12) d. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner (AUT) — 6-2, 6-2

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Yaroslava Shvedova (KAZ) d. Lauren Davis (USA) — 3-6, 7-5, 6-4

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Stefanie Voegele (SUI) d. Anna-Lena Friedsam (GER) — 6-7(3), 7-5, 6-2

    Men’s Singles – Round 1
    Adrian Mannarino (FRA) d. Yen-Hsun Lu (TPE) — 6-2, 6-1, 6-1

    Women’s Singles – Round 1
    Sorana Cirstea (ROU) (26) vs. Aleksandra Wozniak (CAN) — Canceled

  • The Eighth Wonder of the Learned Alchemists

    The Eighth Wonder of the Learned Alchemists

    Wawrinka

    Monte Carlo Masters 2014: A round-about wrap-up & some psychology.

    Near the middle of the day, near the middle of last week, I opened my internet browser to the news that Gabriel Garcia Márquez had died at the age of 87.

    Aww, no,” I exclaimed to no one in particular.

    A colleague—a fellow psychologist who happened to be within earshot—responded to my expression of disappointment with concern. “What’s wrong?”

    “Gabriel Garcia Márquez is dead.”

    Aww, no,” her expression was resonant with compassion. Therapists learn, almost without intention, to pack our monosyllabic murmurings with rich, affirming emotion. I felt immediately understood, and my colleague and I shared a moment of heavy silence as I pondered the impermanence of all things, including authors (and also my lunch, which I’d forgotten on my kitchen counter before work that morning). But, as the sad seconds ticked by and my colleague continued to honor my feelings with quiet empathy, I decided I ought to say something to lighten the mood. After all, it’s not like the Nobel-Prize-winning author was a friend of mine. 

    “Truth be told,” said I, “until this moment I wasn’t aware he was still alive.” 

    “Well,” said my colleague, “truth be told, until this moment, I’d never been aware of him at all. Who is he?”

    It’d been one of those days at work. In fact, it’d been one of those weeks— one of those months. We were both tired and worn-down. The sudden, mutual realization that my colleague and I were sharing grief over the death of a man neither of us had known was alive…well, it was just too much. We burst into fits of irrational laughter. Then—once I regained control of my capacity to inhale—I told her I thought she’d enjoy Márquez’s novel, One Hundred Years of Solitude, she replied that maybe she’d give it a try, and we got back to work, both of us feeling much lighter at heart than before we were saddened by the death of one the literary world’s greats.

    Rafael Nadal’s straight-sets defeat at the hands of David Ferrer in the Monte Carlo quarterfinals took place in the middle of the California night, and I slept straight through it. When I woke up to news of the loss, I was both surprised and not. My reaction was more Hrmm than Aww. Whether it’s mental (as Nadal says it is), or physical (as he might prefer not to discuss with the media), or both (as the two are often intertwined), whatever is going on for Rafa is familiar. We’ve been here before. Nobody rises from the ashes quite like Rafael Nadal, but once he’s risen—once his muscular wings are fully spread, with Nike microfiber plumage shining in the sunlight as he perches at the summit of a mountain made entirely of ranking points and the broken racquets of his shattered opponents—he gets a tad bit uncomfortable. From where I sit, on the summit of my sofa pillows, it seems that something (a significant something) inside Nadal’s psyche prefers to fight the powers that be rather than be one— or at least, prefers not to be World No. 1.

    Unfortunately for (what I am assuming is) Nadal’s conflicted relationship with his own greatness, Novak Djokovic, the current World No. 2, has a wrist injury that looks to keep him sidelined for no small amount of time. The Serb’s injury is a real shame, considering the stunning performance Djokovic delivered in the Miami final. He looked, then, as if nothing would suit him better than an extended, dusty turf war for the No. 1 ranking.

    For now, unless Djokovic’s wrist manages a miraculous Easter recovery, Rafael Nadal is stranded at the top. Unless the King of Clay is suffering physically, or unless he has an abiding desire to abandon tennis for the gambling table, I expect Rafa to be able to convince himself—if not the tennis world at large—that he’s not the favorite to win every title contested on the dirt, thereby freeing himself to do just that. He might even get things sorted this week in the relative shade of Barcelona’s 500-level tournament. Or, the process might take months and he won’t run the metaphorical clay tables again until 2015. Either way, I’ll leave him to it for the moment and turn my attention to the No. 3 and 4 players in the world, who also happen to be the Swiss No. 1 and No. 2.

    [3] Stanislas Wawrinka def. [4] Roger Federer 4-6, 7-6(5), 6-2

    During the 2014 Monte Carlo final—which began very early in the California morning, and spanned three sets containing many brilliant points and scintillating shots but never quite constellated into a beautiful match—and as I watched Roger Federer fend off a break point in the third set with a threaded backhand down-the-line followed by a fearsome overhead smash, I was suddenly moved to pull my copy of One Hundred Years of Solitude down from its resting place on the bookshelf in my living room. It’s probably been fifteen years since I last read the novel, but a passage in the opening paragraph brought much of the story flooding back: “The world was so recent that many things lacked names, and in order to indicate them it was necessary to point.” It’s a passage that lets the reader know the story will begin at the very beginning—in an Eden of wonder—and move in circles from there. What is old is also new. It’s also a sentence that made me think of enraptured tennis fans at a Federer match.

    What Roger Federer does, he’s been doing for well over a decade, but when he does it well, it still feels impossible to replicate. It’s still so new—so recent—that it’s necessary to point. And to gasp. And maybe even to exclaim in an elongated monosyllable resonant with deep emotion. Toward the end of the first set of Federer’s semifinal win over Novak Djokovic, while Federer was struggling to hold his nerves together and Djokovic’s arm was beginning to fall apart, the commentators opened the familiar chapter of the unresolvable GOAT debate. Can Roger Federer truly be called the greatest of all time, or even of his time, since he doesn’t hold a winning record over Nadal or Murray? 

    A half-hour later the Swiss could boast an 18-16 record over the Serb, but he’s still 10-11 against Murray, and 10-23 against Nadal. There was a silence in the booth as those numbers sank in, and then somebody—it might have been Nick Lester—said, somewhat sheepishly, “Aww, I still think he’s the best.” And everyone else agreed with him. Because he’s Federer; and because they know how it feels to watch and to be reduced to wordless gestures, when what you’re paid to do is talk. Márquez’s fascinating gypsies from Solitude might put the Swiss right up there with the invention of magnets, which, they tell us, were originally known as “the eighth wonder of the learned alchemists.” He is a little bit magic.

    Still, as supernatural as Federer’s tennis can be, and as healed as his back appears to be, he’s still struggling with the reality of closing out big points, and big matches. If you spend any time at tournaments with avid Federer fans—something I’ve done on multiple occasions already this year—they will be able to tell you the very instant the typically aggressive Swiss player goes passive. But they will not be able to tell you why. Instead, they will probably ask you, or, if they’ve got a powerful set of lungs, him: “Why didn’t he follow that ball in?”, “Why did he chip that return?”, “Why does he approach to Nadal’s forehand? He’s going to get killed doing that!”, “Why?!?” I don’t know. Maybe he truly believes it’s a good idea to approach Rafa’s forehand, or to remain passively in the backcourt. Or maybe he’s busy thinking about how quickly his daughters are growing up; or whether his capped shirt-sleeves mightn’t be a bit preppy, even for him; or the fact that he’s about to be father three times over; or about the tragic impermanence of the lunch-hour. It could be a thousand things. All we can do is guess. So here’s mine: 

    At the trophy ceremony after the final, Federer told the crowd that he hoped to be back in Monte Carlo for “many, many years.” Thirty-two is by no means old, but there’s no denying that Federer is nearer the end of his career than the beginning, probably much nearer. One day, hopefully many, many, many years from now, when Federer is well past 87, someone will read the news and say, “Aww, Roger Federer died today.” And someone else will respond, “Aww … Who is he?”

    Recognition—the experience human beings crave most— is an impermanent experience. It shifts and alters, as we do, even if you are the most wonderful attraction of the tennis world has ever seen. And when we struggle against accepting inevitable endings and limitations, we start to get confused about what we can control in life and what we can’t. We panic. We try to stem impossible tides instead of focusing on making good decisions about where to place an approach shot, or when not to get too cute with the drop shots. We try to tell ourselves we have all the time in the world, while we secretly freak out that our time might have already come and gone. From my vantage point—again the sofa cushions—Federer looks to me like a man trying to win titles without falling into a mind-twisting pothole of panic. He does just fine, as long as he doesn’t catch a glimpse of the abyss. But, I think it’s possible that if Federer can let go of the need for “one more great run” he’ll have one. Or several. At the very least he’ll stop fading away in deciding sets. Federer might not have “many, many years” left on tour, but he’s got time. And he still inspires plenty of wordless, gestural wonders.

    If trying to prevent the inevitable is a task doomed to failure, then attempting to recover from it is another story altogether—which is why Stanislas Wawrinka’s week at Monte Carlo had the psychologist in me thrilled to her fingertips. There’s little that is more fundamental to life (and therefore tennis) than loss. We all lose in the end. For those of us interested in infant attachment theory (or biblical studies, for that matter) we lose in the beginning, too. But when were able to survive these losses—whether it’s a five-hour, five-set loss to the World No. 1 on center court at a slam; or a seven-hour Davis Cup defeat; or 13 losses to the Eighth Wonder of the World; or a brief loss of dignity along the way to your first slam victory—that’s when change becomes possible, if only we’re helped to keep at it. (Please, somebody tell Jo-Wilfried Tsonga to consider a cozy stay at Magnus Norman’s academy in Sweden.)

    For the most part, substantive change happens gradually, intermittently, with great effort, and only eventually, with easy grace—which pretty much sums up the trajectory of the Monte Carlo final for Stanislas Wawrinka. He started off tense, making easy errors, and losing the first set to the combined force of Federer and his nerves. But, gradually, intermittently, and with a few effortful bellows, Wawrinka began to recover. Watching him clear a channel for his talent to flow was an almost palpable experience. Essentially, this is the kind of stuff I spend my days helping people do. I help people learn how to learn. Yet, whenever I watch somebody integrate intention with action, or insight with experience, becoming more himself along the way, it’s like I’m seeing it happen for the first time. I’m enthralled. 

    By the time the newly made Swiss No. 1 arrived at the third set he was standing well within the baseline, powering through the court with one audacious forehand after another. His serving was equally imperious (if my count is accurate, he dropped only four points on serve in the third set), and his backhand potent. In breaking Federer in the first and third games of the final set, Wawrinka played very much as he had when he nearly bagelled David Ferrer in the semifinals, or when he did bagel Marin Cilic in the second round — which is to say, wonderfully well. 

    Fittingly, Wawrinka closed the match, earning his first-ever Masters title, on a forehand winner. It was this shot that Stan used most aggressively all week. Also fittingly, Roger Federer gave his younger countryman a warm hug and congratulations at the net. A moment of recognition from one learned alchemist to another.

    Cover Photo (Creative Commons License): Marianne Bevis

  • Wawrinka Reigns in Monte Carlo

    Wawrinka Reigns in Monte Carlo

    AO ATP Winner - Stan 2

    Backing up his first Major title in Australia in January, Stanislas Wawrinka, of Switzerland, beat his countryman Roger Federer to win his first Masters 1000 title in Monaco today, 4-6, 7-6(5), 6-2.

    As the two men are friends, Davis Cup teammates, and co-winners of the 2008 Olympic gold medal in doubles, the match started a little tentatively, and rather lacking in kill shots. Federer took the first set on the strength of one early break. In the second, Wawrinka drew the first break, but Federer broke back immediately, and so it was decided in a tiebreak, which Stan took hold of with the first mini-break and never relinquished control from there. He carried that aggressive attitude into the third set, going up two breaks immediately, for a 4-0 lead before Federer held serve. Wawrinka served it out at 5-2.

    With the win, Wawrinka retains the No. 3 slot in the world rankings, as well as his claim to the Swiss No. 1 spot.

  • Federer Commits to Davis Cup Action

    Federer Commits to Davis Cup Action

    Roger Federer

    Roger Federer will join the Australian Open champion and new Swiss No.1 Stanislas Wawrinka in their Davis Cup first-round tie against Serbia.

    “I can confirm that Roger is in Serbia and will play in the Davis Cup,” stated Sandra Perez of the Swiss Tennis Federation.

    It is the first time since 2012 that Federer has made the commitment to play Davis Cup and the last time he played a first round tie was back in 2005.

    The Swiss will begin the tie as favorites with Serbia missing Novak Djokovic and Janko Tipsarevic. The makeshift Serbian team will provisionally feature Dusan Lajovic (ranked No. 102) and Filip Krajinovic (No. 280) in singles, with Nenad Zimonjic and Ilija Bozoljac pairing up for the doubles.

    The tie will be played on an indoor hard court in Novi Sad.

    [divider]

    Cover Photo: Kenneth Hong, (Creative Commons License)

  • Australian Open Final Review: Wawrinka v Nadal

    Australian Open Final Review: Wawrinka v Nadal

    AO ATP Winner - Stan 2

    What an amazing final it was. I know it wasn’t such an epic on court. More of a drama of sorts but as a culmination of an amazing path to glory it was a real feat of Tennis.

    Stan swept past three Top 10 players to clinch the trophy. Beating the No. 1 and 2 players in the world. En route he overcame the reigning champion of three years and swept aside a former champion in the final. He weathered the extreme heat and changeable conditions like everyone else but he managed to do all this without getting injured. Still standing and strutting until the end.

    What I had forgotten was that I was at their last match at the World Tour Finals. I know exactly what it is like to see both men in full flight. I can appreciate just what Stan has achieved and how he did it.

    I had been wondering over Christmas just how close Stan had come to the Top 4. I had completely forgotten the score line at the O2. Had I not then I really would have favoured Stan much more given his consistent progress during 2013.

    The seeds were there in the Millennium Dome. Stan pushed Rafa as hard as he possibly could without winning a set, with the score being 7-6(5), 7-6(6) to Rafa. It truly was one of those results where the score does not reflect the story of the match. Stan broke Rafa twice. At times he literally owned him. You could see he was starting to realise that the very top players like Rafa actually fear him because their strength plays into his strength.

    Rafa particularly likes to get the ball high to an opponent through his spin. That troubles most people but not Stan. That is just where he wants it. Put it high to his backhand and he couldn’t thank you enough. You’ve served him his favourite opportunity on a platter.

    Stan doesn’t need to run around his backhand like his colleagues in the Top 10. He loves a chance to express his creative skills with his beautifully-crafted technique. He just steps up to it and releases his aggression through the ball, trusting his well-honed technique. The rest is just a blur.

    So from this spectacular experience in London I can testify to how big Stan hits. Only Berdych rivals him in the Top 8 for pure power. They’re both just powerhouses. The type that have had wins against Rafa his whole career. It is only now that they are both realising just what this could mean for them in their best years.

    So the result on Sunday wasn’t as much as a surprise to those who have seen Stan play, particularly those who still remembered last year’s match against Novak. He pushed the eventual winner of this trophy right to the wire. If he had won the match then a route to the final was open. This time he did and it was. So let us see where this leads.

    Nadal still impressed me and I think won many new followers. Clearly injured he pressed on. I’ve always wondered what is best in this case. Should he just surrender and proclaim Stan champion? Does he have that right? I’ve read many of the debates with the issue getting cloudier and more complex instead of clearer.

    Though now, if Tennis is to proclaim itself a profession then I like to draw parallels from other professions to gain some perspective. If a chief executive were struggling during negotiations with a migraine, severe back trouble or whatever, then they would take painkillers or anything prescribed to get through. Taking a rest some other time. Peoples’ jobs and the future of the company are at stake. What is the difference here with a tennis player?

    This of course isn’t an answer; it’s more a question. Yet it simply places each player as CEO of their brand providing a performance for their company on the biggest stage possible. The fans have played their part, paying their money and making their own sacrifices to be there. They have a right to see the match they paid for.

    That is what made Nadal’s effort respectful. He gave all he could. Enough to win a set, in fact. He gave the crowd and his opponent the best of himself. Getting on with his job and doing it as best he could.

    I learnt a lot more about Rafa from this match and I liked it. I still don’t know what is best when a player is injured, but I am learning that the show must go on. Rafa didn’t steal the limelight and showed deep respect throughout, by treating others as he would like to be treated. He was professional.

    On his worst days as much as on his best he is a professional to admire. He, and the band of brothers he tours the globe with on this Tennis tour, are bringing an impressive breed of professionalism to the tour. As a professional myself it’s nice to see.

    A truly exciting time for the tour. An exceptional start to 2014.

    Cover Photo (Creative Commons License): Marianne Bevis

  • Tears and Laughter

    Tears and Laughter

    Stanislas+Wawrinka+Australian+Open+2014+Men+eaKRCvehVMHl e

    The 2014 Australian Open Finals

    Li Na [4] def. Dominika Cibulkova [20] 7-6(3), 6-0

    Stanislas Wawrinka [8] def. Rafael Nadal [1] 6-2, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3

    At some point in the twelve months between the day Swiss player Stanislas Wawrinka lost a five-set, five-hour tennis match to defending champion Novak Djokovic at the Australian Open, and the night when he won a five-set Australian Open match against the again-defending champion Djokovic, Wawrinka got a tattoo on his forearm. A motivational tattoo courtesy of Samuel Beckett’s Worstward Ho: “Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better.”

    Tennis players see a lot of their forearms. If Wawrinka ever forgot to try, or forgot how important it is to fail in life, all he had to do was glance downward and Mr. Beckett could remind him of the game plan. Keep going! I remember deploying the same passage on my site, Extreme Western Grip in early 2012, after Rafael Nadal lost a grueling six-hour Australian Open final, also to Novak Djokovic. After falling to Djokovic in umpteen straight finals, Nadal had, I believed, finally failed better—a lot better. And, indeed, next time Djokovic and Nadal met in a tournament final, Rafa won. But that’s Rafa; getting badly burned and then rising majestically, muscularly from the ashes—fist-pumping and vamos-ing in six directions at once—is what he does. He almost did it this past Sunday, despite carrying a back injury so severe he required a medical timeout and repeated visits from the trainer.

    I ought to have realized, from the evidence of the permanent marker he’d injected into his very being, that Stanislas Wawrinka was very also serious about rising like a scruffy phoenix from the ashes. Instead, I was surprised when he pulled himself together, after a very shaky first set against Djokovic in last week’s quarterfinal match, to win in five. I was impressed to see the Swiss force himself, time and time again, to cling to the baseline when it was clear as the stripes on Berdych’s T-shirt that his instinct was to retreat to the comparative emotional safety of the backcourt. I was relieved when he didn’t let down in the next round, defeating Tomas Berdych and earning his first chance to play for a slam title. But he’d never taken a set off Rafael Nadal, not in 26 tries, so all I expected—hoped—for him was that he keep trying again, and again. I hoped he’d get a set, or maybe even two. I hoped the loss wouldn’t hurt too much. 

    In fact, I suspected that the match might unfold in much the way the women’s final did, with the underdog putting up an admirable fight but succumbing in the end to the better, more experienced player. Despite being billed on Channel 7 as a Bond-girl-esque battle between “Lethal Li and Dominika the Dominator,” the attention during coverage of the women’s match remained, and fittingly so, on the tennis. (So far as I can recall, Eugenie Bouchard’s impending marriage to Justin Bieber was not mentioned even once.) It was good tennis, with a happy ending. During the trophy speeches, Li Na’s comic timing was, as usual, impeccable—much like her backhand in the second set— and the smile on her face was unguarded and wonderful to see. But Cibulkova, despite the tears coursing down her face, also seemed honestly happy to be there. It’s not that she was “just” happy to be there, Cibulkova obviously wanted to win. (And if she can keep playing the kind of tennis she played throughout the Open, win she will.) Yet her 6-7(3), 0-6 loss—that second set was closer than it sounds—hadn’t obliterated her awareness of how much she’d accomplished before it.

    Dominika+Cibulkova+2014+Australian+Open+Day+pMzpaSOaaYKl

    Watching the two pose for trophy photos, I was hard-pressed to remember another time when the person left holding the runner-up plate looked so, well, radiant. It’s a shame it doesn’t happen more often. Being No. 2 out of 128 is an achievement to be proud of, but tennis doesn’t work that way. It’s a psychologically harsh sport. Take a tune-up tournament for example. Thirty-two players enter the Sydney draw, but only one gets to go on to the Australian Open with a victory fresh on her mind. Others might win a match or two, or possibly even three, but the last experience will be of loss. No wonder it’s the nihilistic Samuel Beckett and not, say, Ram Dass, to whom tennis players turn to for their inspirational tattoos. 

    After watching Wawrinka defeat Djokovic, I expected that Wawrinka, like Cibulkova, would put up a good fight in the final. I didn’t think he would win. But more important, I didn’t think he’d win playing the way he did: first, so spectacularly, and then so very anxiously. The first set and a half from Wawrinka—regardless of whether Nadal was already injured or not—was magnificent on all fronts. After the match he called it the best tennis he’s ever played. He served well, returned well, and drove his backhand down the line in a way that made Roger Federer look almost frail. Wawrinka’s forehand might be the stroke most vulnerable to a dip in form (he occasionally forgets he has knees to bend), but the winners he strikes off that side are likely to cause sharp, admiring intakes of breath from onlookers. (Or, at least from me.) If only he’d kept it up after he knew Nadal was hurt, like Rafa would have done himself.

    For all that Nadal is kind to children, afraid of puppies, and modest on the podium, he’s ruthless when it comes time to drive the dagger home. Stanislas Wawrinka, on the other hand, is more like the rest of us. As he said after the match, it was hard for him to know that his friend and rival was hurting, hard to stay focused on what he needed to do. Well, it was also hard for me to watch. I was at Indian Wells in 2013 when Wawrinka managed to lose to an injured Roger Federer in much the same way that Wawrinka played the third set of the Australian Open final. He obligingly hit half-paced balls directly to his opponent’s racquet so that the poor guy with the bad back didn’t have to run. It was painful to watch. The next round, which pitted the wounded Federer against Rafael Nadal wasn’t a barrel of fun either, but it was a relief to see Rafa move swiftly to put his ailing opponent out of his misery.

    There is another passage from Beckett, this time from Molloy, which could describe the spiral of psychological struggle that became the men’s final: “I did my best to go in a circle, hoping in this way to go in a straight line.” It was difficult to watch Wawrinka wrestle with himself to keep his aggressive game turned outward against his opponent, and not against himself. It was difficult to watch Nadal struggle to keep himself in the match, knowing that he would (or should) lose, and painful to see his tears when it was done. It would have been Rafael Nadal’s 14th slam title, equaling Pete Sampras’ tally, and the American was on hand to present the trophy. If there was ever doubt about the psychological law of diminishing returns, all that needs to be done is to compare the crestfallen face of Rafael Nadal to the brimming smile of Dominika Cibulkova. Success is nothing if not relative.

    But if the 2014 Men’s Final was messy, Wawrinka’s joy at winning it was sublime. With this title he becomes the new Swiss No. 1 and World No. 3, and he, like many of us, couldn’t quite believe it, saying he’d find out the next morning whether or not he was dreaming. For me, the disappointment of the final two sets gave way to a vicarious experience of Wawrinka’s happiness in a matter of hours. By the early hours of Monday morning, as I waited in line at the airport to board my flight to New Zealand, it was not only the pleasure of the smiles of two new Australian Open champions, and two wonderful weeks spent in Melbourne that was on my mind, but also the loss of an ending. I didn’t want it to be over. Samuel Beckett once wrote, “tears and laughter, they are so much Gaelic to me.” It’s a sad sentence, not suitable for inspirational body art. Tears and laughter are without clear meaning, and of the past. But I mention it now because tears and laughter are also of a piece. In tennis, there’s no winner without a runner-up plate. And there’s no beginning to a holiday down under without its ending. 

    I’ll see you all back in California.

  • Speechless Saying That

    Speechless Saying That

    Australian Open, Final

    (8) Wawrinka d. (1) Nadal, 6/3 6/2 3/6 6/3

    Stanislas Wawrinka has won the 2014 Australian Open, thereby proving wrong those who’d maintained he couldn’t, a group in which he himself was often prominent. At a single broad stroke, which began in his coiled shoulders and uncurled through that mighty backhand, he has become a Major champion, soared into the top three, and stopped Rafael Nadal from becoming the first man in the Open Era to claim a career Grand Slam twice. Due in part to the circumstance and in part to the innate preposterousness of what he had achieved, Wawrinka’s initial reaction was one of muted disbelief, a response that he managed to sustain through the trophy ceremony, and the endless interviews he subsequently granted to all of the world’s main broadcasters. For all I know he is still wearing an expression of bemused incredulity. He wouldn’t be the only one. It was with unabashed wonder that Brad Gilbert on ESPN declared that Wawrinka actually was the Australian Open champion, adding that he was ‘still kinda speechless saying that.’

    To say that Wawrinka was a little lucky is a little redundant. No one wins a Major without some luck, least of all those who aren’t lucky enough to be Roger Federer, Nadal, Novak Djokovic or Andy Murray, collectively known as the big four. Since the 2004 French Open, only three men besides those four have contrived to win a Major – a sequence of thirty-nine tournaments – and in no case was the eventual winner permitted to amble through a wide open draw. At the 2005 Australian Open Marat Safin defeated the first (Federer) and third (Hewitt) seeds. At the 2009 US Open, Juan Martin del Potro also beat the first (Federer) and third (Nadal) seeds. Wawrinka is the first man to see off the first (Nadal) and second (Djokovic) seeds to win a Major since Sergi Bruguera at the 1993 French Open.

    Boris Becker insisted when probed that he would never concede any side of a draw is easier than the other, but then the words that tumble out of Becker’s mouth often bear no trace of a supervising intellect. Perhaps they should have probed him more thoroughly, or with a sharper implement. Wawrinka’s half of the draw was certainly friendlier than the other half, and he was unquestionably helped by a retirement in the first round (Golubev) and a walkover in the third (Pospisil), especially since it limited his exposure to the apocalyptic conditions of the first week. But that merely helped him survive the early rounds, and no draw is benign that brings one up against Djokovic, especially in Melbourne.

    From the quarterfinal until the second set of the final, when events lurched into a strange place, Wawrinka was mostly majestic. As he did with Robin Soderling, Magnus Norman has performed wonders with Wawrinka, and in a relatively short time has ensconced himself among the coaching elite. Unfortunately, even Norman hadn’t anticipated the sharp dip the final would take – a slow turn through the S-bend – and thus couldn’t have known to prepare his charge accordingly. Perhaps he’d figured that the concept of hitting the ball away from an immobile opponent was too obvious to need saying. It turns out nothing is too obvious in a Slam final. It might have been worth a professional code violation to belatedly deliver this complicated message. Marching onto court and smacking Wawrinka upside the head probably would have risked a default, but Norman must have been sorely tempted. I know I was. I suspect even Nadal was by the end.

    Nadal’s back injury inevitably obliges one to wonder what might have transpired had he remained fit, though I confess I don’t find such speculation worthwhile. There was one set in which both players looked fine, and Wawrinka dominated it, but this was his first Major final and there is little reason to think he could have sustained that level indefinitely. One suspects Nadal eventually would have pegged him back. In any case, Nadal’s injuries are a misted, shifting quagmire in which even well-provisioned expeditions are liable to be waylaid and careen over a precipice. Mountains spring from molehills, or at any rate, blisters become volcanoes. Writers who toil hard to maintain a veil of impartiality can fall to anxious weeping the moment Nadal stumbles. There was a moment when he might have twisted his ankle against Kei Nishikori. It soon turned out that he hadn’t, though not soon enough for some alleged professionals to demonstrate that there are in fact fifty-four stages of grief, and that they’re all boring. By the same token, those insisting that Nadal was not injured are certainly wrong, and in many cases have taken their insistence to contemptible lengths. They are also beyond convincing, being possessed by a special kind of mania. As I say, a quagmire, and not worth the trouble.

    Others have insisted they noticed something awry with Nadal early in the first set, if not in the hit-up. Perhaps I’m obtuse, or I was busy staring awestruck at the fearless guy up the other end, but I confess I didn’t see anything wrong. I did remark to my companions that Nadal appeared to have fallen into the trap he used to with David Nalbandian, which was to pay a famous backhand too much respect. Wawrinka’s backhand is, without doubt, a superb shot, one by which I am often reduced to envy. But his forehand remains the more potent shot, and it’s from that wing that most of his groundstroke winners originate. The semifinal was an especially fine showcase for this. Tomas Berdych heard countless forehands hum past. I suppose it hardly mattered, Wawrinka was fearsome from both sides through the first set. It’s worth remembering that this was the first set he ever took from Nadal, though he nearly didn’t. He fell down 0-40 while serving for it, halfway through a sequence of six missed first serves. Nadal then failed to put another second serve return into play, and it’s easy enough to belief his later claim that his back was already bothering him. Something was wrong somewhere.

    The matched changed completely in the second set, which Wawrinka opened in grand fashion by breaking to love. It wasn’t long after this that Nadal evinced clear signs of distress, leaning over and clutching his back, and at 1/2 availed himself of a long off-court medical timeout. Wawrinka, left in the dark on the bright court, took his frustration out on Carlos Ramos, and was only slightly mollified when tournament referee Wayne McKewan emerged with an explanation. There was some concern that the Swiss was thereby squandering valuable energy. Magnus Norman looked on serenely. Nadal re-emerged, encountering lusty boos from the Rod Laver Arena crowd, behaviour that what won’t go down as its finest. (Nadal later said he understood their frustration, though unlike Bernard Tomic he didn’t call a separate press conference to explain himself.) Nadal’s face looked exactly the way it had in the 2011 Australian Open quarterfinal, when an injury early in the first set combined with a ruthless David Ferrer to destroy his at chance at the ‘Rafa Slam’. Wawrinka worked out his vestigial frustration with a brace of aces, while Nadal commenced lobbing serves over at about 140kmh. Before long Wawrinka had won his second set against Nadal. There was speculation that Nadal would default. I didn’t think he would, but believed that the match was essentially over, assuming Wawrinka would do the smart thing and make the Spaniard run.

    This turned out to be a rather large assumption to make. Although physicists have yet to isolate the mechanism by which this process works, injured players will sometimes transform into a kind of localised gravity-well, drawing every ball inexorably towards them. The only reliable way for the opponent to avoid this effect is to launch their shots ten feet out. For the next set and a half Wawrinka tried both these approaches, with limited success. It recalled Albert Montanes’ flailing and dispiriting loss to a crippled Fabio Fognini at Roland Garros three years ago, and Mikhail Kukushkin’s near-implosion against Gael Monfils at the Australian Open. In both cases the latter player could barely move, and was reduced to windmilling his arms at any ball that strayed within reach, generally to devastating effect. In much the same mood, Nadal hardly bothered running for any ball more than a few metres away, but swung lustily at any that landed nearby, which, somehow, was nearly all of them. Thus we discovered yet again that the world number one in a reckless mood is perfectly capable of striking fabulous winners off both sides from neutral balls, leaving some of us to wish that he’d play like this more often. Nadal still missed plenty, however, enabling Wawrinka to achieve multiple breakpoints in every other game, whereupon Wawrinka’s return would explore the bottom of the net or the unscuffed part of the court beyond the Melbourne sign. Nadal’s pace and mobility began gradually to improve, and he won the third set. Wawrinka took to shouting at himself, but not in English. Magnus Norman looked on serenely.

    A match that began electrifyingly for Wawrinka, and continued dismally for Nadal, now spiralled into absurdity for both. Nadal, by his own admission, was mainly continuing for the fans who’d paid a lot of money to be there, but he must have wondered if he wouldn’t be doing them a kindness to end it immediately. Then again, I imagine by this time he was harbouring a few desperate dreams of victory. Aside from his first serve, which Wawrinka could barely return anyway, the Spaniard was starting to play a great deal better. On the other hand, Wawrinka, aside from his serve, had lost all coherence, and his eyes grew clouded with dread. The 2004 French Open final was invoked – always a sure sign that the ropes binding reality together had begun to fray. Jim Courier in commentary pointed out, astutely, that Wawrinka could have lost the final in straight sets and still regarded the tournament as a triumph, but to lose it from this point would be a fiasco. Wawrinka was playing like someone aware of no other fact. He somehow broke, but followed up this accomplishment, monumental in the circumstances, with the worst service game of the modern era, and lost his serve to love. He broke again, more decisively. The crowd went crazy – demented might be a better word – having stared once too often into the abyss. Wawrinka served it out to love, the way exactly no one assumed he would. In deference to his wounded opponent, his celebration was diffident. Magnus Norman leapt to his feet, exultant, and threw his arms around Severin Luthi. Nadal had been granted an unlooked-for hour on court to come to terms with the near-certainty of defeat, but he still looked quite stricken, a look he retained throughout the trophy ceremony.

    Thomas Oh, Kia Motor’s ineffable representative, was so moved by what he’d seen that he kept his speech down to a few minutes, instead of its usual hour. Both players spoke well, though their efforts hardly compared to Li Na’s masterpiece from the night before. Where before they’d booed him, the RLA crowd now hurled their adoration down on Nadal, who fought to quell his tears but lost. Pete Sampras was on hand to dole out the silverware. The official reason for this was because it is the twentieth anniversary of his first Australian Open title. No one failed to grasp the deeper significance, however, which was that, had Nadal won, the world number one would have equalled the American’s Major tally of fourteen. It brought to mind the 2009 final, in which Federer failed to win his expected fourteenth Major. We were in turn reminded that the French Open is only months away. I doubt whether anyone believes Nadal won’t surpass Sampras before long.

    For now, however, the important number isn’t fourteen, but one. Stan Wawrinka, who at some point regressed down the evolutionary chain from being ‘Stan the Man’ to became the ‘Stanimal’, has won his first Major, and has earned his place among the sport’s elite. I, too, feel kind of speechless saying that.

  • Stunner Down Under – Wawrinka Wins Australian Open

    Stunner Down Under – Wawrinka Wins Australian Open

    AO ATP Winner - Stan

    Stan Wawrinka, erstwhile Swiss No. 2, shocked Rafael Nadal and the tennis world by taking the trophy in Melbourne over the world No. 1:  6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3. In doing so, he became the rare player to win a Major outside of the Top 4 in what has otherwise been nearly decade of dominance by (mostly) Federer and Nadal, an ardent Djokovic, and a sprinkling of Murray.  (Oh, yes, and one by Juan Martin del Potro.)

    Wawrinka was ranked No. 8 going into the tournament, and will be No. 3 when the rankings come out on Monday. He’s spent a good deal of his career under the shadow of Roger Federer, but he has emerged into the sunshine today. He toppled the defending champion, Novak Djokovic, in the quarterfinals, and bested the top seed today, becoming the only man to beat Djokovic and Nadal in the same Slam.

    He started the match with a great calm and focus, and took the first set handily, despite not having a great first serve percentage. Then he broke Nadal at love in the first game of the second. He held for a 2-0 lead, when, on his own service game, Nadal seemed to tweak his back. He held serve, but went off the court for a medical timeout. When he came back, his movement and serve were clearly compromised. Speculation rose as to whether the Spaniard might retire. Wawrinka won the set 6-2.

    However, in the third set, Nadal loosened, while Wawrinka tightened. The Swiss had 19 unforced errors when the set was done, and had basically handed it to Nadal:  6-3.

    The fourth set was on serve until Wawrinka broke in the sixth game, but Nadal broke straight back, raising the stakes, and the hopes that it might actually go the distance. But Wawrinka found his nerve, and broke again for 5-3, then served out the match.

    Nadal had been gunning for a lot of history in this final, but it was not to be. Stan the Man, as he’s known, or the “Stanimal,” made his own bit of history today.

    Photo credit:  Marianne Bevis (Creative Commons License)