
OMG, you're so off! I've
written extensively on the subject of where my head's been at since 1971 concerning tennis; my playing, fave players, watching & teaching, then the
recordbook situation! Winning majors of any kind was far from their importance now! They were actually skipped by many top players who refused that journey
"down under!" Since you reference Sampras, I'll re-iterate what s/b our mutual embarrassment proclaiming him the
"All Time GOAT" after he overtook Emerson winning 2000 Wimbledon crown! He was anointed w/o a FO Final on his resume! He went over 2 yrs. w/o a win of any kind; hence the surprise when he took 2002 USO over his pigeon, Andre Agassi! It didn't bother me at all that Roger beat Pete the yr. before at Wimbledon! Back in the day it wasn't that much of a surprise when a top player dropped like a rock in the rankings! The worst this happening w/ Mats Wilander from #1 in '88 to obscurity thru the mid 90's! Federer took over soon after, skipping by Pete's 14 Majors in less than 9 yrs. winning '09 Wimbledon over his pigeon A-Rod! I was still his biggest fan! I started getting bothered w/ the faux rivalry of Fedal that was jammed down our throats! Novak came along & changed the dynamics of the ATG race forever accomplishing records unimaginable just a decade or so ago! Watchng Novak at the moment playing Kecmanovic on Centre Court! He still looks sharp at 38, playing
his game embarrassing youngsters 15 yrs. his junior!




The Australian Open wasn't a "real" major until the mid-80s, really. I've examined this closely and while there are one or two years in the 69-82 range that were closer to the other Slams in terms of the draw, most were basically glorified ATP 500s. Laver's win in 1969 was a bit better as he had to beat Emerson, Stolle, Roche, and Gimeno. But even that was only an R32, so at most it was like a better Masters or Tour Finals. 1983-88 was stronger, but it didn't really become commensurate with the other Slams until 1989-90ish. The French Open was also a bit uneven in the 70s, but it was still pretty strong.
As for Sampras, calling him the GOAT pre-Federer is the highest form of "Slam reductionism." Didn't anyone know about Rod Laver? Pancho Gonzales? Bill Tilden? Even Ken Rosewall could give Sampras a run for the money, as far as career accomplishments.
I know, Slams are the big prize - but other records matter too, especially when considering guys who played in the professional era. Pancho's 7 World Pro Championship titles is among the more impressive records in tennis history. the Pro Tours were grueling and Pancho dominated them for seven tours in a row. While they were a very different format, each was almost a tennis season unto itself. The only thing comparable in the Open Era was the second and final year of the Tennis Championship Classic in 1971, when Laver beat 13 top players in a row - sort of like a double Slam. According to Ultimate Tennis Statistics, it is the hardest title of the Open Era.
Anyhow, I see Sampras more in a group with Borg, McEnroe and Lendl. He might be the best of the four if you want to emphasize Slams, but I'm not sure he was. All four were inner circle greats, and mostly separated from the Big Three by longevity rather than peak dominance. Borg in 78-80, Mac in 81 and 84, and Lendl in 86-87 were all more dominant than Sampras ever was. Not by a huge margin, but they all maxed at two Slam seasons, but Borg, Mac, and Lendl went "deeper" - with more big titles and titles overall, and generally better winning percentages. Jimmy Connors is a step behind these three.
So to revisit the old GOAT game, here is my latest view:
Tier 1A: The Big Three, with Novak the "top point" in the triangle, and Federer and Nadal basically equals as the bottom points.
Tier 1B: Past GOATs - Tilden, Gonzales, and Laver in chronological order. They aren't necessarily less "GOATish" as the Big Three, but played in very different contexts, too different to compare. But Laver gets the same "triangle tip" position as Novak.
Tier 2A: Inner Circle Greats - Borg, Mac, Lendl, Sampras, (Rosewall belongs here if you take his full career into account).
Tier 3: All-time Greats - Connors, Wilander, Edberg, Becker, Agassi.
Tier 4: Lesser or "Quasi-Greats" - Ashe, Newcombe, Nastase, Smith, Courier, Murray, maybe Kuerten and Hewitt, etc.
Tier 5: Near Greats (aka, Best of the Rest) - Kodes, Gerulaitis, Chang, Ivanisevic, Safin, Roddick, Del Potro, Wawrinka, Medvedev, maybe one or two others.
While I'm comfortable assigning Tilden, Gonzales, Laver as GOATs, I'm less willing to assign tiers to other past greats - Budge certainly belongs with the Inner Circle greats, but it is harder to rank Vines, Kramer, Riggs, Emerson, Cochet, Perry, Drobny, etc - let along Wilding and other pre-pro era greats.
A few players are "cuspy." I think Connors could go in either 2 or 3, for instance. Murray might deserve to be in tier 3, also. Same with Newcombe.
Tier 5 are essentially the best players that aren't greats. To be a great, you have to have been the best player on tour for at least a year. Kuerten and Hewitt might belong with these guys, as they were the #1 (Hewitt twice) but it was largely by default as it was between the peaks of prime Sampras/Agassi and Federer, in that "weak era" of 1998-02, especially 00-02.
And then there are the under-achievers and the anomalies. Of recent players, Stan Wawrinka is the hardest to rank because for three years he was able to reach a "GOAT-esque" level, but only at three Slams. Or we can look at David Nalbandian, who is arguably the greatest under-achiever in tennis history. He displayed flashes of brilliance and has one of the best bragging rights in tennis history: the only player to beat the Big Three in a single tournament. His level in that tournament, and at times in other tournaments, was as good as anything we've seen from the Big Three. But he didn't even come close to sustaining it, and was even more of an under-achiever than Marat Safin who at least managed two Slams. But if I could see one career do-over with better coaching and mentality, it would probably be Nalbandian, with Safin a close second. Both should have been, at least, Tier 3 players.