When you have results you are great, with no results you are talented, happy? I know which one a player would rather be.
I aint gong down that rabbit hole in regards to comparing the talents of the Swiss maestro vs the very under achieving Argentinean..we all been there way too many times with Cali. However..Kobe vs LeBron..i wouldn't say that Kobe is a better athlete but if i had to choose one player for one game or for the championship series. I would say Kobe was more clutch and closer to being compared to Jordan..@shawnbm said it well, but I will add a few things. @calitennis127 , it seems that you're essentially saying that in a neutral context--one without any pressure, like a practice session--David Nalbandian is actually a technically superior player to Roger Federer. That the difference in their accomplishments mainly boils down to Roger's ability to compete. Yes? You might agree with some of shawnbm's refinements, but you seem to generally believe that Nalbandian's technically ability is superior and, presumably, as good as the tennis world has ever seen?
This is actually somewhat of a non-falsifiable statement. In other words, it is hard to prove you wrong because there is no real way to know, unless we had a panel of knowledgable judges watch each perform in practice sessions many times.
I am also reminded of the Harlem Globetrotters, who can do all manner of things with a basketball but would get slaughtered by any professional--or college--team. Nalbandian isn't quite the Harlem Globetrotters, but the analogy serves insofar as it points out that a huge aspect of performance is the ability to compete - to translate those technical skills to a competitive match.
I would also argue that a major part of Roger's greatness is that he can do pretty much anything well. He does a few things amazingly well, but everything else he does at least very well. He has no weaknesses, no gaps in his ability. I don't think this was true of Nalbandian.
It is also interesting to compare Nalbandian and Nadal, because Nadal has been accused of being less skilled than his actual results would entail. But here's the thing: a large part of Rafa's greatness is his ability to come up with a two-handed backhand screamer across court, or one of those down the line forehands, or the right serve at the right time. Rafa is so money when it really matters - and that is talent, that is ability, that is greatness. In fact, it may be that by comparing Nalbandian and Nadal, we have the perfect context to differentiate what makes a player great vs. what makes a player simply very good (and talented).
Another thing I will have to admit , Roger’s tennis IQ is off the charts.. He just so damn Smarter than anyone else since John McEnroe.. When you are 37 years old and beating guys that almost half your age, its not by accident. I always thought that one of Rafa’s greatest achievement was to be able to find a way to beat Roger and to solve the Novak riddle 2 times in his career. (I am referring to the two streaks of Novak’s mastery over Rafa). However, the way that Roger has flipped the switch on Rafa is truly admirable. Now I know how the Pistons, and other NBA fans felt when they’re teams had to face Jordan in a basketball series or game.Gary Player said: "The harder I work, the luckier I get." Derek Jeter: "Other players may be more talented than you, but there's no excuse for you not to work harder." Or the old joke: "How do you get to Carnegie Hall?" "Practice." @calitennis127 's whole vibe is that there is some pure thing called "talent," and it should be venerated for what it is. Notwithstanding results. I know Fedfans can lean on his talent a bit, in the GOAT conversation, but it doesn't seem that any one of them here is not also putting in for that nth degree, of commitment and work ethic. Roger wouldn't have merely been Dimitrov without his work ethic and commitment, but he would have likely been closer. @GameSetAndMath, I do rather like that metaphor of 211 v. 212. I think it well-describes the champion's mentality.
@shawnbm said it well, but I will add a few things. @calitennis127 , it seems that you're essentially saying that in a neutral context--one without any pressure, like a practice session--David Nalbandian is actually a technically superior player to Roger Federer.
That the difference in their accomplishments mainly boils down to Roger's ability to compete. Yes?
but you seem to generally believe that Nalbandian's technically ability is superior and, presumably, as good as the tennis world has ever seen?
Nalbandian had two forehands while Federer only had one
Not only in a practice session, but also in a regular match, as demonstrated by his 5-0 start against Federer before the two got big reputations that became psychological weights. Federer has better serving technique but in every other area Nalbandian is equal or better. The big difference is the backhand; Nalbandian had two forehands while Federer only had one.
No, that it mainly had to do with the fact that Federer has hit far less double faults and has made a greater percentage of first serves (and also that he was physically more durable/less prone to injury).
Correct. But how can anyone really dispute this? It is plain as day. Steve Tignor said in a tennis.com piece during the 2010 Paris Masters that he has never seen anyone - not even Federer - look as dominant as Nalbandian when "the Argentine has it rolling." I'm not really sure what the debate is because even Federer more or less admitted that Nalbandian was a better player from the baseline.
I wouldn't use Steve Tignor as a tennis expert to defend your argument.Lol. Could it be possible that in the early years of Nalbandian and Fed's rivalry Fed hadn't worked out the game plan as to how to conquer him. When he did it became extremely one sided. Same can be said about Hewitt. I won't argue as to who was the better player from the back of the court. I'll give you that. I have plenty of solace as to the greatness of Fed and where his legacy is in the sport. On another note I'm glad your back on the board. Don't always agree but always like reading your posts...Not only in a practice session, but also in a regular match, as demonstrated by his 5-0 start against Federer before the two got big reputations that became psychological weights. Federer has better serving technique but in every other area Nalbandian is equal or better. The big difference is the backhand; Nalbandian had two forehands while Federer only had one.
No, that it mainly had to do with the fact that Federer has hit far less double faults and has made a greater percentage of first serves (and also that he was physically more durable/less prone to injury).
Correct. But how can anyone really dispute this? It is plain as day. Steve Tignor said in a tennis.com piece during the 2010 Paris Masters that he has never seen anyone - not even Federer - look as dominant as Nalbandian when "the Argentine has it rolling." I'm not really sure what the debate is because even Federer more or less admitted that Nalbandian was a better player from the baseline.
Same can be said about Hewitt
Two problems here. One, you're ignoring the other 14 matches, which Roger won 11 of. Do those not count?
What it seems happened is that Nalbandian plateaued but Roger took it up another level, surpassing Nalbandian.
The other problem is you're saying that the H2H is an accurate representation of overall ability.
Do you think Rafa is significantly more talented than Roger?
Don't double faults have something to do with playing under pressure?
Thank you for pointing this out. If we take Cali's argument our we supposed to believe that Hewitt is also more talented that Roger? Good grief...
Hewitt bloomed earlier than Federer and Nalbandian. Not a sensible comparison. Federer and Nalbandian were direct peers.
That's irrelevant. Two players can start playing at the same time and one takes to it quicker than the other. Doesn't mean that the other doesn't become the better player. People adapt to the mens tour at varying speeds. Unlike some on here would have you believe there's no spreadsheet or algorithm that defines a set pattern. In actual fact the less talented player or the one with a more limited arsenal is often the one who is able to maximise his abilities quicker. Not saying that's the case in this discussion but it's a viable scenario
What I maintained all along was that if Nalbandian served at 60-70% (like Fed and Nadal), and he kept his double faults to no more than 2-3 match (like Fed and Nadal), he was unplayable and unbeatable.
one could easily argue the exact opposite. Often more talented players lose to lesser player repeatedly until they get their head together. I think that's more likely to be the case in the Nalbandian - Federer match up. it makes no sense for the lesser player to figure out the lesser player later. If the talent differential is truly what you believeIt is a viable scenario but Nalbandian did not jump way out ahead of Federer in their careers to a point where they were on two different levels. Federer was having substantial success and Nalbandian was still beating him.
Either way, my point to El Dude was that Nalbandian was not simply a practice player hitting nice shots off a ball machine. Starting his career 5-0 (including two Slam wins) against his direct peer Roger Federer was no joke and an indicator of immense ability. And in those matches you could see Nalbandian demonstrating a capacity for the most esoteric skills.
Just lol at Federberg and his famous eyeball test... What a useless gloryhunting mug :lulz2: and sure sure, Federer had to get his head together against the mental giant Nalbandian I mean it's common knowledge Nalbandian was one of the laziest players, he was the lesser talent too, according to Federberg... Then he had to have something he won those matches with...... must have been superior calculation skills or something like that.....one could easily argue the exact opposite. Often more talented players lose to lesser player repeatedly until they get their head together. I think that's more likely to be the case in the Nalbandian - Federer match up. it makes no sense for the lesser player to figure out the lesser player later. If the talent differential is truly what you believe