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I've got a blog article or two in the hopper that are focusing on Roger Federer's generation, which I'm defining as players born between 1979 and 1983 (or within two calendar years of Roger's 1981 birth year), ranging from Wesley Moodie to Fernando Verdasco chronologically. Yes, that means that Tommy Haas, Radek Stepanek, Ruben Ramirez Hidalgo and Michael Russell are not included - they were all born in 1978 and are of the prior generation, what could be called "Generation Kuerten" (1974-78).
Anyhow, I devised a little system (surprise, surprise) to rank them in order of career greatness, with the list below. Please take a look and offer up any comments that you might have, but in particular how you feel about the order and if there are any noteworthy players missing. By "noteworthy" it really is anyone born in that range, but they probably should have at least ranked in the top 50 or so and/or won at least an ATP 250 and/or appeared in a Slam QF. As far as I can tell, all of the players listed have at least met those criteria, or if they haven't they're still active and thus earned inclusion (e.g. Estrella Burgos, Chiudinelli, and Robert).
Please note that the system I used weighs career greatness, not peak greatness. Thus, for example, you can see Roddick over Hewitt because his post-peak career was much better than Hewitt's and helped him catch-up (although in my system they are almost exactly even in points). If I were ranking by peak, I would probably have Hewitt and Safin ahead of Roddick, and Nalbandian and probably Coria ahead of Ferrer and Davydenko, but again, this list is focused on career accomplishments.
Anyhow, here's the list - enjoy:
1. Roger Federer
2. Andy Roddick
3. Lleyton Hewitt
4. Marat Safin
5. Juan Carlos Ferrero
6. David Ferrer
7. Nikolay Davydenko
8. David Nalbandian
9. Guillermo Coria
10. Tommy Robredo
11. Fernando Gonzalez
12. Mikhail Youzhny
13. Ivan Ljubicic
14. James Blake
15. Fernando Verdasco
16. Juan Ignacio Chela
17. Mardy Fish
18. Nicolas Massu
19. Jurgen Melzer
20. Feliciano Lopez
21. Ivo Karlovic
22. Philipp Kohlschreiber
23. Jose Acasuso
24. Michael Llodra
25. Albert Montanes
26. Jarkko Niemenin
27. Paradorn Srichaphan
28. Xavier Malisse
29. Taylor Dent
30. Paul Henri Mathieu
31. Florian Mayer
32. Guillermo Garcia Lopez
33. Luis Horna
34. Filippo Volandri
35. Victor Hanescu
36. Nicolas Mahut
37. Carlos Berlocq
38. Wesley Moodie
39. Julien Benneteau
40. Yen Hsun Lu
41. Benjamin Becker
42. Lukasz Kubot
43. Gilles Muller
44. Jan Hernych
45. Potito Starace
46. Michael Berrer
47. Alejandro Falla
48. Paolo Lorenzi
49. Marco Chiudinelli
50. Stephane Robert
51. Victor Estrella Burgos
Please note that in the system I used, there's a long gentle curve starting around Blake or Verdasco, with very little difference among similarly ranked players. There's a sizeable gap between Nalbandian and Coria, and another between Ferrero and Ferrer, and of course a monumental gap between Federer and everyone else.
Also, I tried to include as many of Generation Federer as I could find that fit my general criteria. Some of the above actually don't; for instance, Chiudinelli, Robert, and Estrella Burgos have never ranked in the top 50, made it to a Slam QF or won an ATP 250 or higher, but I thought they warranted inclusion because they're all still active.
Anyhow, I devised a little system (surprise, surprise) to rank them in order of career greatness, with the list below. Please take a look and offer up any comments that you might have, but in particular how you feel about the order and if there are any noteworthy players missing. By "noteworthy" it really is anyone born in that range, but they probably should have at least ranked in the top 50 or so and/or won at least an ATP 250 and/or appeared in a Slam QF. As far as I can tell, all of the players listed have at least met those criteria, or if they haven't they're still active and thus earned inclusion (e.g. Estrella Burgos, Chiudinelli, and Robert).
Please note that the system I used weighs career greatness, not peak greatness. Thus, for example, you can see Roddick over Hewitt because his post-peak career was much better than Hewitt's and helped him catch-up (although in my system they are almost exactly even in points). If I were ranking by peak, I would probably have Hewitt and Safin ahead of Roddick, and Nalbandian and probably Coria ahead of Ferrer and Davydenko, but again, this list is focused on career accomplishments.
Anyhow, here's the list - enjoy:
1. Roger Federer
2. Andy Roddick
3. Lleyton Hewitt
4. Marat Safin
5. Juan Carlos Ferrero
6. David Ferrer
7. Nikolay Davydenko
8. David Nalbandian
9. Guillermo Coria
10. Tommy Robredo
11. Fernando Gonzalez
12. Mikhail Youzhny
13. Ivan Ljubicic
14. James Blake
15. Fernando Verdasco
16. Juan Ignacio Chela
17. Mardy Fish
18. Nicolas Massu
19. Jurgen Melzer
20. Feliciano Lopez
21. Ivo Karlovic
22. Philipp Kohlschreiber
23. Jose Acasuso
24. Michael Llodra
25. Albert Montanes
26. Jarkko Niemenin
27. Paradorn Srichaphan
28. Xavier Malisse
29. Taylor Dent
30. Paul Henri Mathieu
31. Florian Mayer
32. Guillermo Garcia Lopez
33. Luis Horna
34. Filippo Volandri
35. Victor Hanescu
36. Nicolas Mahut
37. Carlos Berlocq
38. Wesley Moodie
39. Julien Benneteau
40. Yen Hsun Lu
41. Benjamin Becker
42. Lukasz Kubot
43. Gilles Muller
44. Jan Hernych
45. Potito Starace
46. Michael Berrer
47. Alejandro Falla
48. Paolo Lorenzi
49. Marco Chiudinelli
50. Stephane Robert
51. Victor Estrella Burgos
Please note that in the system I used, there's a long gentle curve starting around Blake or Verdasco, with very little difference among similarly ranked players. There's a sizeable gap between Nalbandian and Coria, and another between Ferrero and Ferrer, and of course a monumental gap between Federer and everyone else.
Also, I tried to include as many of Generation Federer as I could find that fit my general criteria. Some of the above actually don't; for instance, Chiudinelli, Robert, and Estrella Burgos have never ranked in the top 50, made it to a Slam QF or won an ATP 250 or higher, but I thought they warranted inclusion because they're all still active.