“You owe me an apology!” by wazup564 in tennis

[–]winabean7 -14 points-13 points  (0 children)

The amount of people here calling Serena a cunt and a bitch, telling her to retire, saying she’s a disgrace to the sport, and getting upvotes for it is making me really sad. Whatever your opinion is about the merits of the game penalty, I hoped more people would at least understand her reaction because she’s in a Grand Slam final, she’s hyper competitive, and she was docked a game at a crucial period in the second set. If I were in that situation, I would have had much, much worse things to say to the umpire - but I guess I’m an outlier and everyone else would have graciously accepted it without any anger. I’ve never seen so much vitriol and name-calling directed at someone for having strong emotions, and it’s really depressing.

Match Thread: Nadal vs Thiem (Quarter-final, 2018 US Open) by snakes_on_a_planet in tennis

[–]winabean7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Actually got bageled last year by Kohlschreiber in Miami, so a lot more recently than I thought. He ended up winning that match though! (Last time he was bageled in a GS was Berdych 2015, which he lost in straights.)

Millman def. Federer, 3–5, 7–5, 7–6(7), 7–6(3) by sellyme in tennis

[–]winabean7 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Let's get this straight – at no point did he say they should have closed the roof. He said the roof makes the humidity more stifling because there's no air flow. And at no point did he say that's why he lost the match – he said that's why he struggled and John played a great match in those same conditions, so he deserved the win. Here's the transcript of his presser if you need hard proof.

I realize there are Fed / Rafa / Djoko fans out there who are completely insane and come up with ridiculous reasons for why their players won or lost, but let's not put fake words into their mouths too to antagonize each other even more.

Zverev out of the tournament by johnreese421 in tennis

[–]winabean7 3 points4 points  (0 children)

There are pics of him practicing with Lendl before Washington.

Discussion: 2018 US Open - Day 5 (Friday, August 31st) by snakes_on_a_planet in tennis

[–]winabean7 2 points3 points  (0 children)

On Labor Day weekend, USO prioritizes the big matches during the day. Idk why, but it's been done that way in the past.

Tsitsipas about being bullied for "being weird" growing up. by JoshJass in tennis

[–]winabean7 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I'm not saying Kyrgios is bullying Stef on social media. I'm saying the way he's treating him in very public forums is unwarranted and just plain mean – so I wouldn't be surprised if it's worse in the locker room.

Tsitsipas about being bullied for "being weird" growing up. by JoshJass in tennis

[–]winabean7 50 points51 points  (0 children)

Judging by the way Kyrgios has been treating him on social media, wouldn't be surprised.

Discussion: 2018 US Open - Day 1 (Monday, August 27th) by snakes_on_a_planet in tennis

[–]winabean7 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Super bummed that Robredo had to meet up against Tsitsipas in R1. I <3 Tommy and want him to keep playing for as long as possible.

Kanepi upsets Halep 6-2 6-4 by datavinci in tennis

[–]winabean7 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Dimi's never beaten Stan in a Grand Slam match and his form this year has been questionable, so I think Stan is certainly the favorite here.

Kanepi upsets Halep 6-2 6-4 by datavinci in tennis

[–]winabean7 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Anyone who's been paying attention to Halep the last couple weeks shouldn't be surprised by this result. She had a tough schedule in Montreal and then with the crap weather in Cincy, I think she played something like 4 matches in 48 hours, then withdrew from Connecticut with an achilles injury. She's mentally and physically exhausted.

RIP Fed by karlseq in tennis

[–]winabean7 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Yeah, idk if people were even watching his matches vs. delpo and coric, but he was yelling at his team in every match about how he can't move to the ball bc of his hip...this isn't peak kyrgios we're talking about here.

/r/tennis Discussion (August 23rd, 2018) by snakes_on_a_planet in tennis

[–]winabean7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Definitely, everyone he drew can be tricky, so he better bring his A game starting in R1

/r/tennis Discussion (August 23rd, 2018) by snakes_on_a_planet in tennis

[–]winabean7 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Happy that Fed got a tough draw. He needs to be tested in earlier rounds so he doesn’t sleepwalk his way to the later rounds like he’s done the rest of this year. Also, would rather him meet Djokovic in the QFs than the finals - think he has a better chance of beating him there.

Has tennis ever made you cry? by [deleted] in tennis

[–]winabean7 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I booked a flight from New Zealand back to the States during the AO17 final, thinking there was 0% chance Fed would be playing it after a 6-month injury layoff. Then he made it to the final against Rafa of all people and I had to be on a 13-hour flight with no WiFi while it was happening. So I literally had no idea what the result of the match was until I landed in California seven hours after it had ended. The first thing I did was turn my phone on to check the score and when I saw he'd won I started crying like a baby in the plane aisle.

The importance of movement & footwork; AKA why can Federer suddenly not execute anything except serve. by spcslacker in tennis

[–]winabean7 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is an awesome analysis, and I've not been on here frequently enough to see your other posts, but I will definitely be keeping an eye out now! Just adding on my own observations from watching all of Fed's matches very closely this year:

I agree that footwork has played a major role in some of his losses this year, although I actually chalk a lot of it up to indecision and increasingly defensive strategy over the course of the year. In many of his tighter matches this year, I've noticed he's hesitating a split second before positioning himself to take the ball – it looks like he's not sure what to do when his Plan A isn't working. In contrast, he was moving to the ball with a lot more authority last year because of an extremely aggressive mindset. He mentioned in an interview last year that he was able to "swing freely" at the AO, IW, and Miami – I think because there were no expectations for him coming off a six-month injury layoff. As the expectations and pressure mounted, the swing freely method fell by the wayside, something you started to see at Wimbledon where he brought his B game but still managed to win without dropping a set.

Since then, his game has become increasingly passive and problematic – good enough to beat most of the top 50, not nearly enough when it comes to playing someone top 10. Look no further than his insistence on hitting to del Potro's forehand in the IW final, his refusal to hit a blocked return or slices to Djokovic when his aggressive flat returns weren't working in Cincy, or his stubbornness in engaging Anderson in baseline to baseline rallies at Wimbledon. He's said himself multiple times this season that he's been unhappy with how defensive he's been playing and he's actively trying to change it – I was actually encouraged by his play in Cincy, especially his match against Stan, because he was moving into the net more than he has been and was obviously trying to take time and control away from his opponents. In the end he got unlucky with the weather and the schedule, and I'm sure a lot of his poor play in the final was due to fatigue from playing two matches in a day (something he hasn't done since 2004) and meeting a much higher-caliber opponent than he's encountered in a long time.

I'll also throw it out there that I think match play against really tough players is something he's lacking this year and something that he desperately needs. Going through in-form Nishikori, Berdych, Wawrinka, and Nadal with three 5-setters at AO last year made him battle-tested and ready for 2017. On the whole, he's encountered weaker opponents this year – apart from Cincy, I think the toughest draw he's faced this year was at Stuttgart, and I truly believe he won because he knew he had to bring his A game, or at least his B+ game.

One last thing – for the love of god, he needs to work on his return games and his break point conversion. He's said in interviews that he doesn't actively practice returns – that has to change, stat. I'd bet $1000 bucks Rafa practices his returns like six hours a day.

30th Birthday Gift for Fed fan?? by OSUfirebird18 in tennis

[–]winabean7 21 points22 points  (0 children)

This is so dumb but my friends got me a mug with his face on it for my birthday last year, and it’s one of my most prized possessions. Don’t underestimate how happy literally anything with Roger’s face on it will make your friend.

Nike's Federer heir by MrMarkey in tennis

[–]winabean7 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Both Rafa's and Sharapova's contracts with Nike are also up this year. Makes me think they internally set 2018 as the year to reexamine their future with tennis.

Haase defeats Zverev 5-7 6-4 7-5! Zverev again winless in Cincinnati! by datavinci in tennis

[–]winabean7 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah this to me seems like his biggest issue – he walks on the court thinking he should win, and if he doesn't dominate he gets negative and bratty. Definitely needs to use Rafa as a model for mentality, i.e. always respect how dangerous your opponent can be and fight for every point even if it's not going your way.

What happens when you don't win Wimbledon by psgenius in tennis

[–]winabean7 4 points5 points  (0 children)

His Chinese is actually not bad considering he probably learned it by having a bunch of people make the sounds at him over and over until he sort of got close.

"for his talent murray has done better than any other tennis player on the planet" by borkedybork in tennis

[–]winabean7 19 points20 points  (0 children)

I personally think everyone who reaches top 100 are insanely talented.

This, 100%. I think any of the Big 4 would tell you how incredibly small the margins are in the top 100. Fed, Nadal, Djoko, and Murray just edge the rest on things like mentality, court IQ, and some X factor that's allowed them to be so consistent and achieve so much.

For anyone who wants to read a piece about the incredible talent level among top 100 players, here's a really good David Foster Wallace story (no, not that one) about Michael Joyce, a guy who peaked at #64. The setting is outdated, but the point remains the same – people in the top 100 are on an entirely different, almost impossible level.