2012 has seen the top ATP pros taking things up a notch. Novak Djokovic's 2011 was superb, but he may have peaked in Australia this year; outslugging and outlasting a rejuvenated Rafael Nadal in the longest major final in tennis history. Nadal bounced back from that epic loss with another claycourt campaign for the ages, claiming his record-breaking 7th title at Roland Garros (backing up his 8th consecutive title at the Monte Carlo Masters). In the process, Nadal effectively ended any contrarian conversations about his King of Clay moniker. Not to be outdone, Roger Federer put perhaps his most impressive record even further from the reach of mere mortals, winning his 17th major at Wimbledon. Andy Murray even got into the act. After years playing the lovable loser of the ATP's dominant Big Four, the Scot finally earned his stripes with Olympic singles gold (denying Federer in the final) and a maiden major at the US Open. Will the world number five, David Ferrer, end this ATP season with yet another crowning achievement, or will sixth-ranked Tomas Berdych, deny him and in the process, secure a shard of greatness all his own?
Showing posts with label 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2012. Show all posts
16 November, 2012
Five or Six?
2012 has seen the top ATP pros taking things up a notch. Novak Djokovic's 2011 was superb, but he may have peaked in Australia this year; outslugging and outlasting a rejuvenated Rafael Nadal in the longest major final in tennis history. Nadal bounced back from that epic loss with another claycourt campaign for the ages, claiming his record-breaking 7th title at Roland Garros (backing up his 8th consecutive title at the Monte Carlo Masters). In the process, Nadal effectively ended any contrarian conversations about his King of Clay moniker. Not to be outdone, Roger Federer put perhaps his most impressive record even further from the reach of mere mortals, winning his 17th major at Wimbledon. Andy Murray even got into the act. After years playing the lovable loser of the ATP's dominant Big Four, the Scot finally earned his stripes with Olympic singles gold (denying Federer in the final) and a maiden major at the US Open. Will the world number five, David Ferrer, end this ATP season with yet another crowning achievement, or will sixth-ranked Tomas Berdych, deny him and in the process, secure a shard of greatness all his own?
25 October, 2012
Total Eclipse of the Star
Everyone knows tennis is a cruel mistress, most of all the
players. She’s exacting, calculating and
fickle. Serves rained down at 130 mph are judged within millimeters; deciding
matches, tournaments, seasons. Every
week the players (and anyone who cares to look) know exactly where they stand
in the grand scheme of things; the tour’s 52-week rolling rankings, virtually
unique in sport, do a fair job of minimizing conjecture. Tennis moves on with devastating speed. No sooner does a player kiss the championship
hardware does the process to replace him begin, a process known all too well by
Juan Carlos Ferrero
12 October, 2012
Wilson Congratulates Roger Federer
Check out the new Wilson commercial congratulating Roger Federer on his record-breaking run as the ATP World No. 1. Quite a nice tribute to the Swiss champion.
31 August, 2012
Watching Them Go
Which is more heartbreaking, watching someone waste away to a shadow of their former selves before finally succumbing; or to have them gone suddenly, unexpectedly, in a flash? Sudden loss serves up grief with a shock chaser; forcing you to stop abruptly, feel intensely, process immediately. Extended farewells on the other hand, can be draining, threatening to blot out the memory of everything that came prior. When the farewell drags on there's a desire to celebrate what once was, but simultaneously, an impetus to avert your eyes from the slow motion car crash that progresses in increasingly gruesome detail.
Ladies and gentlemen, the farewells of Andy Roddick and Kim Clijsters in black and white.
Let's dispense with pretense for a second. By the time it finally, officially happened, we were glad to see Kim Clijsters hang it up. We're not "haters," disgruntled Justine Henin fans or heartless bastards. To tell the truth, we were just sick to death of watching Clijsters' torturous death march to the end of her career. The Belgian is a great champion, a World No. 1, a four-time major winner and from everything we hear (we've never graced her presence) a class act if ever there were one. Not to mention, her game has always been fun to watch. At her best, her nimble mobility rivaled that of Jelena Jankovic, while her unbridled power allowed her to stand shoulder to shoulder with the WTA glamazons and be much more than cannon fodder. Clijsters' resume makes her a slam dunk Hall-of-Famer in her own right.
Disclaimers aside, Clijsters has been retiring since she unretired. She was quick to point to the London Olympics as her goal and probably the signpost whereupon reaching, she would hang it up. It was initially inspiring to see her return to the tour as a mother; winning the 2009 US Open as if she'd never really left, then adding more majors to her tally,but let's be honest, it's been a slog of late. When she won the Australian Open just 20 months ago, it looked as if Clijsters would be recast forever as a tennis Artemis, holding her daughter in one arm and her weapon of choice, a Babolat, in the other; strong and beautiful all the way to the end. Unfortunately, we all know how the story played out; injuries and inconsistency took hold. After that brilliant run in Australia 20 months ago, reaching the final in Sydney and taking the Australian Open title, Clijsters went just 12-6 the rest of 2011. Injuries to her ankle, foot, abdominals plus a plan to play a limited schedule to begin with meant Clijsters' victory lap played out in dispiriting fits and starts. She briefly returned to No. 1 in early 2011, but 2012 was, for lack of a better word, sad. At one point, her ranking fell clear out of the Top 50. She reached just three semifinals this year, twice at that stage she withdrew, while the third time she was a beaten by current World No. 1 Victoria Azarenka in three uneven sets. The Olympics which she had dreamed of, ended with a straight-sets loss to Sharapova. The US Open, her final event, would end with a 7-6, 7-6 loss to Laura Robson, a heralded young Brit, but one who on paper, Clijsters should have dispatched.
Let's keep it simple: not playing a regular schedule breeds inconsistent results. The Serena Williams-types who can take extended layoffs and come back worldbeaters are few and far between. Clijsters isn't one of them. Sometimes she chose not to play, sometimes her aching body chose for her, but as the march toward the end progressed, more and more we found ourselves saying "Are we there yet?" It's unfortunate, but it's been a while since Clijsters' presence in a draw seemed...of consequence. Kim Clijsters is officially out the door, but the contender fans knew and loved, she's already been gone for a while.
Andy Roddick, on the other hand, had different expectations. He hadn't won a major since 2003, though in fairness to him, what men have? That aside, Roddick's been quite consistent at his level. He won what will likely be his last tournament a bit over a month ago, once and for all reclaiming his mojo from Gilles Muller in the BB&T Atlanta Open final. That title run was his second this summer. After crashing out of Queens Club in the first round, Roddick righted himself with a title on the grass of Eastbourne the week before Wimbledon. While his Wimbledon wasn't exactly the stuff of legends this year (he fell in the third round), losing to David Ferrer at a major isn't something to hang your head over. Neither was his career.
In a period obsessed with superlatives of the type regularly associated with Roger Federer, Andy Roddick's career is often unfairly dismissed. The man was a World No. 1 who was ranked among the ATP top ten for eight consecutive years, he won a major (and reached five major finals), won five Masters titles and led the US to a Davis Cup title. He wasn't Federer, Nadal or Djokovic, but as the record stands today, Roddick, Lleyton Hewitt and Andy Murray are all just about even for next best career of this era.
With his announcement yesterday that this US Open would be his final tournament, Roddick ripped off the bandage. There would be no farewell tour beyond what we've already seen. Another match, versus Bernard Tomic tonight; maybe another small handful afterward, but that's it, the end. When he mentioned in the presser, "I don't know that I've ever been someone who's interested in existing on tour." Two things came to mind, one his oft-reported retort to a sponsor seeking a performance guarantee that when he dropped out of the Top 15 he'd retire and also, Clijsters.
Roddick chose to go out playing something approximating his best tennis, still winning titles, but knowing that without the will or physical health to put the hard yards into tennis anymore, he couldn't compete at the highest level, so why compete at all. Clijsters chose a farewell tour, each performance looking less and less like a true competitor and more like a retiree popping into the office to visit old colleagues, chatting away, while everyone else is on deadline, trying to build their own careers.
As we write this, we know that these feelings are fleeting though. At some point, probably 2017, up the road in Newport, we'll look at Roddick and Clijsters through a different set of eyes, ones not cloud by their waning moments. We'll remember Roddick in his prime on the lawns of Wimbledon, battling valiantly for the title against the greatest player of his era. We'll remember Clijsters as a triple US Open champion, a hardcourt specialist perhaps, but one who helped take the physicality of the game to new levels. With the passage of time, we won't remember how they left, just what they did when they were here.
Mortality is a condition of life. We forget about it, stash it in the darkest corners of our minds, but it's always there, looming, oft silent, but always there. It's as true in the big picture sense as it is in terms of tennis careers. Two of our greats are moving on, may their tennis lives rest in peace.
29 August, 2012
Court-Hopping
Labels:
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28 August, 2012
27 August, 2012
2012 US Open Women's Bracket Breakdown
Out of chaos, the women's tour suddenly seems amazingly orderly...ish Three of the top four women: Victoria Azarenka, Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams are reigning major champions, while the fourth, Agnieszka Radwanska was the losing Wimbledon finalist. Will the year's final major be a chance for Radwanska to get on the board; for Azarenka to burnish her bona fides as a hardcourt champion; for Serena or Sharapova to build their brands; for Kim Clijsters to ride off into the sunset in style or for some other woman to make her name?
Who will claim the year's final major prize? Also, what are the matches worth watching in the first few days of the Open? Well, check out our 2012 US Open women's draw preview to find out...
26 August, 2012
2012 US Open Men's Bracket Breakdown
So who will seize the day and emerge as the champion? Almost just as importantly, what are the matches worth watching in the first few days of the Open? Well, check out our 2012 US Open men's draw preview to find out...
25 August, 2012
Blacklabel Tennis Fan Guide To The 2012 US Open
Who needs the big, overblown, traditional holidays? You can keep your thanksgiving turkeys, your 4th of July fireworks, your Santa Claus. For this guy, the most wonderful time of the year is the start of another US Open tennis tournament. Oh, it's not absolutely perfect; the weather always seems to veer from sweltering when the first ball is struck to sweatshirt weather by the end; the food prices always make me wonder why the USTA can't hire Kanye West's jeweler to build a platinum and diamond encrusted roof over Arthur Ashe stadium and frankly, there's always a point where I get tennis fatigue and have to leave a bit early for the day, but there's no time of the year I look forward to more than the US Open.
So, why am I writing this unofficial guide to the US Open when there are so many official sources out there? Well, to be frank, because I'm me. Living in New York, the US Open is my hometown major, one of the biggest events of the year and the tournament I know the best. Unlike the professional beat writers who generally spend the tourney shuttling off to the press conferences and have cordoned off seats at the show courts, I've only ever experienced the Open like you, as a fan. I boil in the summer heat like every other fan, I get no closer to the players than anybody else with an oversized tennis ball, I pay $4.75 for my Evian just like the rest of the hoi polloi. In other words, for most of the last decade, I've experienced the Open in the exact same way you will and have learned a few tips and tricks that I think will help you (whoever you are) maximize your trip to the US Open.
18 August, 2012
Down On Your Knees? - The Rafa Fan's US Open Backup Plan
With tennis fans processing the disappointing, if not shocking, news that Rafael Nadal's grand slam season is over, there are a number of questions. The knee injury keeping the Spaniard out of the US Open, is surely disappointing to him, but just as much, if not more, to the legions of Rafael-ites. We can't do much for Rafa's knees, but we can hopefully help some of the fans out. We know fans love Rafa for any number of reasons and some might even have a little trouble getting fired up about the Open in the absence of their usual cheering interest. Well, as always we're here to help. Here's the Blacklabel Tennis guide on who to watch if you're missing Nadal at the 2012 US Open.
06 August, 2012
Stop And Smell The Redemption
The Sun, The Daily Mail, The Times, I didn't read them this morning, but I hope that Andy Murray read them all. Worst case, I hope his mother/sometimes coach Judy has copies of all the British dailies stashed away so that he can read all the writers who spent years lambasting him suddenly singing a new tune (if only for a day). I hope Andy Murray pulls out of the Rogers Cup with "fatigue" in the form of a lager drenched headache and a long, long night of partying with his mates and an afterparty with Kim Sears. Professional tennis is a grind like none other in sport: solitary, crisscrossing five continents, playing tournaments from New Year's Eve to Thanksgiving, with every week's results dissected, overanalyzed and recounted by the press corps, fans and coaches alike, not to mention a ranking system that tells you every single week of the year where you stand in relation to your competition. Murray was considered, for lack of a better phrase, the most accomplished "non-winner" the game has ever known. Having forever rewritten his narrative with his win over Roger Federer for Olympic gold yesterday, I sincerely hope the Scot is indulging in the sweet taste of victory.
28 July, 2012
Who "Deserves" Olympic Gold: Sentimental Favorites
20 July, 2012
Coeur Contre Corps (Heart Vs. Body) Again...
This isn't the way it's supposed to end, is it? When we discuss sport, the word we often reach for is "heart." Less to describe the physical muscle that keeps a player upright and functioning than the concept of the heart as the athlete's storage place for "fight." The central point in the athlete's body where the will to compete pulses, rises, falls and ultimately leads the way to his or her fate as a champion or an also-ran. While we could never deny the impact of the figurative heart on the sporting landscape, days like yesterday remind us that there is far more than the heart at play.
11 July, 2012
Bloggers Bar Special Edition: Time Machine Predictions
We can't be the only ones who at the end of a major take deep breaths and can barely be arsed to think about tennis for a few days, can we? A bit of travel, plus some important non-tennis stuff taking root elsewhere in life and voila, we've been silent for four days past the end of Wimbledon. Let's start our penance here: First, since we've already feted ladies' champion Serena Williams, a hearty congrats to 2012 and seven time men's champion Roger Federer. To say Serena and Roger emerging as the champions was unexpected, would be insulting; but we would say if you picked BOTH to win at SW19 this year, you're either in the minority or a time machine.
When we did our last Bloggers Bar post (random aside: what do you think of the name: Blacklabel Roundtable in the future?), we asked our fellow writers whether Serena Williams or Roger Federer was more likely to win another major. On one hand, egg meet faces. On the other, whichever player we selected, we were right! Given the fact that both wound up winning their next time out, I thought it would be fun to see why we thought one of two was more likely to claim another major. Without further ado, here are our pre-Wimbledon takes on who: Serena Williams or Roger Federer was in our eyes, best positioned to win another major. Here are the answers, from the four at the bar:
- @AlvaroRama Alvaro Rama of EuroSport2 & Quality Sport (AR)
- @TennisNewsViews Lisa Marie Burrows of TennisNewsViews.com & World Tennis Magazine (LMB)
- @TheFanChild Chris Oddo of TennisNow.com & The Fan Child (CO)
- @VBlacklabel Vito Ellison of BlacklabelTennis.com (VE)
Labels:
2012,
Bloggers Bar,
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S Williams,
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07 July, 2012
Serena, Serene & Winning: 2012 Wimbledon Women's Final Recap
Just over two hours after taking the court, Serena Williams was crowned the Wimbledon ladies' singles champion for the fifth time. Ten years after she first claimed the Venus Rosewater Dish, the American powered her way to a 6-1, 5-7, 6-2 victory over Poland's Agnieszka Radwanska. Serena's opponent in that match ten years prior, older sister Venus, was in the stands, having been dispatched from singles earlier in the fortnight, but still alive with her baby sister in the doubles. As much as the one-time grass court dominatrix Venus was in a different position than she was ten years ago, so too was her Serena. The brash exuberance of Serena's youth having been replaced by the anxiousness of a veteran champion knowing that she only has so many chances to climb the sport's highest heights again and knowing that the tests would not be any easier because of who she was or what things she's done. She knew she had to take the victory, and although there were nerves, ultimately that's what Serena did today.
05 July, 2012
2012 Wimbledon Mens Semifinal Previews & Predictions
It's almost the final four we expected: Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer, Andy Murray. Of the vaunted "Big Four," only Rafael Nadal failed to make the semifinals here at Wimbledon this year. When one of them goes down, the others pick up the slack. The last time fewer than three of the ATP Big Four made the semifinals of a major was way back at Roland Garros in 2010, when Nadal romped to the title. With three of the top four in the world in the semifinals, it seems odd that we could have a surprise champion, but we could. Neither of the men on the bottom half of the draw, Murray and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, were truly considered championship favorites, except in particularly hopeful quarters of Great Britain or France, but one of them will be in the final and in with a chance to claim the title on Sunday. So who'll have Breakfast at Wimbledon on Sunday? Read on:
04 July, 2012
2012 Wimbledon Ladies Semifinal Previews & Predictions
After a week and a half of tennis, we're at the business end of this year's Wimbledon. In the ladies' event, AKA the Run for the Rosewater, our four semifinalists are Victoria Azarenka, Angelique Kerber, Agnieszka Radwanska and Serena Williams. Two of these players have been World No. 1, hoisted major tournament trophies and played Wimbledon semifinals before. Naturally, those two will play each other in the semifinals. The other two are (relatively) new entrants to the highest echelon of women's tennis, first time Wimbledon semifinalists and will vie against each other for their career-defining first major final. How do we expect these ladies' semifinals to pan out? Read on tennis lovers:
01 July, 2012
Wimbledon Middle Sunday Bloggers' Bar
It's the middle Sunday at Wimbledon. Which means the punters can get back to that favorite British pastime, downing pints at the local pub. For those of us not necessarily at the All England Club, following the tournament on TV and Twitter has almost the same feeling. Our barroom conversations may take place over fiber optic cable, but it doesn't make them any less compelling. Welcome back to the Bloggers Bar, this is a becoming a regular feature on Blacklabel Tennis where we pose questions to some of our favorite writers in a virtual roundtable. Our esteemed bloggers and writers today are:
- @AlvaroRama Alvaro Rama of EuroSport2 & Quality Sport
- @TennisNewsViews Lisa Marie Burrows of TennisNewsViews.com & World Tennis Magazine
- @TheFanChild Chris Oddo of TennisNow.com & The Fan Child
- @VBlacklabel Vito Ellison of BlacklabelTennis.com
In this installment, we discuss some of tennis' burning questions:
- Who had the most disappointing first half of 2012?
- Who has been the biggest positive surprise of 2012 thus far?
- Which man is most likely to end the Big Three's dominance?
- Will Maria Sharapova bea dominant World No. 1?
Find out which question half of our panel didn't even hazard a guess at...
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30 June, 2012
Wimbledon Day 6 (Three Thoughts)
Take A Bow: Of the many tragic figures of Wimbledon, Andy Roddick looms among the largest. The quick-witted American with the muscular serve is a three-time finalist at the All England Club, only Federer and Nadal have fared better here during this generation. Like everywhere and everyone else on tour (Save Novak Djokovic), Roddick's road to tennis immortality has been largely blocked by the Spaniard and the Swissman who've dominated this era of tennis. Roddick is a combined 6-28 against Nadal and Federer, with Federer particularly playing his bogeyman, boasting a 21-3 record versus Roddick. Roddick's big serve and aggressive game have always felt Savile Row-made for the grass, but he's a combined 0-5 against Nadal and Federer on grass. At Wimbledon specifically, four times the end of Roddick's road has been at a dead end called Roger Federer. While almost everyone remembers Roddick's heartbreaking loss 16-14 in the fifth to Federer in the 2009 final, that might not be the one that Roddick ought regret the most. Most know that in 2003, THE Roger Federer came into being by winning Wimbledon over Mark Philippoussis in the final. To get to that final, he knocked off Roddick in the semis 7-6 (3), 6-3, 6-3. Such began the Yank's hard luck at Wimbledon; today may have been the end of it.
29 June, 2012
Staring Into The Abyss

As if you missed the news Rafael Nadal was stunned yesterday in the 2nd round of Wimbledon by Czech journeyman Lukas Rosol 6-7, 6-4, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4. How big of an upset was this? Rosol came into Wimbledon no tour level singles titles to his name, Nadal has 11 major titles. Then suddenly, deja vu of Roland Garros 2009, Federer goes down 2 sets to love in is next match, to French veteran Julien Benneteau. Benneteau was as close as two points from the win in the fourth set tiebreak. For a wild couple of hours this Friday, tennis fans were forced to consider the very real prospect of losing Nadal and Federer on back to back days in the first week. Were Benneteau to have come through, it would have marked the first major semifinal without Nadal AND Federer since the US Open...in 2003. In other words, if a major semifinal happens and neither Federer nor Nadal play in it, did it really happen?
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