That Wimbledon result in brief
Wife (to self, who had taped the chunk of the Wimbledon men’s final from the start of the third set): “Do you want to know who won Wimbledon?”
Me: “No.”
Daughter, leaving room: “It was the one with the headband.”
(Federer wears a headband, Roddick wears a cap.)
Revelation of the tournament: Jimmy Connors in the commentary box. So great to see him back. Connors was always one of the best post-match interviewees on the circuit. He had fantastic attitude.
Other thought: compared to Connors’s day, the men now hit the ball a lot harder - but it’s less precise, further from the lines. Connors and McEnroe could put an approach into a space four feet square from the corner, sliding it low, making the pass even harder. Nobody hits Connors’s style of shot anymore - incredibly flat, almost unspun, and guided like laser missiles around the court. By the time he was playing the US Open in 1991, already over 40, his style was a weird throwback, an anomaly. He beat lots of topspin-style players that year, coming back from the dead. “Do you think he’s got the right style to beat players like you?” I asked one of the topspin merchants. He replied, “If it were, then everyone would play it.” True; but if you’re the only person who plays that way..
- These posts might be related (the database thinks..):
- A quick thought on Federer winning Wimbledon five times (8 July 2007; score: 77.34%)
- Tim Henman: a better player than everyone thinks (13 September 2004; score: 43.92%)
- A PHP/MySQL question - geeks only need apply: how to get a formatted date from an associative array (17 March 2007; score: 25.47%)




July 5th, 2005 at 11:04 pm
I loved watching Federer; he’s such a joy (which is so rare for me with a male player) that I don’t care how uncompetitive the match is. He made Roddick and Hewitt look average.
I wasn’t such a fan of Connors’ commentary. But Wilander at the French Open on Eurosport was absolutely terrific. So I suppose Connors seemed to me less so because of the comparison.
btw, the Scotsman of the Future, Andrew Murray, won against Carraz at Newport today.
wg
July 6th, 2005 at 9:50 am
Murray is going to be top 50 within a year, top 10 - likely five - the next one. Talent will out. He made Johansson look quite ordinary for a while at Queen’s.