Originally posted by jimlosaltos
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Originally posted by stroke View PostSinner had his fast forward/video game going vs Musetti. Musetti had no chance. Not a small margins situation.
A clash of styles. You've criticized Lorenzo's deep positioning, justifiably, and he was up against an opponent with aggressive, almost Fed-like court positioning.
Never stood a chance BUT Lorenzo did hit some of the most amazing shots I've seen in ages -- Stunning. Guy hit some outright winners from the box seats on the run to within inches of the baseline that left Sinner unable to react. Ditto some returns. Not enough. Was never going to be enough.
But years later he'll have the highlight reelLast edited by jimlosaltos; Yesterday, 02:44 PM.
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Originally posted by jimlosaltos View Post
True, but I still enjoyed watching the match.
A clash of styles. You've criticized Lorenzo's deep positioning, justifiably, and he was up against an opponent with aggressive, almost Fed-like court positioning.
Never stood a chance BUT Lorenzo did hit some of the most amazing shots I've seen in ages -- he had. Guy hit some outright winners from the box seats on the run to within inches of the baseline that left Sinner unable to react. Ditto some returns. Not enough. Was never going to be enough.
But years later he'll have the highlight reel
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Originally posted by jimlosaltos View PostCoco Gauff splits with a coach and brings on Gavin MacMillan, a self-described biomechanics specialist who helped Aryna Sabalenka resurrect her serve.
It looks as if she is just plain fatalistic about things. But the motion has a very pronounced and nervous looking hitch at the critical juncture where back swing becomes forward swing. The transition point. Because of her fatalistic approach she has the ability to just throw the nerves to the side and hit all out. I don't detect any element of "control" in the traditional sense in her service game approach. Just all out come what may. She gets away with it. Afterall...she is a superb athlete. But I wonder that if at some point the nerves get a hold on her and that thin line of being out of control doesn't raise it's ugly head. I haven't seen anything to convince me that Gavin has fixed her serve at all.
Regarding Coco's serve. I would approach her the same as any other tennis player. First the setup position, which I don't like one little bit. Then you proceed to the back swing. You have to arrive at that transition point in balance and in position to push the pedal to the metal. It will be interesting to see how long he lasts in her camp and how he spins it. He is more of a spin doctor than a biomechanics expert. A biomechanics expert would have eliminated the obvious hitch in Sabalenka's motion or admitted the obvious truth.
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Good to see Naomi Osaka playing more tennis and giving the social justice a rest. I hope. She competed well and overwhelmed serve challenged Coco Gauff. Leave the social justice to others. Take care of your child and when on the court...play hard. I give her a lot of credit.
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I congratulate Amanda Anisimova for the way that she has come back from her Wimbledon defeat. She avenges her 0 & 0 defeat to Swiatek in the quarters. Wins a tough 3 setter against Osaka, in the semi's and is back in another Grand Slam final at the U.S Open. She's been through alot and has come out the other end. Good for her!! I'm pulling for her.
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Originally posted by seano View PostI congratulate Amanda Anisimova for the way that she has come back from her Wimbledon defeat. She avenges her 0 & 0 defeat to Swiatek in the quarters. Wins a tough 3 setter against Osaka, in the semi's and is back in another Grand Slam final at the U.S Open. She's been through alot and has come out the other end. Good for her!! I'm pulling for her.
What a battle they had. Osaka served for the match at 6-5 in the second set after winning a nervous first set tiebreak, but was broken. Amanda took over then let two match points slip away with perhaps tight shots
Plus, the two women's lives and their tennis are more alike than not. Hard, flat power hitters. Amanda might be the best returner in women's tennis, where returning seems to trump serving. On one point in the first set you knew it was on when Amanda hit an 83 MPH return winner off a respectable second serve. No quarter given. No idle rally balls, waiting for an error.
Both women were phenoms, Amanda Anisimova at 14 years old was the youngest player in a main draw match since 2005, Naomi Osaka at 16 years old won her first main draw match over a top 20 player. One a 'Jersey girl of Russian parents, the other a Floridian returned to her birthplace in Japan.
Both dropped out of tennis. Both experienced severe depression. Both have come back in a big way.
Both winners.
P.S. This was a fast-paced match but it still ended at something like 12:56 AM this morning. On a weekday! There were no huge delays. The prior semifinal Pegula-Sabalenka was only 2 hours long. Why does the USTA insist on scheduling matches that run into the next morning? It's not for the ticket holders - stands started out full, ended up half empty. It's not for the TV viewers, except perhaps in Osaka. To sell more Honey Deuce's?
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