Originally posted by klacr
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It's all the same. It's the junior game only with testosterone. Death of serve and volley my you know what…it's the death of tennis. Period. The forecourt has virtually been eliminated from the game and when a player happens to make a play at the net or a half-volley for heaven's sake…the commentators go hog wild as if it was the second coming or something.
Kei Nishikori had a rather interesting tournament and it sort of emphasizes his relative strengths and weaknesses. He has been rather vulnerable to injuries throughout his career and this tournament sort of shows how that may be so. He had three three setters in a row and each of them was a real grinder. First of all it was Tommy Robredo who succumbed 63 46 76, then it was the Baby Bull of France Jo-Wilfred Tsonga 62 46 62 and finally it was the "EveryReady Energizer Bunny" David Ferrer 36 76 64. Not exactly your energy conservative route to the semifinals when you have to face the impeccable defensive machine of Novak Djokovic. That is way too much pounding on the body to take to have anything left in reserve. While it is admirable to be able to grind down your opponents it has a price tag on it.
Recovery becomes a key word in the world of competitive tennis. I don't know of any other sport that contestants are called upon to make Herculean efforts in so many consecutive days. While the three out of five Grand Slam events are certainly monumental efforts in terms of endurance, these events that draw the top players are feats of toughness as well. Novak Djokovic emerged unscathed. He never lost a set. He won by virtue of his management…playing every point and every situation smart without wasting any energy.
Federer found himself short of what it took and he sort of meekly laid down for Milos Raonic. Raonic for his part overcame Tomas Berdych in an exciting three set semifinal but it he too found himself short of recovery time when it came time to face Novak in the finals. Novak knows how to take full advantage of an opponent who is less than one hundred percent. He mowed down two consecutive opponents who were decidedly still recovering from their previous matches.

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