BleedGopher
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This is crazy level dominance:
Go USA!!
Go USA!!
Absolutely thrilled for her. And as everyone observed, including Sabalinka, Keys won it. Sabalinka didn't lose it Keys just plain won it. The people she beat prior makes it all the more impressive.Absolutely incredible story for Keys!!! So happy for her. What a win, what a tournament!
Go Madison Keys!!
It was really excited for the semi final lineup but unfortunately they didn't really live up to their potential.Wish this was a semifinal match. Hope Coco can win it all.
Go Coco!!
Yeah I understand that she's kind of hot headed which is one thing. She hasn't generally been so directly disrespectful of her opponent and does compliment them.Reason #329 why I can’t stand Sabalenka.
Go Coco!!
Not sure if I buy that. Johnny Mac is prone to hyperbole sometimes. I think Rafa would find a way to win his share.McEnroe is right. These two have elevated the game so quickly, they would beat peak Nadal on clay.
Go USA!!
Great article. The Athletic has gathered some of the best writers around.The Athletic: How Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner’s tennis rivalry went stratospheric at Roland Garros
It was just like tennis dreamed it.
Five and a half hours of thrilling play and unrelenting drama between the two new stars of men’s tennis. The introduction to the wider world of a new rivalry that this sport hopes can carry the torch handed over by the Big Three of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.
In serving up one of the best and most dramatic matches in tennis history, this felt like the moment Jannik Sinner, 23, and Carlos Alcaraz, 22, announced themselves to the world at large. Tennis needs their rivalry to be epochal and their first Grand Slam final against each other delivered beyond its most fanciful expectations.
They are already stars to anyone who follows tennis semi-regularly, but this catapulting of their talents, personalities and profiles into transcendence means more than any sporting statistics. Still, they have split the past six Grand Slams between them, winning three each. Alcaraz has won five aged 22 and one month, the same age as Nadal when he got to that number.
This was the pair’s 12th meeting overall (Alcaraz leads the head-to-head 8-4 after his fifth win in a row), but a first Grand Slam final means more to the wider world than any other kind of match. These encounters take tennis players into the mainstream. Not just for the great shots, but the revealing of who they are as people, exposing them in a way that few sports can, creating bonds with the audience through five hours and 29 minutes worth of shared experience.
It feels almost immaterial in some ways, but eventually it was Alcaraz’s French Open final. He came through 4-6, 6-7(4), 6-4, 7-6(3), 7-6(2), having saved three championship points when down 3-5 in the fourth set. He then withstood Sinner serving for the match, as well as the disappointment of failing to serve it out himself in the fifth set, to come through in a tiebreak in which he went god mode at the end of the second-longest Grand Slam final in history. Alcaraz became only the third man in tennis’ Open Era (since 1968) to save championship points and go on to win a major final. It was also the first time Alcaraz had come back from two sets to love down in a match, at the ninth attempt.
All of which means that the snap judgment is that it belongs in the conversation with the great finals of lore, the ones that tennis fans, and many casuals, can rattle off without even thinking. Björn Borg vs John McEnroe, Wimbledon 1980; Federer vs Nadal, Wimbledon 2008; Djokovic vs Nadal, Australian Open 2012. The quality of this match was not as high on both sides of the net at the same time as some of those, but they share something more important for tennis as a whole: the way those players were looked at was never the same again.
It was a final that showcased their personalities and the rivalry’s dynamic, as well as their ludicrous shotmaking abilities. Sinner was generally steadier, but in being so, he showed the world that his base level of tennis is borderline ridiculous. Alcaraz, whose floor is less secure, rose from a few troughs to hit his scintillating ceiling, which is peerless as of now.
In the final few games, with Sinner showing scarcely believable fortitude to come back again and hit sublime shots of his own, Alcaraz produced a reflex volley, a flicked backhand winner, and then a passing shot on the same wing from deep behind the baseline that flew miraculously past his opponent. In the tiebreak, Alcaraz went supernova and fittingly sealed the match with a forehand passing shot up the line on the run.
The contrast in styles, with Alcaraz possessing more variety but also being more of a tortured genius who can fluctuate from absurd highs to seemingly inexplicable lows, is a compelling element of the rivalry. Sinner’s the world No. 1 and more consistent, but Alcaraz’s highs are higher.
Sunday illustrated that and the world also got to see Alcaraz’s showmanship — the finger to his ear after one of his incredible steals, as well as his refusal to accept he was beaten. Sinner matched him in this regard and such was the emotional toll of this final that the normally calm Italian let out his frustration at points in the fifth set. Nothing reveals a tennis player’s personality like this kind of occasion and few sports are as revealing as this one. Even once the match has finished, asking losing players to put their devastation into words is brutal.
There was no tearful Andy Murray after losing the Wimbledon 2012 final to Roger Federer, when Murray delivered the “I’m getting closer” line heard around the world, but Sinner still endeared himself to many simply by holding the mic and being gracious enough to, after all that, praise the man who had just shattered his dreams.
“It’s an amazing trophy, so I won’t sleep very well tonight, but it’s OK,” Sinner said.
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/64...ner-french-open-final-tennis-result-analysis/
Alcaraz was as generous in his tribute to his beaten rival and then addressed the adoring crowd: “To Paris, you have been really important support to me since the first practice for the first round. You were insane, unbelievable for me. I can’t thank you enough. You were really important, you are in my heart, and you will always be.”
A few minutes earlier, as the match was reaching its conclusion and the tension swelled, half the supporters chanted “Carlos, Carlos,” while the other half responded with “Jannik, Jannik.” As the noise on Court Philippe-Chatrier grew louder and louder, it was impossible not to be transported to Wimbledon 17 years ago and remember the Federer-Nadal final.
Many of the greats of the game were comparing this final to that one, and there’s generally no higher praise for a tennis match than that. “For sport, it’s something amazing to have these players after Roger, Rafa, and Novak is still playing, but this kind of rivalry,” said Juan Carlos Ferrero, Alcaraz’s coach and a former world No. 1 and Roland Garros champion.
“Having these two guys fighting for big trophies, I think we have to be very happy about it in the sport of tennis. For them, for sure, it’s something that they raise their level every time they go on the court. They know they have to play unbelievable tennis to beat the other guy and it’s something that is going to help each player to raise the level even more.”
Who knows where this rivalry will end up, but after the end of the Big Three, men’s tennis couldn’t have asked for more.
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How Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner’s tennis rivalry went stratospheric at Roland Garros
Men's tennis needed this rivalry to be stratospheric. Their first major final against each other sent them into another galaxywww.nytimes.com
Go Tennis!!