Home > Tennis > Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, Murray - the future of men's tennis on court today
by Nick McCarvel on 20 October 2007
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I'm always looking for the bigger and better in life. I grew up in Montana and my eyes were constantly fixed on the cities of the future: Seattle or San Francisco would be where I would go to college, there was no question about it. So after three-plus years in Seattle, my tendency has been to think: What next? New York? London? Paris?
It's a common theme for many individuals: the grass is greener, the buildings are taller, the paycheck is bigger and life is better than what we have right now.
Yet for the ATP Tour, I would argue that the tour is experiencing some of the best rivalries - both established and forming - that is has seen since Agassi/Sampras or McEnroe/Connors.
Mind you I'm just a 21-year-old college student who missed tennis's hayday in the 70s when top players were comparable to rock stars and tennis experienced class A treatment as a sport to be reckoned with.
Besides the US, however, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal are international superstars. Novak Djokovic is on his way there. Andy Roddick reaches all markets, as does James Blake. Andy Murray is the savior of British tennis, while an entire wave of successful (and personable) South American players are making their names (and games) known on the tour.
Two-and-a-half years ago Nadal played a man named Mariano Puerta in the final of the French Open. The tennis world was buzzing, not because of the Nadal-Puerta match-up, but because of the Spaniard's defeat of Roger Federer in the semi-finals - four sets of tennis brilliance.
As much as tennis has deteriorated over the past couple of decades with the power game, astounding racket technology and often a loss for respectable strategy (other than hitting the ball as hard as possible. See: Gonzalez, Fernando), the game has also seen a rise in the anti-modern culture.
Federer slices, dices and plays every shot in the book with his cool and calm demeanor. Nadal runs everything down, looking more like a fighter ready to go 12 rounds than a country club tennis boy. Djokovic can be creative and Murray's funky style has the Brits talking Wimbledon title in the near future.
The fact is, the future of tennis is now. Players like David Ferrer and John Isner can keep us on our toes, but the leading acts of the 21st century have taken center stage, and I don't see their curtain call coming any time soon.
Comments (7)
by Aasim Shaffi on October 20, 2007
The stability of the top players like Fed and Nadal is truely outstanding. But i wouldn't put it anywhere near the best of men's tennis. Fed rules alone at the top of the game the ONLY person to compete is Nadal on clay and grass.So what about the hard courts. The hardcourt slams are boring when it comes down to the top contenders. Sure Novak looks preomising but he just recently reached his 1st slam final and still needs to find the championship mental strength. The Roland Garros and Wimbledon finals are the real and memorable stuff about men's tennis. Andy roddick is sliping away and andy murray still has a long way to go. So my point is that today's men tennis has no chance when competing with connors, McEnroe, Borg times. Only the nadal and fed rivalry can compete. By the way the picture shows jamie murray not andy murray.
by Nick mcCarvel on October 20, 2007
Aasim...sure, Fed has continued to dominate, but looking to 2008, I think we have a lot to look forward to. Sure, the Fed-Nadal rivalry is most compelling, but I think Djokovic is just starting to come into his own in terms of being able to play with the world's number 1. Andy Roddick played an incredible match with Federer at the Open (in which Fed was nearly flawless). My point is that men's tennis has a lot of exciting stuff going on right now. You disagree completely?
by Chandan on October 21, 2007
Dude, where did you get the idea that Roddick/Blake are hot everywhere. Maybe in America, but not anywhere else. In fact, Andy has not done anything notable since his US Slam and that was 4 years ago! He is on his was down. Blake is too inconsistent for me to say anything.
by ree on October 21, 2007
yeah, roddick is not even that big outside america, and the funny thing, or rather embarassing thing is the fact that roddick hired connors as his coach and still he can't beat fedex at g slams. really makes me laugh.
by DKX on October 21, 2007
US singles tennis is not going anywhere at the moment to be honest. Roddick has reached, if not passed his peak and is clearly no challenge for Fed. Same goes for Blake. The future does look bright though - Nadal and Djokovic have the potential to take away some of Federer's slams next year. Andy Murray isn't too far off either...
by Nick McCarvel on October 22, 2007
Can we look to David Nalbandian as a contender in '08? He sure has a nice record against Fed if he continues his form from Madrid in 2008.
by ree on October 22, 2007
I'm not sure about nalbandian, sure he just beat federer, djoko and nadal, and he is 7-8 against federer, but he's not always playing his best tennis all the time like federer, and he's not as consistent too.
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