Home > Tennis > Will the Davis Cup finally be the making of Andy Roddick?
by Ilana Berger on 28 November 2007
Email this Article (15) Comments
Free £10 bet when you register at
When most of the elite players are having a rest after a long season and making arrangements for Christmas, American star Andy Roddick is deep into his tennis as if the campaign has only just begun.
This coming weekend, Roddick, together with team-mates James Blake and the Bryan brothers, Bob and Mike, will be the busiest players around when they take on the Russians in the Davis Cup Final in Oregon.
Davis Cup for some players is a weird event. Big players with big egos are used to playing for themselves only during the year, and suddenly they have to put all their personal interests aside and concentrate on playing for their country.
For Roddick, at least this one time and at this particular event, every win will feel like the best and most important victory ever. Roddick is a patriot. He likes to play for his national flag. He likes the atmosphere, the crowd, the feeling that he has more than his coach and family in his corner - a whole nation hungry for success, in fact.
In the twilight of Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi's careers, all fingers where pointing at Roddick as the leader of a new generation of American tennis stars. That never happened. Roddick was able to deliver some of the promise when he won his first and only Grand Slam at home in 2003, but he never quite stood up to the expectations of his fans - and especially the nation.
Objective tennis experts knew from day one that Roddick was no Sampras or Agassi. They saw a player with mediocre talent but loads of will, ambition and fighting spirit, though not a star like many others predicted him to be.
Roddick is a decent player with a huge serve and nothing much more – and his results to this day tell the whole story. Coaches like Brad Gilbert and Jimmy Connors helped his game immensely, but even they couldn't turn him into something he wasn't capable of being.
Davis Cup might just change Roddick's luck. He needs another big title under his belt after four years of disappointments, especially on the big occasions.
Davis Cup in not another Grand Slam, but it is as close as it gets to it. Roddick needs to feel he is part of such a big occasion to maybe finally raise his game to the next level, and become what a whole nation expected of him.
Comments (15)
by deb on November 28, 2007
I'd like to see Roddick win a Davis Cup. It must be hard knowing that you don't have the talent to fulfill people's expectations of you. In an interview earlier this year Roddick said:-"I don’t know if I’m working with the talent of Fed or Nad," he says frankly. "Roger has set the bar pretty high. Fed is someone who has been blessed with the ability to do most things with a racquet. And Nadal, you see him in the player’s lounge drinking Coke and eating pizza, and then go out and spend five hours playing tennis. You definitely have to be that much more disciplined to compete with that." If he was from anywhere but America, with it's tradition of multiple slam champions, perhaps he'd be applauded for maintaining a position in the top 10 for 6 years given his limitations but as it is his best is never going to be good enough. Here in Britain if Murray ever wins Wimbledon and/or becomes No 1 for however brief a period he'll be a national hero!!
by RodFan on November 28, 2007
tennis player for years now, respect that. As for his potential, he has not reach it yet. Connors has improved his game, but not that much, because he does not spent enough time with him. Roddick's return game is like he is in the 100th and not in 10th. That is where he could improve tremendously. Roddick has to win both of his rubbers this weekend, Bryans have to win doubles (which they will) and USA will finally have the Davis Cup.
by Ayah on November 28, 2007
Andy Roddick has made quite a few grand slam finals but every single time he has been stopped by Federer. So he definitely doesn't lack the talent to win it's just that Federer is so much better than everybody else. Bad luck for Roddick. I hope he can win the Davis Cup title. He's been wanting to win DC since he was a kid so if he could win it this weekend I think that would salvage his 2007. GOOD LUCK TEAM USA!!!!
by D.L. Mills on November 28, 2007
I have great respect for Andy's effort. He always gives all that he has. Some day the conditions will be right and he will stop Federer. In the mean time, I have a great respect for the way that he never, ever stops trying. I will pray that this Davis Cup title will be his in the meantime.
by mark DeMaio on November 29, 2007
This guy has faced the greatest player ever, If not for Federe Andy probably would have at least two more major titles. He has given himself totally to DC and deserves the credit for getting them this far. He's missed one tie in 7 years...the guy is a winner even if they lose this weekend, which I hope they do not. His spirit, and dedication make him a winner contrary to scoreboards. titles in the trophy case are great, but trying to remain competitive and working hard are a lot to be proud of. He carries the weight of the American tennis fans with NO help from anyone. The guy deserves a little luck and a big break.
about the repeat comment, it wasnt going thru so i sent a couple times and it showed up like that..so, sorry!
by SallyW on November 29, 2007
I agree with the above comments. The person who wrote this article is personally biased against Roddick. If you don't like him or appreciate the hard work and effort he puts into his career then don't bother writing about him at all. It only makes you look petty. Roddick may not be the greatest player ever but he is the top American player and has represented the USA as well as he can. That's all anyone can ask of their sports heroes. I will be proud to cheer Roddick on at Davis Cup.
by tennis lover on November 29, 2007
I wish readers could be able to comment on articles based on the facts and not take it so personaly. I do not agree with everything the writer thinks either, but I wouldn't conclude that the she "doesn't like Roddick". The writer makes an opinion about Roddick's tennis - not about him as a person - and there is a very big difference...
by Jessica on November 29, 2007
Roddick deserves much more credit than this article gives him, sure he has only 1 grandslam title, but thats 1 more than most in the pro tour!! not to mention 21 other titles! I know Federer is the best player the game has ever seen, but Roddick is still improving!! He might not ever see the same success as Fed, but i reckon he has aanother few grand slam titles in him! SO COME ON USA!!!!!:o)
by fredy on November 29, 2007
the only reason why Roddick and his countrymen are in the Davis Cup finals is because Sweden plays horribly on clay and chose carpet.Had they face any other team;it would have been on clay and once again they would have LOST! The Czech Republic made a mistake when they chose clay because Berdych doesn't perform well on clay and Stepanek wouldn't have been able to carry the whole tie on his own. Roddick,Blake and the Bryan brothers should get on all fours and be thankful they got a free pass all the way to the finals! If they win it this weekend,good for them but it won't mean a damn thing in my opinion! Spain,Russia and France with all due respect to the US are all better teams.
by allison grery on November 29, 2007
Sorry fredy but the only reason most other teams beat the US is because they put them on clay, their worst surface, so that would be their free pass too. Why are they all afraid to play the Americans on a more neutral surface? Answer: because the Americans are better players then they are and they know it. The Americans have won on clay before, just so you know.
by Angela on November 29, 2007
I guess being in the top 10 does not make you a good tennis player? Being the highest rank Amerian tennis player (except for a short time when Blake was higher) doesn't mean a thing if you go by this article. Do you understand how hard it is to be competitive year after year? When Roddick dropped out of the top 10 what did he do? He praticed and worked his butt off to regain his top 10 ranking. That is not only the sign of a good tennis player but speaks volume to the kids that look up to him. I think this article is shameful. Andy Roddick may only have 1 grand slam title but in the era of Federer who else has won, Nadal only on clay, and if I remember correctly Marat won the Australian once (many years ago therefore I guess everyone playing tennis right now must not be talented if you go by this article. Go back and look at his carrer he has finished the year ranked in the top 10 since 2002 (not easy), he has a record of 432 wins to 137 losses (not too shabby), 23 Titles (again not too shabby for so
by deb on November 29, 2007
America beat Spain in the quarter-final if they now beat Russia in the final are they still worse than both those teams?
by Jeffrey Greene on November 30, 2007
"Roddick is a decent player with a huge serve and nothing much more – and his results to this day tell the whole story." Not quite. Roddick is the only player other than Federer who has managed to stay in the top ten for the past five years. Everybody else, all those players who are arguably more naturally talented than he of the big serve, have long ago dropped out and off the planet. Flukes and non talents usually don't hang around the top of anything for very long. To say that Roddick is nothing but a serve shows your lack of expertise, knowledge, and understanding of the sport of tennis.
by tennis anyone on December 01, 2007
Don't you know how to read? the article never said Roddick is not a good player but that he didn't fulfill his potential in the eyes of American fans!! You cannot do "selective" reading !!!
Add your comment here
PERSONAL ABUSE WILL NOT BE TOLERATED
First Name
Last Name
Email
Heading
Display your favourite sport or football team badge with your comment.
Sport
League
Team
Comment *
Please enter the text you see in the picture into the textbox below. *
Can Liverpool cope without Torres over Christmas? Manchester United and Chelsea are watching!
Messi, Lampard, Kaka - who can get the Golden Ball off Manchester United's Cristiano Ronaldo?