crystalfire said:
everyone wants to see new blood but lets just say we have completely new finalists at a slam this year...what are the odds that youll set your alarm and try to catch that final? i for one would care less, until they start continuously making finals and establish themselves. if not its just another tennis match that ill catch in the news later. obviously if any of the big 4 are involved theres a much better chance we will all catch that final. so i guess big 4 bring in the viewers which is good for tennis. we need a new group of players who people can support and consistently reach the final stages otherwise for now well keep rooting for the current big 4. until that happens which i dont see happening any time soon tbh
This is a good point. People love superstars. What I'd love to see is some brash young pup start head-hunting the top players. Not just a bunch of Johanssons and Gaudios (and Cilics) eeking out Slams in a weak field, but a new young superstar or three supplanting the reigning regime.
As I've argued before, we're probably not going to see it. Or rather, we'll see it as a combination of Novak and Andy getting older and remaining dominant longer because of a skipped generation of mediocrity (Nishikori, Raonic, Dimitrov etc), and then the rise of the next generation (Kyrgios, Coric, Zverev, Kokk, etc). But what we won't see is a new young generation supplanting a peak or even late peak Novak and Andy. Those young guys are 18-20; by the time they are 22-24, Novak and Andy will be 32 and probably no longer in prime form.
So the next few years will see a gradual tidal shift. 2014 was a bit of a shock, with Wawrinka and Cilic. 2015-17 will see the fazing out of Fedal, with continued dominance from Novak, and Andy playing wingman, and one or two others sneaking in big titles. 2018-19 will see the regime change, with the new order established by 2020 or so.
Or something like that.
Anyhow, my hope is that we see some of these young guys emerge as actual superstars, and not just another generation of second tier players like Nishiraotrov. I have no doubt that my hope is at least partially fueled by the fact that my favorite player turns 34 this year. But it also has to do with wanting a bit of new spice to the mix. If we say that Novak became an elite player in 2007 and Andy in 2008, it has been a full seven years since we saw a player break through to the true elite of the game. That gap is probably unprecedented in Open Era history. Another research project to work on.