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It's the most dull time for tennis fans. No more majors for the rest of the year, and the fall hard court season hasn't begun.
Fedal have dominated the narrative this year, and this already Fedal-heavy board has grown even Fedaler as a result. Bitterness ensued on both ends of the fanbases post each major, excuse-making remains as rampant as ever (slowed down surfaces, fatigued players after semi final marathons, bad backs, etc...). In other words, not much has changed for the past 10 years and the rivalry is as strong as ever.
One of the biggest criticisms of Nadal throughout the years has been his imbalanced results. In other words, his results on other surfaces pale by comparison when compared to his clay court results. This, of course, is undeniably true. After all, Nadal has won 10 French Opens, 22 masters on clay, and went on an 81-match unbeaten run on clay. His Grand Slam tally looks like this: Australian Open: 1. French Open: 10. Wimbledon: 2. US Open: 3.
Clearly, the number "10" sticks out and is much greater than the second highest number on that list, 3.
So why make this thread then, since it's so clear-cut? Well, what if I told you, this adds to Nadal's legacy instead of taking away from it? Why? Well, let's look at the following hypothetical scenario.
Let's take an example of a player who never existed, and give him an imaginary resume. Let's call this player Nafael Radal. Radal is now retired, after enjoying a stellar career, winning a total of 10 majors. His major count looks as such: AO: 1. FO: 4. Wimbledon: 2. US Open: 3. Wow. A no-brainer straight entry into the hall of fame. Double digit majors, having won three different majors at least twice, and winning all four majors too. What a balanced resume!
Of course, nobody can have an ounce of criticism to dish out with regards to this player's career. After all, celebrated legends who succeeded on all surfaces like Andre Agassi have accomplished less.
Now, imagine a player with the exact same resume, but replace his 4 French Opens with 10... and somehow, this would be a resume you can criticize?
I hope the stupidity of this premise is obvious now. Nadal would be getting punished for being even greater? How does that make any sense? I'll highlight this point further with this: Nobody in their right mind could claim that a player who won 2 majors on grass (let's ignore the finals he reached) and 4 on hard courts has had been anything short of great on those surfaces in terms of majors won. But somehow adding 10 FO's -- which is an absolutely impossible feat -- takes away from that?
Because then, you're asking Nadal to be almost as good on other surfaces as he is on clay, which is utter lunacy. We are talking about someone who in his prime, was as close to literally unbeatable on a particular surface as you can possibly get, and that's not even hyperbole. If he were 85% as good on those other surfaces, you'd end up with something borderline obscene.
So Nadal's otherworldly greatness on clay is somehow used against him by pretending that some players should feel "ashamed" for letting this supposed clay courter win so much on other surfaces (let's not pretend these boards aren't littered with similar takes). Moreover, clay is treated as some gimmicky exotic surface that's almost a different sport (ignoring that the vast majority of the players on tour grew up on clay courts). The fact that only one major is played on clay is mere happenstance. There was a time when two majors per year were played on clay (1975-1977). So it's all arbitrary. Hard court tennis just happens to dominate this era, but it doesn't make the surface any superior or more authentic than others.
And finally, by the same token why are Federer and Djokovic's lone clay court majors not a knock against them? Hell, Novak's 12 majors include 1 French Open, 3 Wimbledons, 2 US Opens and 6 Australian Opens. Why is that not looked at as an imbalanced resume?
Fedal have dominated the narrative this year, and this already Fedal-heavy board has grown even Fedaler as a result. Bitterness ensued on both ends of the fanbases post each major, excuse-making remains as rampant as ever (slowed down surfaces, fatigued players after semi final marathons, bad backs, etc...). In other words, not much has changed for the past 10 years and the rivalry is as strong as ever.
One of the biggest criticisms of Nadal throughout the years has been his imbalanced results. In other words, his results on other surfaces pale by comparison when compared to his clay court results. This, of course, is undeniably true. After all, Nadal has won 10 French Opens, 22 masters on clay, and went on an 81-match unbeaten run on clay. His Grand Slam tally looks like this: Australian Open: 1. French Open: 10. Wimbledon: 2. US Open: 3.
Clearly, the number "10" sticks out and is much greater than the second highest number on that list, 3.
So why make this thread then, since it's so clear-cut? Well, what if I told you, this adds to Nadal's legacy instead of taking away from it? Why? Well, let's look at the following hypothetical scenario.
Let's take an example of a player who never existed, and give him an imaginary resume. Let's call this player Nafael Radal. Radal is now retired, after enjoying a stellar career, winning a total of 10 majors. His major count looks as such: AO: 1. FO: 4. Wimbledon: 2. US Open: 3. Wow. A no-brainer straight entry into the hall of fame. Double digit majors, having won three different majors at least twice, and winning all four majors too. What a balanced resume!
Of course, nobody can have an ounce of criticism to dish out with regards to this player's career. After all, celebrated legends who succeeded on all surfaces like Andre Agassi have accomplished less.
Now, imagine a player with the exact same resume, but replace his 4 French Opens with 10... and somehow, this would be a resume you can criticize?
I hope the stupidity of this premise is obvious now. Nadal would be getting punished for being even greater? How does that make any sense? I'll highlight this point further with this: Nobody in their right mind could claim that a player who won 2 majors on grass (let's ignore the finals he reached) and 4 on hard courts has had been anything short of great on those surfaces in terms of majors won. But somehow adding 10 FO's -- which is an absolutely impossible feat -- takes away from that?
Because then, you're asking Nadal to be almost as good on other surfaces as he is on clay, which is utter lunacy. We are talking about someone who in his prime, was as close to literally unbeatable on a particular surface as you can possibly get, and that's not even hyperbole. If he were 85% as good on those other surfaces, you'd end up with something borderline obscene.
So Nadal's otherworldly greatness on clay is somehow used against him by pretending that some players should feel "ashamed" for letting this supposed clay courter win so much on other surfaces (let's not pretend these boards aren't littered with similar takes). Moreover, clay is treated as some gimmicky exotic surface that's almost a different sport (ignoring that the vast majority of the players on tour grew up on clay courts). The fact that only one major is played on clay is mere happenstance. There was a time when two majors per year were played on clay (1975-1977). So it's all arbitrary. Hard court tennis just happens to dominate this era, but it doesn't make the surface any superior or more authentic than others.
And finally, by the same token why are Federer and Djokovic's lone clay court majors not a knock against them? Hell, Novak's 12 majors include 1 French Open, 3 Wimbledons, 2 US Opens and 6 Australian Opens. Why is that not looked at as an imbalanced resume?