NUMBER ONE
Transcription
NUMBER ONE
P E R S O N A L I T Y : M A R A T S A F I N Communication and External Relations Department March 2005 Roger Federer Marat Safi n Lleyton Hewitt Andy Roddick Joachim Johansson Andre Agassi Guillermo Coria Rafael Nadal Tim Henman NUMBER ONE The INDESIT ATP 2005 Race is off to a start. Who’ll be on top at the end of the year? Let’s do some predictions together... Mario Ancic 1 INDESIT ATP 2005 Race Safi n and Federer at the end of their incredible match in Melbourne FabFour No – it’s not a Beatles come-back, but the world of tennis too has foursomes that seem a cut above the rest. We’re talking about Federer and Safin, Roddick and Hewitt. Who’s going to win the new race for the no. 1 title? T he INDESIT ATP 2005 Race has barely started and it already looks a personal thing between two players. Roger Federer and Marat Safin were so impressive in Australia that suggesting possible challengers seems pure conjecture. Here’s our tentative Top Ten for this season anyway. Melbourne was won by the player they said would lose. Roger Federer was looking so omnipotent, a sort of infallible tennis machine, that no one would have thought he wouldn’t reach the final. But that’s what Marat Safin made happen, in a semi-final match that may well go down as the most exciting match of the season, such was the suspense of the see-saw scoring. The Swiss ace is still the season’s big favourite. Hiccups happen to everyone but in the long run his superior consistency and completeness should prevail. He says Post scriptum 2 himself he’d prefer to win a 3rd Wimbledon than a 1st Paris. Either way he’s likely to take home one or two slams. The good news for us is that the Schumacher of tennis at last has a real challenger. Behind the lead pair we have another couple of youngsters. Andy Roddick and Lleyton Hewitt must be cursing their luck at being born in the Federer era, otherwise they might have been dominating the circuit. To get to the very top the American is slightly lacking in technique and the Australian in physique. Neither of their temperaments, however, look like being content with less than no. 1. But getting there depends more on the top seeds than on their own capabilities. And the FedererSafin duo seem better equipped. Acting as a “buffer” between the Fab Four and the rest of the Top Ten we have “grandpa” Andre Agassi. In Melbourne he was steamrollered by the Federer Express and must have wondered what the point of continuing was. A sad experience for a champion whose presence we will unfortunately be missing quite soon, for no one will be surprised if 2005 is his last season. His objective is to equal the achievement of his historic rival Pete Sampras, who in his last Slam tournament took home a victory as extraordinary as it was surprising. Will Agassi have the strength to follow suit? He certainly doesn’t lack willpower but he can only hope that Federer catches flu and that Safin and Roddick get out of the wrong side of the bed. The unknown qualities outnumber the certainties but in New York, Agassi’s home court and with all his public behind him, the miracle just might come off. In the second half of our very personal Top 10 we have some surprises. Frontline we have a Swede who over the last year has grown from a Mr Nobody into the new T h e AT P s i t e i s n o w a v a i l a b l e i n S p a n i s h G a e l M o nf il s s ig ne d a 5 ye a r c o ntr ac t with Nike wo r th a round $2m Pete Sampras is considering playing in the Senior Tour T im H e nm a n tu r ne d to Pilate s to e a s e hi s back troub le End of season scenario? The season has only just started and we’ve been having fun making predictions about who of all the established champions, new faces and old friends - will be this year’s new Top Ten. 1 2 3 4 Roger Federer Marat Safin Andy Roddick Lleyton Hewitt 5 6 7 8 Andre Agassi Joachim Johansson Rafael Nadal Guillermo Coria 9 10 Other Other Tim Henman Mario Ancic Taylor Dent Tommy Haas Switzerland, 23 He’s the undisputed favourite for the Indesit Race 2005. He dominated last season and delighted us with his incredible tennis. Forget about Dolly, we should be cloning Roger. In the meantime, record his matches and enjoy yourselves. USA, 34 No longer a potential no. 1 and probably not even a Grand Slam winner. But he’s there right behind the top four, an eminence grise hoping to pull a rabbit out of his top hat. UK, 30 The Panda of tennis (last surviving exponent of serve & volley), he looks a bit past it but can still give us thrills. He’s always dreamt of winning Wimbledon and has even come close. Maybe at the end of his career the dream will come true, though it sounds more wishful thinking than a good bet. Russia, 25 Federer was short of only one thing – a rival. He now has one in the back on form Safin. The Russian beat Roger in Australia but will have to show more continuity if he wants to keep up with him. No. 2 doesn’t really do him justice – one and a half? Sweden, 22 Boom Boom par excellence, he looks like breaking all the ace records in history. But it’s not only a serve he’s got – watch out for his fine forehand, solid back hand and unshakeable faith in his resources. He may now be ready for a Slam final. Croatia, 20 After his Wimbledon semi-final we were all expecting him to take off, but he then exited the next seven tournaments in the first round. All he has to do is get all his enormous talent together. Which is why he’s one of this year’s Wimbledon favourites. Boom Boom. We’re talking about Joachim Johansson. Last year he beat Roddick in New York, a Herculean task if ever there was one. Lethal when serving, he lost to Agassi in Australia in spite of the fact the 51 aces he clocked up on that occasion set an all-time record for a game of tennis. Potentially, he already deserves a Slam because he has both hands very strong and admirable self-confidence. His fiancée is Leyton Hewitt’s sister, which seems to be doing wonders seeing the physical progress he’s made. He’ll be no. 1 material if gets all his characteristics working together. Close at his heels is a young guy set to be a teen idol: Rafael Nadal. The name alone has a film-star ring to it, an impression he does nothing to correct. He graces the court wi long shorts and a very mean forehand. Apart from evoking an indio version of the Beautiful and the Damned, he’ll USA, 22 A step down from the top two but still competitive, except on clay. If he completes his game and perfects his technique, he’ll be difficult to stop. Will he break his own world speed record for a tennis serve this year (250 km/h)? Spain, 18 Undoubtedly ready for the quantum leap. If he can stay out of injury, he’ll be among the favourites at Roland Garros. He’s won a Davis Cup and is thus an idol Spain. His fisherman style long shorts may conceal a true pirate. USA, 23 Having lost five kilos to Weight Watchers he’s suddenly become a great player. On both hard court and grass he’s a serious proposition and if he manages to discipline his talent he can seriously aspire to a Top Ten ranking. be amongst the favourites in Paris but can also be threatening on the hard court. Just ask His Majesty Federer who lost to him at Key Biscayne last year. Next comes clay-court prince Guillermo Coria, cruelly punished by cramp just when he was on top of Gaudio at a Paris final. Vendetta is best served on the rocks but Guille doesn’t want to wait too long. He may have missed the second half of last season through injury but he’s still the man to beat on clay, which is by no means the preferred surface of the current Top Four. Behind him comes the exact opposite Tim Henman – the last specimen of the serve & volley school and still hunting down the Wimbledon final that’s so far eluded him. He may seem past his best but if you believe in fairytales, put a few pounds sterling on him to win the Championships. Closing the ranks of the Top Ten is Mario Australia, 24 Rusty is back after two seasons at no. 1 and another two in relative hibernation. The biceps he grew this winter have made him even stronger. One doubt though: last year he was always beaten easily by Federer and this year he lost against Safin. So he’s still not on the same level as the leading pair. Argentina, 23 Recovery from injury has been long but the sight of red clay should make Gillle more competitive. Last year he lost the Paris final through cramp, so he’ll be out for revenge this season. Germany, 26 The German former no. 2 seed now has his injury behind him and is ready to start regaining his true form. But in the meantime his adversaries have improved, so he’ll need to work very hard to get back in the Top Ten. Ancic. When he came close to reaching the Wimbledon final last year, we were all talking about a new phenomenon being born. Since then SuperMario has done his best to change our minds though. His game is complex rather than complete and he still needs time and patience to get things together. When he does manage though, it’ll be bad news for everyone, top seeds included. Think we’ve got it right? Since getting ten out of ten would be a miracle, we’ll throw in a couple of alternatives – say Tommy Haas and Taylor Dent. Haas came back last year after a serious injury and seems ready claim his former status (2nd seed, which now looks beyond his reach). But he’s certainly ready to fight for a place in the Top Ten. As is Dent (son of Dent), who has the talent of a pure attacker and an appetite to satisfy any chef. If he loses five kilos he’ll start to be seriously dangerous. Carlos Moya, Juan Carlos Ferrero, Tim Henman and Roger Federer decided not to play in the Davis Cup this year Spanish Alex Calatrava put up for auction on eBay the possibility of sponsoring him in one of the Grand Slam tournaments in 2005: the starting bid is �3,500 Images of the final in Rotterdam were transmitted via Internet by the tournament’s official website 3 Personality Being Marat Safin He’s the most controversial player on the circuit. As he’s intelligent, shrewd and never banal, we asked the winner of the Australian Open 2005 to reveal his personality in his own words Infancy “When you get rich and fa- mous, you have to think just one thing: where you’re coming from and how much money you used to have. Things you can’t afford to forget.” Being Russian “We Russians are different. We have a different mentality, a different way of living and reacting. But I can’t explain it. I’m not Sigmund Freud!” Professionalism “You want to sit around in a 5-star hotel sipping whisky? OK, but first you have to travel the world sleeping in rooms with no bath and eating $5 menus. Starting out you earn $100 a month, if you’re lucky. No one gives you money, fame, glory...” Homeland “In Russia there’s a unique atmosphere. It’s my homeland. I was born in Moscow and that’s where I’ll go back and live the rest of my life when I retire. By the way, Moscow has the most beautiful women in the world. Guaranteed.” School “I wasn’t a genius, I wasn’t a dunce. I was a normal kid and failed an exam now and again. Who hasn’t?” Money “When I look at a dollar I only see the picture of George Washington and a bit of paper. Money is nothing other than money. It makes life easier but I don’t feel sexy because I’ve got a lot.” Popularity “After winning my first Slam title in 2000 people started recognizing me. But not enough. I wanted to go to a famous Moscow club for New Year’s Eve but they wouldn’t let me in. If people don’t recognize me now and ask what I do, I say I’m a poor student. It’s more interesting and more fun.” First Slam victory “I may be the winner of the US Open but I forgot my entry pass and they didn’t want to let me in. When I said my name was Safin, they asked me, “How do you spell that?” Motivation “Motivation is like love. When you’re desperate for it, you can Post scriptum 4 crazy.” Defeats “Losing isn’t a tragedy. Marat Safi n never find it. When you let things go spontaneously, it turns up immediately.” Women “Sure I like them a lot. What guy doesn’t enjoy the company of a beautiful woman. It’s great, it’s natural. You can’t go against nature, can you?” Hobbies “I find fishing marvellous. When I was out with an injury, I would spend 8 hours in a boat, sitting drinking beer. I had everything I needed. What I caught, I cooked. I was with friends and at dinner we had wine too. Relax, relax, relax: what more can you want?” Expectations “I want to live my life, not someone else’s. I know what I’m doing and I’ve been doing it for years. They tell me to do this, do that, get up at seven and go to bed at eleven, and eat this and not too much of that. If I won ten Slam titles and was world no. 1 for years, people would still say I could have done better. You have to live with that thought. And try not to react – otherwise you’re in trouble.” Coaches “I don’t understand how my coach can he hang around me 24 hours a day? I can travel on my own though. I don’t need a baby-sitter. And above all I don’t need someone trying to teach me too much. If someone talks to me from 9 in the morning to 10 in the evening, I go What should I do? Shut myself in my room and cry my eyes out?” Sleep “I don’t like playing early. At 9 in the morning I’m not really ready to play tennis – only to sleep.” Fighting “At the outset I wasn’t used to fighting. When I played well, winning came easily, when I played badly... I would lose against my mum.” Distractions “During a game you sometimes start thinking of dinner, the car, playing golf, sometimes sex even. But you’ve got to be careful not to lose control. If you think too much, the game will soon go against you.” Winning “Winning a big tournament is the best thing in the world. It makes you happy, proud. It’s even better than sex. I swear it.” Broken racquets “In my year of grace I broke 36 racquets. But I became world no. 1, so who’s complaining?” Temperament “I’m not a Stefan Edberg. I’m not a robot. I’m a normal guy that gets mad when something goes wrong. It happens to you in the office, no? At worst I break a racquet – so what? I didn’t kill anyone. It’s a bit of graphite!” Adversaries “The adversary I detest most is Santoro. I hate playing against him. He beat me five times in a row. I need two weeks preparation and another two weeks to recover afterwards.” Success “I’m just too happy travelling round the world playing tennis. Instead of living in Moscow sweeping the streets.” Job “I’m not interested in what happens tomorrow. I can’t be always worrying about what’s going to happen. And I don’t want bodyguards. I’m not the Russian President. I just have to play tennis and earn some money. And maybe entertain people. That’s my job.” Yannick Noah and Jim Courier will be entered in the Hall of Fame this year Federer won his 16 th consecutive final in Rotterdam, an all-time record Guillermo Coria changed racquets by going over to the new Prince technology – it’s the first time he’s changed since going professional Special Ranking by Joachim Johansson and Andy Rod- Scottsdale tournament, who takes home dick. For the moment the giant Swede over 16 points a match with aces alone. seems just ahead, having clocked up Completing the top 5 are the huge 284 aces in 16 matches, which is an en- Frenchman Gregory Carraz, with 15.5 viable average of 17.8 aces a match. Not aces a match, and the Belarus player that the Austin champion is far behind. Max Mirnyi, whose 14.5 aces a match Roddick’s average ace per match per- have enabled him to make a cracking formance is only slightly lower at 16.1. start to the season. Johansson also set up a curious record. Against Aces Agassi in the Australian Player Nation per match Open he managed 51 aces (an all-time record) but also Joachim Johansson Sweden 17,3 lost the match. Curiouser Wayne Arthurs Australia 16,6 still, the top three performers in this particular statisAndy Roddick USA 15,9 tic all lost their matches. In addition to Johansson, Gregory Carraz France 15,5 we have Richard Krajicek Max Mirnyi Belarus 14,5 in 1999 (49 aces against Joachim Johansson Aceman The serve has become a vitally important weapon in modern tennis. Especially on the indoor courts where the last few games in this stage of the season have been played. So who are the fastest serves on the circuit? The title will be contended, on an equal footing I’d say, Not only aces You can’t win by aces alone. Which is proved by the number of good players whose ace scoring has so far been poor. Here are players in the Top 100 who depend least on winning serves. Unbeatable! Roger Federer Roger Federer continues his long uninterrupted series of finals victories. He’s currently on 16. One thing is clear: it’s best to play him early on, because once he starts smelling success, he’s like a bull on seeing a red flag... Kafelnikov) and Goran Ivanisevic in 1997 (46 aces against Norman). In between these two phenomena, Johansson and Roddick, we now see the Australian Wayne Arthurs, recent winner of the USA 13,3 Marat Safin Russia 13,1 USA 13 Mario Ancic Croatia 12,5 Thomas Johansson Sweden 11,6 Jan-Michael Gambill Aces per match Winning serve Filippo Volandri 0,8 Oliver Rochus 1,7 Sjeng Schalken 1,8 Bohdan Ulihrach 2 Keeping a high percentage of service games won doesn’t only depend on your serve. Though scoring lots of aces helps. Here are the best in this field. Player Year Tournament Adversary Score 2003 Vienna Carlos Moya 6-3 6-3 6-3 TennisMastersCup Andre Agassi 6-3 6-0 6-4 2003 Mardy Fish 2004 Australian open Marat Safin 7-6 6-4 6-2 2004 Dubai Feliciano Lopez 4-6 6-1 6-2 2004 AMS Indian Wells Tim Henman 6-3 6-3 2004 AMS Amburgo 2004 Halle 2004 Wimbledon 2004 Guillermo Coria 4-6 6-4 6-2 6-3 The finest doubles % services games won 95 Joachim Johansson Player Wayne Arthurs 95 Roger Federer 94 Andy Roddick 94 Ivo Karlovic 93 Apart from the singles the doubles circuit has come to life. Here are the best doubles couples after two months of activity. Pos. Team 1 Black/Ullyett 231 Andy Roddick 4-6 7-5 7-6 6-4 2 Bryan/Bryan 211 Gstaad Igor Andreev 6-2 6-3 5-7 6-3 3 Aspelin/Perry 178 2004 AMS Toronto Andy Roddick 7-5 6-3 4 Bjorkman/Mirnyi 112 2004 US Open Lleyton Hewitt 6-0 7-6 6-0 4 Bhupathi/Woodbridge 112 2004 Bangkok Andy Roddick 6-4 6-0 6 Arthurs/Handley 104 TennisMastersCup Lleyton Hewitt 6-3 6-2 7 Damm/Stepanek 101 2004 Mardy Fish 6-0 6-3 Points 2004 Doha Ivan Ljubicic 6-3 6-1 8 Erlich/Ram 92 2005 Rotterdam Ivan Ljubicic 5-7 7-5 7-6 9 Melzer/Waske 90 2005 Dubai Ivan Ljubicic 6-1 6-7 6-3 10 Suk/Vizner 87 Young French hope Richard Gasquet missed the start of the season because of... chickenpox Bobby Reynolds played in the Australian Open because he couldn’t get... a visa for the Brazil tournament; lucky him, seeing he got to the third round An exhibition opened at Roland Garros featuring all the tournament posters produced by major artists over the last 30 years; if you prefer pins, www.pins-rolandgarros.com 5 New talents Donald Young At just 15 he’s seen as the black McEnroe. A left-hander with a great temperament, he’s history’s youngest ever no. 1 juniores and has already debuted with the pros. Will he be the phenomenon of the coming years? Donald Young Y ou don’t have to be an orphan to be a champion, but tennis folk think it helps. No offence to mother Ilona and father Donald Sr. (good health and long life to them in fact), but in effect there are not a few cases of young tennis talents being burnt out by the excessive parental expectation. Aware of this danger, Ilona didn’t want to exaggerate with little Donald Jr. and waited till he picked up a racquet on his own, when he was two. The little guy soon learnt how to make use of it. He kept hold of it for the next 13 years and last January used it to win the juniores title at the Australian Open and become, at 15, the youngest ever under 18 no. 1 in history. Donald Jr. isn’t a new discovery of course. He’s been under observation since John McEnroe asked for a partner to train with when he was in Chicago. Supermac was given a thin looking boy with a mischievous grin and a red cap on sideways. He thought someone was joking. Then, when the kid played him a unreachable dropshot, he started asking around and then pronounced, “Gentlemen, I’ve just played against the future world no. 1”. Donald Sr. Immediately agreed, “My son has the right qualities for becoming the new Sampras. And can go better. There’s no hurry. He’ll get all the experience he Post scriptum 6 needs and then we’ll see what he’s capable of”. The IMG immediately put him under contract and then the first sponsors swooped, first of all Nike, who see him as a possible Tiger Woods of tennis. The initial stream of dollars allowed them to move from Chicago to Atlanta, where there’s a Federal technical centre and just a twohour flight away is Florida, where some of the world’s best tennis academies are. For example the one run by Nick Bollettieri, who shaped up the talent of Andre Agassi, Monica Seles and a dozen or so other stars. “He has the cold determination of the great champions,” says guru Bollettieri, “it only takes a quarter of an hour with him to realize that. He has extraordinary talent and expectations on his account are by no means exaggerated. He’s going to be big”. Many people, lacking imagination maybe, have compared him to Arthur Ashe, the strongest Afro-American player in history and Wimbledon winner in 1974. But Donald Jr. isn’t happy with the comparison. “If you only win one Slam title, it might be just luck. If you win 14 though, like Sampras, it means you really are a no. 1. And I want to become a no. 1”. For the moment he should concentrate on growing. Age comes on its own but physique has to be worked on. One scout put him at a generous 1 metre 75, which we’ll pretend is true and hope he grows the ten centimetres he’ll need to avoid being trampled by the giants that inhabit the upper regions of tennis. Marat Safin is Le Coq Sportif paid tribute to a great champion who died recently, Arthur Ashe. The French brand put back in production the tennis shoes Ashe wore when he won at Wimbledon in 1975 Change in the ATP calendar: the Shanghai tournament is being moved to Ho Chi Minh City (ex Saigon). Shanghai will host the Masters Cup 1.93, Andy Roddick 1.87, and so on. He’ll also need vitamin treatment and weight-training to gain a few kilos of muscle. The kid only weighs 67 kg (in his clothes). If mother nature is generous, Donald Sr.’s plans may work out. Because Donald Jr. has enormous talent. Scientific studies have shown that genius resides in the left-hand side of the brain and that lefthanded people are therefore particularly gifted. On court there nothing he can’t already do – slice serves, delicate dropshots, stinging volleys (his forehand is pure poison). He can also argue with his mother when she gives him too much advice. “Mom, let me do what I want. I’m the one on court,” he screamed once during the last Australian Open. Donald Jr. has already debuted on the professional circuit. Not like common mortals, who have to learn the ropes in futures and challenger tournaments, but in an ATP event in the major circuit. It was in Memphis, where the young phenomenon was invited by the organizers. He lost his first match against Robby Ginepri, fellow American, no. 69 in the INDESIT ATP Entry Ranking. A good way to burn him out is to run after success at all costs, as soon as possible. Febrile managers crave TV exposure, interviews on CNN, GQ cover photos. Which all means contracts, commissions, money. But the risk is that the kid will get dispirited up against a world he’s not ready to take over. As Bollettieri rightly says: “You have to be very careful choosing the right moment for a kid to debut. You have to wait till he’s ready technically and mentally. Adult players hate kids. What do you think a 25 year old is going to do playing a 15 year old? Offer a welcoming hand? He’ll try and annihilate him, because no one likes losing to a kid. They used to call my Agassi punk, when he was 17. And that was the nicest word”. Donald Jr. doesn’t seem worried for the moment. If anything, he seems to have a superiority complex. At times he’ll start playing right-hand (“to give my opponent a chance”) or take a nap just before going on court. Someone like that has only two options. Either he becomes an absolute phenomenon or he’ll have a book of jokes dedicated to him, in comparison with which the one on Totti will seem no laughing matter. The jury should sit out another year before giving its verdict. Gael Monfi ls Teen-ranking Donald Young isn’t the only young talent on the ATP circuit. Here’s the under 21 situation according to the INDESIT ATP Entry Ranking. At the top of this special ranking, we have Swedish Robin Soderling, who recently won his second ATP title, in Milan. He may not be the new Edberg but he can calmly aim at a top 20 placing. He’s followed by Croat Mario Ancic, a super-fine talent ready for the Player Top Ten. Then Tomas Berdych (very high potential) and the already famous Rafael Nadal, hero of Spain’s Davis Cup victory last year. Next come Juan Monaco, Nico Almagro, Marcos Baghdatis, Janko Tipsarevic and Ivo Minar. Last in this Top Teen Ten is the 18 year old French Richard Gasquet, a huge talent who’s still not quite resilient enough to achieve high level ranking. Nation Born Ranking* Mario Ancic CRO 1984 23 Rafael Nadal SPA 1986 31 Robin Soderling SWE 1984 36 Tomas Berdych CZE 1985 44 Nicolas Almagro SPA 1985 89 Juan Monaco ARG 1984 91 Marcos Baghdatis CYP 1985 95 Janko Tipsarevic SCG 1984 101 Ivo Minar CZE 1984 111 Stanislas Wawrinka SUI 1985 118 * INDESIT ATP Entry Ranking 28 th February Federer and Ljubicic are the payers who’ve won the most matches in 2005: 20 Giant Ivo Karlovic has won 93% of all his service games but only 3% (!) of his returns All the Top 100 in the INDESIT ATP 2005 Race have committed double faults (the lowest number is 6, by Edgardo Massa) Still in the INDESIT ATP 2005 Race Top 100, there are 14 players who serve at least 10 aces a game 7 Memorabilia “ “ Wilson T2000 M a m m a m i a , w h a t ’s t h i s ? N o t h a n k y o u . B e a u t i f u l , OK, historic, but you can’t play tennis with this thing. N o w o n d e r t h e g a m e u s e d t o b e s l o w e r. H o w d i d they hit the ball at all? Let me have my racket back! 8 Robin Soderling after winning the Milan ATP Tournament
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