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« Rome: Et Tu, JC Rome: What a Pity... »
Rome: Spotting the Dirt Worm
Posted 05/09/2008 @ 5 :30 PM

RsThis week TENNIS.com is featuring one of our blog regulars, Asad Raza, who is in Rome for the men's Italian Open. He'll be writing back and forth with me here a couple times; reporting on the home page; and blogging over at Pete's as well.

Asad,

We’ve caught you on TV a couple times this week, during the Rafa loss and the Roddick win. From that angle, you look like you've got a Jeff Goldblum kind of thing going. But studious and attentive to all details, of course. Call me perverse, but there are few things I savor more than watching a tennis match by myself in a half-empty press section in some far-off city, knowing I’m going to be writing it later. There’s nothing quite like that to focus the observational mind. Have you enjoyed the Roman crowds? They’re more playful than the French, and slouchier.

It’s been an unexpected tournament, as I’m sure you’ll agree. Nadal and Federer down, Roddick up. Has this made it more exciting around the grounds, or is there an air of disappointment or anti-climax? I think the clay season needed this. It’s a breath of fresh air in spring for the first time in three years. We’ll get plenty of Rog and Rafa in the next few weeks, but what are the chances we’ll see the Dirt Worm performed again? Watching on TV, I didn’t get the feeling the crowd was all that thrilled to see Stepanek do his dance. It doesn’t matter, he played much more proactively throughout and deserved to win. Federer spent a lot of time hanging back and waiting for him to create something in the rallies. I wonder if a reverse pressure got to him after Rafa lost and the draw was his.

It was a fun match to watch, perhaps because of the conditions. You’ve been talking about the varieties of clay, and I’m sure there are many gradations. One other variable is the weather; clay matches seem to be affected by sun and heat more than others. Nadal vs. Ferrero was clearly played in “heavy conditions,” and it slowed everything and everyone down. I’ve always thought of Nadal as a great heat and sun player—he seems to feed on it, and perhaps a faster clay court suits him.

Today the stadium was hit by that golden afternoon sun that I associate with tennis in Rome. If the ball was flying faster, Stepanek used it to his advantage. I’m still amazed that he was the one who found a way through both tiebreakers just when it could have gone the other way. I’ve written before that he’s much better to watch live than on TV. You can see his variety, his craftiness, his ability to slow points down and use every part of the court, including the center of it. He also plays at a nice, natural rhythm—not deliberate like Nadal and Djokovic, or semi-frenetic like Roddick. I loved his down-the-middle, chip and charge plays today; it doesn’t get any more old school than that, and they worked. What did you think of seeing Stepanek live this time?

As for the rest, I’ve only been watching in bits and pieces. Here are a few of my couch potato observations:

—Djokovic has a solid game for clay, but I wonder if he has the mental patience. When he started to go south in the second set against Andreev, he was testy and incredulous, and pretty much packed in a couple games. I think he has to guard against impatience against lower-ranked players; the clay greats have always been mentally steady through the ups and downs of a three-hour slog. He did come back to win in the the third, which shows again his overall confidence. But he tends to expend a lot of energy proving what he knew all along—that he was going to win.

—Nadal’s performance reminded me of the one he put on last year in the semis in Rome against Davydenko. He had just come off two unreal blow-outs, against Youzhny and Djokovic, and I expected him to stay at that level all the way through the French Open. Well, that’s not how it works for anyone. Every day is a new one, and subject to a hundred variables, including the weather—your confidence can literally be blown away in the wind or suffocated in humidity. Nadal hit short against Davydenko and had trouble generating power, though he pulled it out in the end.

This year, he came into Rome after another high-flying performance, against Ferrer in Barcelona—for much of that match, he was at his very best. But right from the start against Ferrero, you could see Nadal didn’t have it, especially on the forehand side. I believe he was injured, but I think Bodo had a good point when he said that his recent negativity about the schedule may have caught up with him. Nadal almost seemed to be trying—subconsciously, perhaps—to prove that he was right to complain. Or it may have given him a reason in his mind for an off day. He was right, of course—there was very little chance he was going to run the table this time. And you were right: A Nadal presser is always a lesson in coming to terms, honestly, with what you just did on the court.

—Blake: I like watching him more on clay than other surfaces, because he has to hit a few balls before pulling the trigger. He and Monfils played the most entertaining match of the 2006 French Open, with lots of touch and long, athletic rallies. Watching him today, I kept seeing Blake as a batter on a baseball field. His returns are swings from the plate, as if he’s timing the ball for a line drive. As for Wawrinka, the guy’s game doesn’t do it for me. His brand of bruiser-ball is impressive in its way, but still bruising.

Who do you have in the semis, Asad? I’ll take Stepanek and Roddick. Would that be an anti-climax? I don’t think so. We'd have another chance at spotting the (perhaps rightfully) elusive Dirt Worm.

Enjoy the weekend,
Steve

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Comments

anyone else notice the ATP site saying Stepanek and Roddick are meeting in the semi's?

anyone else notice the ATP site saying Stepanek and Roddick are meeting in the semi's?

oh gosh, a double post, PLUS the site now says Wawrinka/Roddick.

I'm just going to crawl into a hole now.

it's ok, andrew. definitely ok

no steve, I made a mistake on a MESSAGE BOARD. An INTERNET message board!


my life is over!

/sarcasm

Guys,

This tournament has seen enough drama already.

Andrew, let's not make your mistake bigger than it is (shame on you, though).

So, who wins this on Sunday? I don't like Djoko at all but I don't see anyone taking this from him.

Andrew: not to worry about the mistake. But we do have someone who posts regularly on this site by that handle (plus an Andrew Miller), so please pick a different handle.

Jeez, that mono sure is lingering...;-)

Who the hail would have called Roddick in any kind of final (quarter, semi or otherwise) in Rome? What a great surprise, and not a moment too soon. I've already branded '08 the year of the real A-Rod, and I really hope to see him do well now and later (whither Wimby, Andy???)

So now it's Djokovic's tournament to lose, although really you could say the same about a number of players left. If Stepanek can dispatch Federer in straights, whom can't he worm over? Now we're back to the reality series tennis used to be...if only until Roland Garros of course.

okay, this will be my handle from now on.


and "shame on me"? I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or not, so I don't know whether to feel bad or laugh. :/

It's been hard to watch Federer - I had thought that his confidence crisis was finally over, but watching him not dare to go for his shots against Stepanek was another sign that it isn't.

Nice to see Roddick hanging in there - it would be a real joy to see him win Rome, just for the sheer shock value of it (just thinking about it makes me giggle). But I agree that Djokovic will have something to say about that, and I would even argue that Wawrinka is really the favorite going into that semifinal. But hey, stranger things have already happened this week!

jesus. it's like 5 years ago before federer and nadal started to dominate. it's such a crap shoot now. i like it, even though i'm a fed fan.

i haven't watched the match between radek and fed but it sounds like it was close and tight.

and here i though the rome title was already in roger's hands...onwards to hamburg. i wonder if nadal will play there?


I'm sure Nadal will go to Hamburg. He can't afford to drop more points after losing 2nd round in Rome. Otherwise he'll have to win biiiig in the hard court season in order to keep his ranking - remember that Djokovic will be breathing down Nadal's neck more than ever, especially if he wins Rome which he most likely will. He'll make up quite a bit of ground on Nadal.

*Waves to Saave*

Steve, you wrote: "Watching on TV, I didn’t get the feeling the crowd was all that thrilled to see Stepanek do his dance. It doesn’t matter, he played much more proactively throughout and deserved to win. Federer spent a lot of time hanging back and waiting for him to create something in the rallies."

Yes, and yes. Stepanek got to MP by going after the second serve, and pulled back one of the minibreaks by going after a first serve. Federer didn't play a bad TB, but he was still the more defensive player. Maybe he counted on himself to pass Stepanek more often than he ended up doing.

Steve,

I can't believe your subscribing to the mumbo jumbo that an "air of negativity" was the reason Nadal went out. Or that he was "subconsciously " trying to prove that he was right about the scheduling. Maybe his horoscope was off too. The guy's foot was torn up and he couldn't generate power from his legs. He was injured. That's it. End of story.

As for Stepanek's dance: He says he thinks people like it, and that's why he does it. Oh, poor thing.

Watching the Rome matches today - if I didn't know any better, I wouldn't even think they were playing on clay. You didn't see a lof of sliding and the ball was traveling fast in the court. It just seemed like they were playing on a hard court!

How much do you want to bet that the 4 players left in the Rome final loses early at Hamburg? Call it just a hunch... Rome is the fastest clay tournament; Hamburg is the slowest. I just think the players left in Rome will really see a big difference in the surface next week.

Steve, how do you think Federer bounces back from this? It wasn't a 'horrible' loss (in the order of say, Volandrigate) but a relatively meek performance in the second set, and definitely not the kind of loss that you want to have in your mind as you try to win the French Open. Thoughts?

Semifinal predictions:

Djokovic in 2 over Stepanek - Believe Radek will be emotionally flat tomorrow while Novak did not have to expend too much energy

Roddick in 3 over Wawrinka - This will come down to a few crucial point. Even though Stan has played well the last 2 weeks, I favor Andy when the crucial points are played.

Master: You certainly could be right. Stepanek though is unpredictable. He wants to be in the top 10 again, and he may just be hungry enough to keep it together tomorrow. And as I said on the other post, he has the ability to deeply frustrate Novak by disrupting his rhythm.

we'll soon find out.

master ace

although i would like radek to make it to the final, your logic is unassailable. i saw jcf flame out after beating rafa... i think radek might go down that way, too.

but where oh where are my manners???

STEVE

what a beautiful article! you say with your usual understated elegance what my frenetic (yes, channeling roddick here) mind cannot ever express. i love your perspective on radek the worm, the courts, and your other tidbits. you are SOOO literary! :) a joy for this old fashioned sucker on the board.

thank you once more for writing this! lovely, from title to last sentence.

Upon reflection, I think I noticed that Roger used no forehand drop shots today against Stepanek. And only one or two that might be called drop shots from the backhand side. I think that when one is frustrated (as Roger obviously was as, among other things, Radek served horribly except when he really needed a point), NUANCE OF STRATEGY GOES. We all lose our creativity when we are fixated and for someone like Roger, he went back to his style that usually wins, but not quite this time.

I found Roger to be resilient when he was behind and up against the wall. Then when he got his neck in front, he let up. This is a strange pattern that I think we have seen with him in losses against Canas in Miami and Djokovic in Montreal. In many of his key losses, he has won more points, but not the big ones.

Robin: that was an extremely insightful post. Do you mind posting it again on the Tennisworld blog where a larger audience might read it?

My gut feeling is that he also got out of the claycourt thinking mode during the Karlovic match, in which the main strategy was just of course to get a racket on that serve and hope for the best.

hey robin, good points but honestly with Stepanek and Karlovic rushing the net so often, theres no point in hitting drops as he did with Canas... he wanted to keep them on the baseline, and i think for Rog to get such aggressive, serve based opponents in Rome really threw him off... hes basing his training on long points, geared to beating Rafa of course, and this messed up his rhythm totally... another lesson learned before RG. its not just grinders on clay he has to deal with...this was a wimbledon style match when he's gearing up for long points vs grinders... again, better now than in Paris... Jose has taken note, im sure of that..

I don't think Stepanek is going to win. So far this year, all the players that have beaten Federer in the previous round has not done too well didn't go on to win the championship except on two occasions.

Federer's Losses this year
tournament: player he lost to (result of the player)
- Australian Open: Djokovic (won championship)
- Dubai: Murray (lost in QF)
- Indian Wells: Fish (lost in F)
- Miami: Roddick (lost in SF)
- Monte Carlo: Nadal (won championship)
- Rome: Stepanek (??)

As of right now, it does not look good for Stepanek. Plus Djokovic does have a lot of fire power and he is more rested benefited from that retirement from Almagro.

Rome has sucked so far, and yesterday was proof of it. The public was ... no words to express what I think of them. The matches, well ... much the same. Rog played OK, just got surprised by the Worm. The Djerk, as usual, got lucky (Almagro does have the game to beat him, and the first set was uncharacteristic. I, for one, don't think the Djerk has been that good on clay whatever other people think). I'm not going to say anything about Rafa's performance just in case people think I'm totally biased (which, of course, I am, but not as much so as not to be sensible as well). I'm only going to say that I don't give a fig about rankings and race (it's along time since I decided not to pay attention to these things). I want players to play at their best and win nice (not ugly or because somebody retires). If this means that Rafa needs to skip Hamburg and lose his second spot, so be it. I'd rather have a Rafael playing gloriously and win whatever he has to win than having him dragging himself all over the court because he has to defends his points in a ridiculous schedule designed by a bunch of people more worried about money and TV audiences (if they get it where it apparently matters, meaning the USA) than about the players and the sport. And this goes for any other player, not just Rafa.

Finally: the Djerk firepower? It depends on how you define the term. If you mean that he sniffs the second spot (no matter what), yes. He's already said he wants to be number one, he deserves it and that the king (or should we say the kings?) is dead. If you mean the skills, the stamina, and the grace and character of a true champion, sorry guys but I don't think so. But I've seen worst (quoting some other person's recent words)

The Djerk, as usual, got lucky..

nadalmaniac, u r d djerk....ignorant, nole hater..

cmon novak, u ll be on the scnd position after wimbledon for sure, rafa is going down, losing his breath. of course fed, cant hold his position eternally, and u have a chance to grab your 1 place...


ajde novak....

Steve, I'll be writing you back later today--for now I'm off to the courts... For the record, my picks, in Andrew Burton's format, are Djokovic 75% and Roddick 55% .

Srdjan? isn't that Djokovic's father's name?

david thats right srdjan djokovic...

Wow, those were great semifinals! I bet the crowds were thrilled!

I think instead of putting Davydenko on trial for throwing the matches or for not trying, its time to put Federer on trial for the same charges. He consistently does that, he was 4-0 up against Nadal in Monte Carlo, he threw that match away then he did the same thing in Rome against Stepanek when he was 5-2 up in the second set tie breaker. All of a sudden he starts hitting sporadic shots and the match is over, thats not fair.

Hey Steve, do you need an assistant to go with Ray Stonada and cover Rome next year? Quality of writing is irrelevant, don't you think? :-)
Seriously, think that Ray Stonada's reporting has been phenomenal.

RE: RADAL NADAL,

Try playing your best with your ft. hurting. I know how he must of felt,I have DIABETES and my ft. always hurt. I don't even know how he could stand less more play.

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