Why is Federer's spanish coach Jose Higueras been such a trader to his country. Nadal is trying to become the first Spaniard to win RG 4 consecutive times and Jose is training Federer to stop him.
Posted by eric
05/24/2008 at 06:44 PM
2nd
Posted by gerrynjapan
05/24/2008 at 06:45 PM
am I first?
Posted by gerrynjapan
05/24/2008 at 06:48 PM
oooooohhhh, close it was.
Dear Sartorially Resplendent Correspondent in Paris,
I'm really enjoying your reports. Can't wait to read the next one!
Posted by Fed-Rafa
05/24/2008 at 06:49 PM
Why is Nadal being a TRADER to his country? Jose Higueras is trying to become the 1st spannish coach to have guided a player to a career slam and Nadal is trying to stop him!
Posted by Syd
05/24/2008 at 07:08 PM
Dear Sartorially Resplendent;
Delicious. You are giving Janet Flanner a run for her money with these dispatches from Paris that have me drooling with envy.
* He definitely went for the tighter, more streamlined look.* Sounds like Roger. At least I'm going to pretend that it was he.
Pauvre Gasquet; the weight of a nation on his young shoulders. Perhaps some kicking of Perrier and slamming of Evian products will help rid him of his demons.
Posted by Master Ace
05/24/2008 at 07:24 PM
Surprise to hear that Justine was thinking about retirement after she won her 4th RG title while most of us were thinking about her going for a 4-peat especially after she ended the season with a 3 set thriller over Maria
Posted by jon
05/24/2008 at 07:44 PM
Why is Federer's spanish coach Jose Higueras been such a trader to his country. Nadal is trying to become the first Spaniard to win RG 4 consecutive times and Jose is training Federer to stop him.
It's 'traitor', and you're an idiot.
Posted by sally
05/24/2008 at 08:08 PM
maybe jose forgot he's spanish, since he now lives in palm springs and has for over 20 years.
Posted by † Hallelujah
05/24/2008 at 08:58 PM
Maybe Jose's drunk from cheap wine he bought at TRADER Joe's
Posted by tellmeJO
05/24/2008 at 09:34 PM
† Hallelujah, that is hilarious...secondly....I actually think that Gasquet kicking the bottle and showing his displeasure is a good thing...I am a HUGE Gasquet fan (sadly) and I watch just about every match he plays in...and the common thread in his losses is an almost ambivilance towards losing, consistency, and certainly tennis...I see this as a sign that he actually (dare I say) cares whether he loses the match...I could be wrong, but this could be a sign that he really, truly wants out of this slump and is willing to FIGHT, CLAW, and (hopefully) TRAIN his way out of it...I'm not expecting anything great in the near future from him, but I will keep my fingers crossed for Wimbledon...
Posted by JR
05/24/2008 at 10:39 PM
I wonder how some of these practice pairings come about. Do some players just show up looking for someone to hit with? Is there a tournament social director who matches folks up?
Posted by lulu
05/25/2008 at 05:43 AM
I'd rather translate "foutaises" as "rubbish", although "ridiculous" is ok and does match the feeling you get when you see riri trying to look like a bad boy and failing. Honestly, Gasquet does have a problem about growing up in his job. He seems to feel more comfortable with his "young precocious genius" image and less and less at ease as he's growing up and deadlines are coming closer. it was ok not to meet extravagant expectations a few years back, but it's now about time he did sth truly great, he knows that a,d i don't think it's surprising the crisis hapens now. Let's just hope he solves his problems and adjust to his life. God knows i've been wanting to kick his ass these past years, but it'd be w real loss for tennis of he remained as unachieving as he is now, given his raw talent.
Posted by ava
05/25/2008 at 10:32 AM
Dear sartorially resplendent correspondent,
I have to tell you how much I enjoy these posts. Keep 'em coming..
Posted by embug
05/25/2008 at 05:02 PM
Great post. I felt as if I were walking around the grounds at your side. I was very sad to see Guga depart. He will be missed. However, I was elated and surprised to see that Nicolas Lapenti defeated Jarko Tipsarevic. Lapenti must still be on the upswing.
I'm not sure if I buy all the reasonableness from Justine. I don't have much faith in her. I think she quit because she couldn't bear to lose anymore matches, which had been piling up this year. The "I've been thinking about it for almost a year" just doesn't wash for a player who retired from the final of the AO, siting a stomach ache. She could've hung in there for four more games, which would've allowed Mauresmo the honor she deserved. Also, the hand-raising incident at the FO as she played Serena Williams was about as low as a player can get on court. Justine cannot handle defeat, that's it. There's no middle ground for this women, only a black and white existence. She wanted the number one spot, or she would leave, which she did.
Au revoir Justine et bon chance. I hope you can learn to be truthful with yourself and then with the people around you.
Posted by jon
05/25/2008 at 07:59 PM
I agree! I'm a fan of hers but I think it's total crap, her reasons for retiring. She took a few huge beatdowns this year and she retires...pretty silly.
Posted by Crazy-for-Rog
05/26/2008 at 01:59 AM
Oh c'mon Steve, do tell ... who is the Nike player you declined to name?
Posted by Crazy-for-Rog
05/26/2008 at 02:00 AM
Oh c'mon, do tell ... who is the Nike player you declined to name?
Posted by Crazy-for-Rog
05/26/2008 at 02:00 AM
Moderator ... please delete my 1:59 AM post. Thank you!
Posted by tontonsky
05/26/2008 at 05:44 AM
charles manson lookalike husband
what a hoot.
thanks matey
Posted by Samantha Elin
05/26/2008 at 06:18 AM
Just what we needed, another Justine hater. Embug, Justine was a great champion who gave grace and class to the game.
Posted by Tom
05/26/2008 at 07:45 AM
Henin retired because she needs to be near her family. It's pretty obvious. Did anyone read that article from the UK Independant newspaper. There's too much sorrow. Family tragedy always along side her tennis career.
Henin isn't scared of losing matches. She's afraid of losing her family again.
I have to wonder what sorts of articles the french will produce in light of gasquets lates withdrawl
Posted by jb
05/26/2008 at 06:40 PM
kate - i think it could get even more ugly w/ Reeshard's withdrawal. I think he needs to get away a bit and get his head together.
Tom - I think you're prolly right about henin. I don't think she's 'afraid' of the competition and is running from them. I think she finds that she no longers cares is she loses, and that's no way to have a tennis career.
I give her credit for leaving the game on her terms.
As for our satorially resplendant correspondent - many thanks for the post!
Posted by barry
05/26/2008 at 11:13 PM
many thanks to the sartorially resplendent correspondent and steve for giving us the backstory behind the tournament. this just adds to the richness of the play on the court.
for the justine haters, if you'd have seen justine's 2 & 0 match against serena you'd easily see justine's heart wasn't into tennis anymore. justine hit balls blandly, both short in the court and down the middle, without any of the creative flair for angles and spins that have characterized her career. Some of this was in evidence in the Australian Open against maria, although that may be blamed more upon Carlos' poor gameplan (maria's serve was simply en fuego, too).
all the credit in the world goes to justine for recognizing life is short and doing whatever makes her happiest, in the moment, instead of worrying about how much money she can take from the game or what her legacy will be many years down the road (something that adversely afflicts too many of the players and press and fans of the game).
while there is no true substitute for justine, the next diminutive player who carries an interesting bag of spins, redirections and mixed velocities is Chaki, so m-life (is it m-life?), please save a spot for me on the Ana bandwagon.
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