“Horses
for courses.”
You
know the meaning of this, of course. But, I will give you another meaning quite
the opposite of what you have in mind.
It
was 1974 and Jimmy Connors will end the year winning three of the four majors. French
Open, the tournament he did not play, rather was not allowed to play that year,
obviously he could not have won. This is the meaning I have for the idiom that
started this post: The course is defined by the horse, a champion horse yet
failing to win a race there. So Connors is the horse that failed to win the
French Open.
But,
Connors is not the only one. John McEnroe also failed. But his failure is of a
different kind. Yes, it hurts me to say it, but McEnroe choked against Lendl,
leading two sets to one and with a break in the fourth. McEnroe’s year was 1984
and he was ruling the tennis world, beating Connors most imperially at
Wimbledon and dispatching Lendl contemptuously at the US Open. Yet, I mark that
year for his loss at Roland Garros.
Then
comes Bjorn Borg. Where there is Connors, can Borg be far behind? There were
reasons galore, as Borg listed them out after every loss at the US Open. And,
there were as many as nine losses, if I remember my arithmetic. A cat has nine
lives, but unfortunately for Borg, at the US Open he did not have even one life.
Borg, then, was the horse that never won the race at Forest Hills or Flushing
Meadows (see, how easily I metamorphosed a cat into a horse!).
Now
I come to the protagonist of this post – Ivan Lendl. I hated Lendl when he beat
up my favorite McEnroe some seven times in a row and was leading the count 7-2
head-to-head, early on in their rivalry. But then the tide turned, McEnroe
evened the count I think, and I could appreciate Lendl without being accused of
two timing my love.
Lendl
is just one of those workhorses. McEnroe is reported to have said that he had more
talent in his fingertips than Lendl did in his whole body. This is not as outrageous as it might sound,
even if it may not be the literal truth. But, look what Lendl did with the
talent he was endowed with. And, yesterday he did more.
“Grass
is for cows.”
This
is what Lendl said in 1982 when asked why he was skipping Wimbledon that year.
Unfortunately, the Lendl horse did not like grass. He started out hating
Wimbledon but later made it his mission to win there. But, it was not to be.
Who
did you see sitting so impassively in the box at courtside with Andy Murray’s
entourage at the 2013 Wimbledon? It was none other than the horse-turned-horse
trainer, the great Ivan Lendl himself. Lendl took revenge at the tournament, by
guiding Murray to the title. There must have been a wry smile, mocking at the
turned-up-nose of the tournament, ostentatiously calling itself, The Championships, on his face.
The
above is not to take anything away from Murray. But, one must admit the match
was a bland affair. The opening game set the tone and the result of the third set
was preordained. It was just fillers in between. I do not know whether Djokovic
did a Borg or he was a good loser when interviewed after the match. I couldn’t
care less.
Let
the Brits celebrate Murray’s victory. I am content feeling good about Lendl. I
am happy for him.
Was
Lendl thinking along these lines? I don’t know.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
4 comments:
I always felt that Lendl was unlucky - did deserve to win the Wimbledon title. I think it must be in some form a vindication for him now that Murray won the title. Well, for those who never seen Lendl play, it will be hard to understand what this is all about.
Nice one Raghu. Rgds, Ravi
Thanks Ravi for echoing the thoughts in the post. Lendl was not talented, in the sense that McEnroe was and that perhaps worked to his advantage here; in a sense "talent" cannot be transferred. But whatever it was that Lendl has could be. This is how I figure this situation out.
RE
lendl worked hard as he was not
as talented as others..'
just like Murray.
But djonvic was off colour that day with his errors and faults
yet Murray did a wonderful job of coming up from deep down one -four to win the set.
ledl might have changed the opinion about grass
sampath
Yes DS sir, the grass at Wimbledon is no more grass for cows! In fact, that is my grouse, that it is not for cows! The playing field at 'T' is lush green on the second Sunday. This can only mean that grass court tennis is not being played. But the field is grass, not for cows though!
RE
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