Almost
seven or eight years ago I had claimed that for my money it was John McEnroe
who was the greatest tennis player of at least the so-called Open Era [1]. I
want to revisit that topic mainly because so many things are being said about
Roger Federer having played 1,000 matches, at a winning percentage of 81.4.
As
I have given the link to my earlier post, I will not go over the points again,
but would take a slightly different tack, based on a table of minimal statistics,
The 1000 Club, given in today’s The Hindu [2].
I
reproduce the table below:
Player
|
Total matches played
|
Won / Lost
|
Winning %
|
Jimmy
Connors
|
1,427
|
1,156
/ 271
|
81.01
|
Ivan
Lendl
|
1,310
|
1,068
/ 242
|
81.53
|
Guillermo
Vilas
|
1,226
|
940
/ 286
|
76.67
|
Andre
Agassi
|
1,144
|
870
/ 274
|
76.05
|
John
McEnroe
|
1,079
|
881
/ 198
|
81.65
|
Stefan
Edberg
|
1,076
|
806
/ 270
|
74.91
|
Ilie
Nastase
|
1,026
|
730
/ 296
|
71.15
|
Roger
Federer
|
1,000
|
814
/ 186
|
81.4
|
The
above numbers reveal a lot and also almost preclude claiming anyone of them the
“Best” of the Open Era.
If
you went into the details behind the numbers, you would find that in general
the rivalries of the 1970s-90s were more, and more varied. Connors had said
something like he would chase Borg to the ends of the earth. That does not seem
to be the case anymore, the chasing left to the precious few majors and the
season-enders, to claim the bragging rights and bag a chunk of the loot.
When
Federer and Nadal meet in the on-going Australian Open, they will be playing
head-to-head for the 26th time. Compare that to Lendl v. McEnroe, it
was 36 by the time the two guys quit.
The
flip side of that argument could be that the talent beyond the first two was
too thin. But, the numbers belie that, with five of the eight guys in the table
having been contemporaries (even if one excluded Agassi and Edberg as
latecomers).
When
Pete Sampras was on top, he was the “Greatest” of all time. In my earlier post
I shot down that preposterous claim and I seem to have been proven right. It is
hardly ever his name is mentioned with much awe, probably because he focused
too sharply on the so-called majors. It is quite sad that he lost even that crown,
“winner of most majors” to Federer.
To
be sure, to play 1,000 matches and have a winning percentage exceeding 80, like
Connors, Lendl, McEnroe, and Federer is truly impressive and I do not begrudge
the fan adulation the last one gets. But, it is a different matter that he be
judged the best of even the limited Open Era. Simple calculation shows that to
match McEnroe’s numbers, Federer has to play 79 more matches (say, 16
tournaments, year and a half) and win 12 of them. That is for every tournament
he enters, he has to win 5.5 matches for every loss. A tall order, particularly
given that his opponents have tasted blood.
There
are many things beyond numbers that go to make a player shine among the best; what
these are in my opinion I have already written about. The above table,
celebrating Federer reaching a milestone has not persuaded me to change my
opinion.
References
2.
The 1000
club, the Hindu, January 25, 2012
3 comments:
That is a fair analysis...
any day the flashy McEnroe is my favorite..
That is a fair analysis...
any day the flashy McEnroe is my favorite..
Thanks DS sir ... I developed my position after losing an argument with my father that Rod aver was better than Lew Hoad! He did not claim that Hoad was better than Laver but only that theye were equals.
RE
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