Saturday 21 November 2015

Adios ...


And with that ... the season is over.

It's been a while.  I fell out of love with tennis at Wimbledon.  I reeled as some loathsome creature called Kyrios continued with sneering and umpire baiting as he changed his socks and dared the umpire to warn him for time, citing the time Rafa takes.  And when Azarenka was asked for the millionth time in her pressers about the noise she makes, she didn't tell them to shut up as she'd answered these boring questions before and why didn't they just move on? No, she said that they should hear the noise that Rafa made when he was practising. I remember thinking that the guy isn't even here any more and yet you are all still at him ...

Rafa then went on to Hamburg and picked up a tournament win. I thought it one of the worst tennis matches I'd ever seen and would have switched off if it hadn't have been Rafa. Something like 80+ UEs between them and it so could have gone the other way, only that time Fognini's antics meant he shot himself in the foot, not the other way around.  Rafa's summer's results barely saw him reach quarter finals and he seemingly had a pattern of good match/dreadful one. During the US Open, I awoke in the early hours when Rafa was again playing Fognini. I put the match on to hear him lose the third set and promptly turned it off again and allowed myself to go back to sleep. I knew he'd lose the match and wasn't even surprised to wake up again to the headlines that he had. I think he said he took positives from the result, and I read that he fought like mad in the 5th set. But amongst the comments and platitudes I couldn't find any - because Rafael Nadal doesn't lose in 5 sets when he led by 2 sets and with a break in the third. Fight or no fight ...

So when the Tour started up again back in the Far East to then move on to the indoor courts of Europe, I thought I might as well pack in now. It's my least preferred part of the season and traditionally it's a time when Rafa never really does very well. But hasn't he surprised us all? 

Something started to click back into place a little, and Rafa succeeded in doing something that he hadn't been achieving much this season, and that was getting into finals. I know the Prince of Darkness beat him in what seemed like an easy scoreline, but I actually thought Rafa played better than the result demonstrated. I was a tad disappointed that he was broken to lose in Shanghai, but actually what was better, was that he was starting to rack up decent wins against the better players again. You know, giving a message out that he was starting to get back on track and reaching the business end of tournaments. Basel was another good show after it started oh so badly and he could have actually lost to that tw*t Rosol. But he didn't. Now that was what I call fight and not the sort demonstrated in Flushing Meadows. He reached another final, and put up a pretty good show, and I was damned proud of him for taking that second set off Smugly.

Paris again was progress. Super resilience against Anderson and maybe he could have done it against Stan, but it was not to be. F-SF-F-QF ... hell fire, I'd have been dancing with those sort of stats during Rafa's glory years, never mind now!

And so to the season closure at the World Tour Finals. I had no expectations ... and so Rafa beat 3 top 8 players to get to today's semi-finals. Typical. Rafa had no answers today and the PoD played him a bit like he was on a string. Rafa was better in Beijing in my opinion, but unfortunately Djerk has been metronomically carving his way through everyone this season, so Rafa by no way is the exception. I thought Djerk really wanted to crush Rafa today, to try and break him. Because I have this theory that Djerk has suffered so many times at the hands of Rafa, that he now wants to make him suffer, and to inflict victories over him that devastate him, as he has been devastated. Like when Rafa beat him in the semi-final of Olympic Games, that epic in Madrid in 2009, the French Open victories. He wants to make Rafa feel as he felt ... the thing is, Rafa won't ... ever. I think Rafa has been devastated in matches before, but not at the hands of Djokovic. Rafa takes his defeats, accepts when someone is the better player, tries to learn from it, and then simply moves on. He doesn't have your agenda Djokovic, he has own - and is the better man for it.

"He's back!!" is a phrase I've read many times this season. Well Rafa's not, in my opinion. He is - however - at a level that is so much improved from what we saw before September and I sincerely hope it's something he can use to build up confidence from to take forward into next season. Will he ever really be "back"? And what is "back"? Playing like he did in 2013 and winning everything in sight? Or when he wasn't quite winning everything in sight but was still managing to sweep up on the clay, is that "back"? As Rafa marches towards his 30th birthday and with what he's had to take both physically and mentally within his career, "back" will be whatever he's able to make it be. And I wish him every bit of luck that he so deserves to have with it.

As for me, this little blog was such a mainstay to me as I followed Rafa's career and recorded my thoughts on it. And the hiatus has been good. I intend to sit back and watch and enjoy whatever the rest of Rafa's career brings for him. Good luck to us all ... 

Wednesday 26 August 2015

"You are naug'ty Rafa Nadal ..."



Thanks to Woody over on VB for posting this gem.

How women of the world reacted yesterday when it allllll came off !!!!!!!!

Tuesday 25 August 2015

Nadal by the Numbers ...










BOLD ...


Quote of the year by my pal Rafandready ...
"I might buy some BOLD to spray on my pillow ..."
Still PMSL ...

Navy ...




White ...


It all comes off ...



And it's bloody amazing ...

Tommy Hilfiger ... I salute you.

There's not been much about tennis that I've enjoyed lately but OMG have enjoyed THIS. Like me, you've probably spent the day in total hysteria and when I need to visit a happy place, I am coming right back HERE.

God bless you Rafael Nadal.


Thursday 2 July 2015

Rafa's presser ...



It's sad ... but will probably be blocked before you can see it. *hugs* to Rafa.

[insert player name here] ...


... had the match of his life.

In the rawness of this just happening, I'm not up for writing much now. It is odd that bar the 2009 injury, Rafa was the finalist from 2006-2011, and to go from the highs of that record to the lows of recent years is odd. He can't just forget how to play on grass. But the thing is about Rafa, let's not worry ourselves too much over him. He really does treat the two impostors of Victory and Defeat just the same, and whilst as a top sportsman the defeats are tough to take, I think his natural balance means that he reflects, takes note ... and moves on. He has a lifestyle that nearly all of us can only dream of. He does something he loves for a living and when that doesn't go well, he returns to the luxury of his homestead on his beautiful island, surrounded by the people that love him very much. He's OK.

I'm just going to use this post to reflect about us ... well, me. But I think some of what I will say may ring true. I lead a regular life, have a regular job, and live in a regular northern town in the north of England. I have lots to be thankful for. But so much of my life is routine because from Monday to Friday I have to do what is expected of me in order to earn a wage to fund the modest lifestyle I lead. Weekends are taken up with the chores, with other responsibilities, but then I'm luckier than a lot of people because I have things to look forward to and can afford to have some of the nice things in life. But in the main, the reality of my life is the humdrum of it.  

However amongst the humdrum is a spark, is a passion, is something that gets me excited and something that keeps me entertained and interested. And that something is Rafa. Rafa pierces the boring routine of my week and offers another dimension. I look forward to his matches, to seeing him play. I look forward to the tournaments that come up. I look forward to something like Wimbledon or the French because they just take over the airwaves for two weeks and you get immersed in the results and the schedule and the apps and the pressers and the matches ... and Rafa. And when he's gone ... the aftermath feels like a return to Dullsville.

That's what I feel it's like as a fan. So I don't worry for Rafa, well, not in the sense that his life is good and he moves on quickly although right now I wish I could peel away the onion layers and find out what is really going on ... but I'm more sad for me. Sorry, I've just read that you're sad right now Rafa ... but the same goes for me. The tournament has lost its sparkle, and my mojo for it has gone with his exit. I won't be planning to watch him on Saturday, and it doesn't matter now that I moved a booking I made on Wednesday because I'd hoped to be watching a quarter final instead. None of it matters ... and life returns back to its routine. 

I live for those magic moments, those special times and meeting up with the lovely friends I've made because of it. And "poof" when it's all gone ... I feel as I do as I'm sitting here right now. But do you know what? It will pass ... because this is what being a fan feels like. This is what being a fan is all about.  

Earlier this week I read a totally fantastic article. It was by Pete Sampras, and it was a letter to his 16-year-old self. Did you read it? I'm very tempted to make a blog post about it because it moved me so much and I think it was so damn good. And of course all the time I was reading it, I was thinking about what I'd put in a letter to my 16 year-old self. You may think that with the way I'm feeling right now, it would be to never, ever, evah! follow tennis. Don't be a fan. 

But it isn't. 

What I'd say to myself is that you know that day you turned the TV on by chance to the French Open semi-final when you couldn't stop watching this long-haired teenager in funny long shorts and a shirt with no sleeves? Well, that decision to watch is one of the best you will ever make in life, so don't change channel. And that's because this 19 year-old kid is going to bring you some of the happiest moments you will ever experience. It will be a rollercoaster following his career. You will experience some pretty low lows but my God ... the highs will be quite amazing. But more important than that, you will meet some fantastic people from around the world because of it. Some will be friends over the internet, some will be friends that become part of your very real world and people that you turn to and talk over the lows and highs of life and who grow to care and really like you. You'll visit some fantastic places with them, you will have some of the best laughs. You will swear profusely and take the mickey out of each other and talk about sock pockets and then wonder what the bloody hell you even meant by that expression. 

I'm speaking about us. 

It will feel better in the morning. A virtual hug to you all and I shall very much look forward to bringing the jet ski pictures to you. I would rather it had been a trophy bite, but then we don't always get what we wish for. Night night from Wimbledon my friends ... xxxxxxx  

Wednesday 1 July 2015

Rafa's Daily Dose ...

"I was the chef today. First course, salad with olives! #Wimbledon #RafaNadalAlimentosEspaña"
And a cheeky glass while you're doing it too, Rafa? Nice ...

Standing O ...



It brought a lump to my throat yesterday to see the crowd stand to applaud Rafa - spoilt only by the numpty UK commie who just couldn't shut the front door and comment on the moment, but rather chose it to remind us - once again - of a Rafa defeat. But the ovation is what should be best focused on.

I've only been able to watch these highlights due to being at work during the match and the BBC's ridiculous live scheduling which threw his match all over the place so I couldn't record it properly. But hey, the victory is all I need to know about. It's taking me some time to get into the tournament so far but hopefully with Rafa on third on Centre tomorrow, I can enjoy some early evening, summer, sunny tennis. And [unjinx] ... a nice victoreeeeee.

video via NadalPower

Monday 29 June 2015

Wimbledon ahoy!!


I'm savouring this feeling ... calmness. Rafa's about to embark on 12 months' of tennis where he has potentially everything to gain and simply nothing to lose in every single tournament he plays. The fruitless clay season is over and it has finally been proven to the hatahs, media and naysayers that yup ... shit really can happen. Even at the French. And guess what? Rafa survived, we survived and we now all move forward.

I love Wimbledon. Probably because it's my "home" tournament, probably because it's what we oldies in the UK grew up on before satellite TV and internet streams meant that we could pour over every single stroke of every single tournament. I even remember as a teenager keeping myself awake on Sunday nights before school because the BBC World Service used to announce tennis results before midnight and it was the only way I could find out whether my [then hero] John McEnroe had won. How times have changed ...

But more than loving Wimbledon, I love Rafa in it, and frankly with the exception of the 2009 injury, Rafa spoiled us with final appearances from 2006 to 2011 until it started to go slightly array. If all things come to pass, I don't think Rafa has got a bad draw at all this year. Sure, he's got the tricky quarter final again, but you've got to beat these kind of players at some point in the tournament and what will be will be. See, how calm is that??

We've had no salacious breaking press news this tournament - the heat being on Djokovic this time because of his own coach breaking the story of their on-court "communications". And when I watched Rafa at The Boodles on Friday - now are sitting comfortably for this - he completely cut out his tic routine when serving and was taking an average of 15 seconds between points!! Could it really be that Rafa now flies under the radar? 

I hope as always that Rafa has a good tournament. And if he doesn't? Well, it's not going to be the end of the world, is it? I like to believe that at some point he's going to surprise a lot of people. Whether it be this tournament or the next or the next ... there will be one. 

So in the meantime, let's strap ourselves in, let's hope for a good one ... and let's try to enjoy it!! VAMOS!!  


Wednesday 24 June 2015

Petition ...


Following on from my letter to the ATP/ITF which was very well received by the readers here and posted around social media - thank you to all, it's very much appreciated - but it won't astound you, however, to read that (a) I have had no response from the ATP and (b) I have had no response from the ITF either.  

However, there is simply no doubt that amongst fans there still remains a serious concern about the inconsistent application of the Time Between Points violation ruling. 

Via Twitter, I received a very smug and pompous response from Robbie Koenig who did not address a single one of the points I raised about the time violations, but instead preferred to suggest that smashing racquets showed "character" and that umpires missed verbal abuse because it is spoken into crowd noise/applause. Quite. Darren Cahill - on the other hand - posted a very polite response saying that he's raised the subject many times and that it's time for a shot clock that starts after the umpire calls the score and then its 25 seconds. This response has given me encouragement, and I just believe that we need keep the subject current, live and in the public domain. 

To this end, I was delighted to see that a petition has been posted on this very subject. If you support any of the opinion expressed, then I would politely and kindly request that you consider adding your signature to it. If you also wish to air your views, then all the better. 

The petition is to be found here.

The numbers are growing, and as you can see from the comments, let's keep the groundswell of opinion growing too. Fans from all around the world are posting their views. Let's for once let the fan voice be heard and most importantly, keep the momentum going!!

Thank you to loobyloo and MAC creating it. And thanks in advance for all who take the time out to sign. 

Sunday 21 June 2015

A flash of the Queens Party Pants ...


What can I say? After shaking the clay from his shoes, Rafa headed off to Stuttgart which when I first heard of this decision a while back, I did raise my eyebrows. And I'm convinced that had the French Open gone it's usual way, then more than likely he wouldn't have gone, but what a joy it turned out to be.  A final and a trophy bite, what could be better?

And so as Rafa made his way to the Queens Club in London, "hopeful" was the word.  But ...

One step forward, two steps back ...

The thing is, I'd got back onto that Rafa tournament merry-go-round. When it was first announced in March that he'd be returning to Queens I tried to get a ticket, but quelle surprise, they'd all sold out. Popular guy that Rafa - and with the added bonus that as he takes so long between points, there's plenty of time to go and dash out for a nice jug of Pimms. Boom, boom!

So I cursed myself for umming and aahing about whether to go or not which gave rise for all the tickets to go during my faffing, so when I read that some more had become available, I was in there. Queens tickets are really expensive, so I was only going to stretch to one, and this is when it starts with the merry-go-round - when to hop on? For most of Rafa's career and certainly when he's been at Queens before, he starts on a Wednesday. Considering Rafa's up and down form and the fact that apart from the crazy year in 2008 when he couldn't stop winning all summer, Rafa hasn't progressed very far at this tournament. So I thought my safest best would be Wednesday, and I handed over ninety-five new pounds to Aegon for the privilege. Yikes.

Can you imagine how I felt when on Monday, the Order of Play was announced and that Rafa would start his first match on Tuesday ...


It takes a thick skin and nerves of steel to be a Rafa fan generally anyway. What with the constant negative media focus from him bursting on the scene, to the utter foulness of fans on social networks, notwithstanding the odious way they treat you at tournaments, to the simple fact that you can't just switch on the television to quietly watch one of his matches before the bias and contemptuousness of the commentators literally makes your ears bleed - it's not easy. It's been a couple of years since I last saw Rafa play, and that was at the French Open.  We bought tickets for the Monday and Tuesday on Chatrier to try and cover both bases as to when he might start his 1st round match. We travelled out on the Saturday, met other friends that afternoon and nervously waited for the OOP and prayed that he wouldn't be put on on the Sunday because of course, we didn't have a ticket and were nervous about the flurry should we need to get one. We were lucky, he wasn't. But then the stress starts again on Sunday because you're then left wondering, OK he's surely either going to start on Monday or Tuesday (this time praying it's not Wednesday), but will they put the Champion on Suzy Longlong -every possibility - and if so, how are we going to get tickets?? Stress, stress, stress and more bleedin' stress. But I ended up being lucky that year. Rafa played on Chatrier on the Monday leaving me able to sell my Tuesday ticket on-line because the FO has a great process for this and so I got to spend a lovely day in Paris rather than making my eyes bleed at the obnoxious sight of the Prince of Darkness.

What goes around, comes around.

So I wasn't entirely in the best of moods when I boarded the train to London last Tuesday - me being a "glass half empty" kinda gal anyway. And then when I thought I'd left my book at home so bought a new one at the station - only to find when I unzipped my bag that I'd brought my book all along - and then when I went to my handbag in order to find my glasses to read Twitter/Facebook/New Book, I found that I'd left my glasses at home resulting in me having to buy some of those magnifying reading ones from a well known high street chemist ... well, I was just GAAH!!! This trip was already costing me a fortune!

The Plan A for Tuesday afternoon was to dump my bag at the hotel, catch the train to Hampton Court and have a few hours of culture before heading back into town to meet my friends Rafandready and Womble (not their real names, obviously ;) for dinner. But true to form with the general malaise of the day, my train arrived in London an hour later than I thought it would (my bad assumption, nothing to do with Sir Richard Branson's lovely trains), but I decided I'd still try to get to Hampton Court but perhaps just do the gardens. I then promptly got on the wrong tube, headed back, changed, and got on the wrong tube again ... so I thought, sod it! Put Plan B in action ... but not really having a Plan B. On a whim I decided to visit this Victorian arcade I'd had a fancy to, finally arrived there via Google maps telling me where to go because I'd obviously gone in the wrong direction ... and was completely underwhelmed. This day was pants, and as I was starving by this stage but mindful that I was meeting my friends for dinner in 3 hours, I sat myself down and ordered a chicken sandwich.

The thing is ... nobody speaks English in London. Or to clarify, nobody in the service industry speaks English as a first language, so I was left with this girl trying to explain that something was more expensive and that it came with these things, but I just cut through it and said, "I can have a chicken sandwich though, can I?" and she said "yes". Chicken pieces on a thick ciabatta with a mountain of chips and salad then found it's way to my table. And with a small beer, the "chicken sandwich" lunch cost me £16 bloody pounds.  #thud

It was whilst I was waiting for he mahoosive chicken sandwich that I made the first, tentative steps of finding out how Rafa's match was going, and was a bit shocked and a tad nervous to see that he'd lost the first set. You see the thing is, I may have headed down to London berating my lot and convinced there was no chance I would see him, but because the third round matches would be played on Wednesday and Thursday, I clung on to the very faint hope that from somewhere the Fates would be on my side and that Rafa would be scheduled to be play on Wednesday. Never in my wildest dreams did I factor in that he might be beaten and not there to play it anyway!!

So when I next flicked onto the internet to see that Rafa had levelled the match in a tie-breaker, my first thought was "phew" and I carried on about my way. When I next dared to look, I could see he had a break and that calmed me somewhat. All matters had resumed to normal. But when I approached St Paul's cathedral, sat down for a little rest in its gardens and took out my phone to see that ... RAFA HAD LOST!! ... well, I just couldn't believe it.

In a daze, I walked towards the Millennium Bridge and for two pins, I could have chucked myself off it. That or the annoying bunch of French schoolchildren that were getting in my way. I couldn't believe it, this really was it. No more hanging on to a hope that I'd get lucky with the scheduling ... Rafa was out. I really, truly wouldn't see him ... I could have cried.


So with a heavy heart I set off to meet my friends at Earl's Court tube station. Rafan arrived first, flush with disappointment for me, but what to say? However, she then came up with her brainwave. As Rafa was playing doubles with Marc! that day and they still hadn't started to play and we were only one tube stop away from Queens, she suggested that we head on over to see if we could get a return ticket and catch a bit of doubles. When Womble arrived, she was up for it, so in for a penny, in for a pound, we set off for the tube ... promptly got on the wrong one, headed beyond where we wanted to be and had to head straight back to head back out again. Have I said GAAH!!

When we finally got to Queens, we were greeted with one ENORMOUS queue. But of course being British, we quietly joined the back of it without a question being asked. It turned out that the queue was so big because it was made up of locals, who were obviously granted free entry to the Club from early evening to make up for the disruption caused to them during the tournament. But we didn't know, we just queued ... It did give the opportunity to talk though about the perils of booking for tournaments - plenty of you will know them well. We've had to accept this year that nothing now with Rafa can be certain and he's had some "strange" results, but he's had defeats before that have caused disappointment. And then we have had all the injury breaks ... the sadness for him, the disappointment knowing that he's not going to be there at the tournament you're travelling to, the holding out in vein hope that he will be at the tournament you're travelling to. It's hard. Womble came up with a stat that for all the tournaments she's had tickets for, she's seen Rafa about 25% of the time. That's a low stat.

But hey, we were getting towards the head of the queue and when we finally made it to the ticket office, we were told that we had to buy a ground ticket to get a pass into the club ... and then we would have to join another queue to see if we could buy a return.  FFS!!! Rafa's match had already started by this stage, but we once again did the polite British thing and joined the queue for Court 1 returns ... which for some strange reason had grown particularly long. Wonder why!??! But we inched forward and inched forward and then got to the head of it. "Two tickets for Court 1" a steward said, waving them in the air. Yesss!! Womble told us to go ahead and before we'd even made our way to the court she had one too.

We were IN!! *happydance*

So we made our way to enter the court, and it was via a gangway that was under the stand by the side of the court. We had to wait to enter because the players were playing out the last game of the first set. Then it was over, first set to Team Cuteness. Yey!! But hang on ... wait a minute ... TEAM CUTENESS WERE LEAVING THE COURT AND COMING STRAIGHT FOR US!!

It's then all over in flash. Marc! passed first, and whilst you're catching your breath ... Rafa's there. Right in front of you. He turned to look at me and with the raising of the left eyebrow and a quizzical look on his face he said, "Wooffs?? Hey Wooffs ... if the ATP or ITF provide a response to your letter on time between points, be sure to tell Benito, won't you??"

OK ... I made that last bit up.  ;)

But no seriously, he's there. He's by you, right in front of you ... and you try to take it all in because once again you're surprised at how tall he is. He's 6'1", but he seems so tall. And he's actually so incredibly slim, that's what gets me every time. And his skin ... oh boy, it's amazing. Since I posted said letter to the ATP/ITF, I've had quite a number of - shall we call them "visitors" - to this site, who have all had a right laugh about the "caramel skin" comment in About. But it is ... I've never seen a human being with skin like it. Of course I stood there like a gibbering idiot saying nothing and doing nothing, but at least Rafan had it within her to say "Good luck, Rafa" whilst patting his arm ... and he said "Thank you" to her. Oh Lord ... we were agog!!!

Of course we didn't have the damn foresight to stay put for when they came back to return to the court, this time having some time to have prepared ourselves. No instead, we headed off to take our seats. Doh! I can't tell you anything about the second set I saw, it all passed in a blur. I was probably too bothered about taking photographs to take anything in, and I barely saw any of the play. What always gets me about Rafa playing on grass though is the sounds. The sound of his footwork, the sound of the ball being thwacked. It's amazing. I think the second set took about 30 minutes and before you know it, it was over. We left the court to meet up with other friends and fellow Rafa fans, I think partly in hope that we might see him leave, but only to be told he'd already left. We'd witnessed those Party Pants and now the last dance had been called.


The thing is, this is the good part of the merry-go-round ... you don't know when you're going get on, you don't know when you're going to get off, but you're going to meet some great people as you take your turn on the ride. It was lovely to see the VB girls again, to meet friends from social media for the first time such as LizzieBee and Trish, and especially to meet aRNi, who has been such a great supporter of this blog for a number of years now and she's always sweet about my dog Rose ... which always endears. :) She'd also very kindly made something for me - how lovely is that?? I love the camaraderie and the shared emotion. It doesn't make up for the results or withdrawals, but it most certainly helps. Love it.

So I did catch myself a bit of Rafa after all. The next dilemma to face was whether to go to Queens on Wednesday or have myself a day in London town. The merry-go-round again. Rafa wasn't due to play doubles again till Thursday and so I had to weigh up the permutations. He could very well have turned to Marc! that evening and suggested they withdraw because of having a good week at Stuttgart, a singles match and a doubles match and therefore he was in need of some R and R back home before coming back for Wimbledon. He could very well have stayed on to get more practice and see if they won the doubles. Ifs, buts and maybes ... who knows? You take your chance and it's either going to go one way or the other.

I decided not to go to Queens. I had no idea if he would show up or what time he would show up if he did. If he didn't show up, then I wouldn't have had much of the day left to go and amuse myself with other things that London has to offer. If he did show up, great, but I'd still have had so many hours to kill before being able to take my train to head on back up North. So I took that trip to Hampton Court and had an amazing day there. Rafa's practice sessions that week had been a bit difficult for his fans. He'd been on courts which were a court away from where people can stand to watch or else you were subjected to seeing him through squashed openings between the conifers that grow there. Not comfortable and not easy. Of course on the day that I decided I wouldn't try for practice, he turned up at 1pm on a court that contained seats where my friends had a front row, comfortable view and he hit the ball for 2 hours. That bloody merry-go-round.

So that's it. My experience of Rafa for another year. It's not put me off trying to see him again, but it's perhaps put me off from trying to see him in the UK. I shake my head sometimes at the things we put ourselves through and I really do swear ... never, ever, evah again!!

Monday 8 June 2015

Dear ATP and ITF...

OK ... I'm not one to usually write to bodies like the ATP and ITF, but I'm becoming increasingly concerned what with this whole public airing of the Bernardes affair and with undue and what I consider unfair penalising of Rafa with this damned time between points rule at crucial stages of a match, that I've taken pen to paper. I doubt if it will go anywhere or that I'll even get a response, but I've aired my views to them and there's not much else I can do ...



Wednesday 3 June 2015

Rafa's presser ...

À la prochaine ...


I didn't watch the match as I was at work, and I obviously won't watch it now. Because of this, I feel strangely detached from the result - probably because not watching meant that I didn't immerse myself in it like I usually do - but more so because whilst I hoped against hope, I didn't think he'd win.

I don't see anything wrong in stating that either. I am a committed fangirl, and I like to speak more of rainbows and unicorns than not, but sometimes there's got to be a bit of acceptance. Djokovic is the best player in the world right now. I don't like him and I don't like his tennis, but he is the best player. That comment was something that wasn't often afforded to Rafa during those times that he clearly was, but I can't do anything about that. Rafa's been perfectly honest about himself and his game, especially since Miami. Today he has said that he was happy with his recovered level since last month, but it wasn't enough to beat Djokovic. He's perfectly correct. He also said that he wants to come back year, when he is better prepared and playing with more confidence and best of all, he said he wants to work hard and come back stronger.

And if there's one player that can do that ... it's Rafael Nadal.

It's never going to be quite the same as it was, but it can be good again. He has had an unbelievable run at the French Open and a feat such as 11 times played, 9 victories and only 2 defeats still remains amazing. I'm proud of him, and I'm sure everyone else associated with him is too. Speaking from the heart, there's actually been other defeats worse to swallow than this one - believe it or not. This hasn't consumed me like some of the others have, and I think it's because the lead up to this one has kind of prepared me for it. That and the laws of probability that say he can't go on winning at Roland Garros forever.

There are positives. Rafa looks fit and he looks well. He isn't hampered by injury. He may have talked long and hard about his lack of confidence on the court, but off it, I don't recall seeing him as happy at Roland Garros for a long time. He's had to adapt many times in his career to be successful. He's had to change his game from being the "clay specialist" he was duly tagged in his earlier days to become the aggressor that tasted victory on grass and the hardcourts of North and South America. Maybe this year's clay season experience will teach him that change on his beloved favourite surface will also have to come. 

The French Open has been a wonderful adventure for Rafa and for us. He's taught me to love a Slam that was so discarded in the past and to appreciate how great it is to see points crafted by the likes of a player we will never see again. Aah, it's been brilliant. From the total annihilation of Federer to his tearful, painful victory in 2012. To the drama of a 9-7 5th set in 2013 and the suffocating, heat driven victory of last year. Back in 2006 after withdrawing in the semi-final at Roland Garros, an arrogant Novak Djokovic boasted that Nadal is beatable on clay. It then took him 5 years to actually achieve it, and 9 years to do it on the court of Philippe Chatrier. And he's still only won a quarter-final. La Decima may not have happened for Rafa this year, but it will. I feel it. And it will be his crowning moment ...

Rafa now has 12 months of stress free tennis to look forward to. He can work hard, use that new racquet, recover from his absence last year and get back to somewhere near to the level where he can compete as he would like. 

So it's "au revoir" once again to the red clay of Europe and the green grass of England now awaits. First up is Queens ... where I shall be waiting.  ;)

You tried your best Rafa ... thank you for that. Always with you, always love you. You are the greatest exponent on this surfrace that the tennis world has ever seen. Thank you for the joy that your victories have brought us ... thank you for the dignified way you behave in defeat. The best tennis player I have ever had the joy and luck to witness. Thank you Rafa. Thank you.

Tuesday 2 June 2015

Bonne chance ...


I don't think I have much to say in my post tonight. We all know the stakes ... and they are high. There is heart and head whenever Rafa plays and never more so now. One player is having one of his best seasons ever ... one player for the first time on clay doesn't even hold a title. Both players are going for a title that has "1" in it - significant for one player because it will represent finally the achievement of his Holy Grail and a Career Grand Slam; significant for the other, because it will represent an unprecedented double digit figure of titles won at one Grand Slam. For one player his chances have never seemed greater, for the other, for the first time in years they are seriously in doubt.

I've just watched a whole series of former players be asked who they think will win. Some can't call it, a couple said Djokovic, the majority said Rafa. I have a fear that this tournament has come just that bit too soon to find Rafa at the level he needs to be to beat the current world's best player, but I have faith that at some point, he will get there ...

For me, one of the over-riding things about being a Rafa fan which remains as prevalent now as it ever did is because of his character; because of his incredible will; because of his fighting spirit and his "never say die" attitude; because he lives and breathes for matches such as this; because Champions are born and what they possess isn't made; because of all that ... it's still very, very difficult for me to turn off that little switch inside of me ... that switch called "Hope".

Because ...
"Assume you have no hope. If you have no hope, you have nothing. If you have nothing, there is nothing holding you back. If there is nothing holding you back, there is nothing stopping you. If there is nothing stopping you, there is nothing saying you can't. If there is nothing saying you can't, there must be something saying you can. If there is something saying you can, you can do anything. If you can do anything, you can dream. If you can dream, you can hope. Therefore, there is always hope. There is always hope ..."
Rafael Nadal may not walk off court tomorrow being the French Open champion.  But neither will Novak Djokovic.

I wish you the best of luck tomorrow Rafa. Have courage, be brave ...

Monday 1 June 2015

Post match presser snippet ...

Phew ...


The evil twin turned up today, didn't he?

I started off by watching Livescores and then sneakily watched the match via my phone today at work. So my perspective can be blurred by that but at one point I had that awful, nauseous feeling in my tummy that this could be turning into one of those sort of matches to be enjoyed into the early evening with bags more tennis to play ... after it should have been killed off so much quicker.

Even in the first set I felt angst because getting off to a quick start and with his serve coming up, I thought he'd get a perfect 4-0 start. Not to be. But still he won the first set and then he won the second at a canter, and with a break in third, I felt relaxed. And I allowed myself to start thinking that even though he hadn't had the greatest of opposition, Rafa would have got through to the quarter-finals without dropping a set, his play had been fairly good, he hadn't given us any of the worry that previous RGs had in the early rounds and there were forthright, happy, determined and cheeky press conferences ... not statements saying that he felt like he was a 100 years old. So whatever the quarter-final outcome, he'd done well.

But as he ended up having to go to an unnecessary fourth set, this is what's troubling me. He's losing his serve at points when he has the advantage in a match and should be spring-boarding to success. And for all the good we've seen at this year's tournament, I still think Rafa is fragile. Again, I'm trying to get used to this new Rafa, but this fragility he has of losing winning positions in a set and today when holding the advantage for the match, is not going to bode well for him against Djokovic. And although we saw lots that was good in his attacking play, the minute he got rocked, he climbed back into that defensive shell and just hit from way behind the baseline again, handing the advantage to Sock who played far into the court and if that cost him points against a player like Jack Sock who didn't make the mistakes that Rafa's defensive play was hoping for ... well, Djerk isn't going to miss, is he?

If Rafa hadn't lost that third set, I would have been thinking, "great tournament Rafa. Lots to be positive about. I'm concerned about how quickly and easily you concede after breaking serve and that probably won't be good enough against a real quality player, but you've done great".  But the fragile nature of not being able to serve out for the match and losing his serve the second time to forfeit the set ... well, I think it shows that Rafa still has a way to go in being at the level that's required to win the biggest prizes, but that doesn't mean he won't get there ... umpires' interjections with time violations that potentially impose the outcome of a match notwithstanding.

And so we have it. "That" quarter-final.  But in the words of Rafa [as tweeted by @javieralbisu and translated by nou.amic] "Winning a final changes the year for you, a quarter-final doesn't. It's not the match of the year".

Quite.

Sunday 31 May 2015

Sunday Rafa-interview ...


Into the second week ...


I only saw the third set yesterday and very brief highlights, but Rafa looked good. Or good enough. The footwork is still good, the forehand looking fine, the boy's done well this week. And as important for me, Rafa is looking relaxed and happy.

We know that with Rafa's form this clay season he can swing from one match to the next, but there's no complaints from me with what I've seen so far. Yes, it's a different story in the second week and I know we take each match as it comes, and there's one to be played before Wednesday, but he's doing his best and I can be happy with that.

Good luck Rafa! Keep it going!!

Friday 29 May 2015

Did Rafa shoot Bernardes' cat ... ?

OK. Let me explain.

Years ago when I first dipped my toe into commenting on the world-wide-web regarding tennis and Rafa in particular, there was this fabulous poster called AIR. AIR was a Rafa fan who utterly loathed Smugley, but his put downs were of the PseudoFed variety. Hilarious. Following the annihilation handed out to Federer at the French Open of 2008, the BBC's cameras went back to the studio and as AIR described it, Sue Barker [the BBC presenter, abject Fedtard and former player] had a look on her face "like Rafa had just shot her cat". OK, my bad sense of humour, but ...

Poor old Rafa. As Umpiregate continues to rage and felines dive through their cat flaps in order to seek cover, Christopher Clarey from The New York Times posted this very sanguine article, and shock! horror! ...

Within the article, the French Open's tournament referee - Stefan Frannson - seems completely non-plussed by it all and when he responds with comments such as:-
“There is the perception sometimes that if the player just says, I don’t want an umpire, then it happens. That is not true, because if they say they don’t want this official then we find out why they don’t think they should have him, and we look into why he thinks so. We might agree. We might disagree.”
then it must be a situation he has encountered. Equally the article goes on to explain that:-
"When they [the umpires] arrive at a Grand Slam tournament, Fransson said they were usually asked to provide a list of players who might be problematic for them to umpire, as well as a list of any recent issues."
So this backs up what was reported in l'Equipe yesterday, that in reality, it's mostly the umpires who advise who they don't wish to umpire to the extent that they are even asked to provide a list to the Tournament Referee of a Slam.

Next up the article introduces us to Gayle David Bradshaw - Executive Vice President for Rules and Competition at the ATP - no less, who talks about "vacations" between players and umpires. You can read his comments for yourself. So ... if a Slam tournament referee and some top bod concerned with the rules at the ATP talk about players having breaks from umpires like it's the most normal thing in the world, why were the top 3 players [seemingly] in complete ignorance of this?  And just because they were, why does that - once again - make Rafa = wrong, and everyone else = right?

And what happened to common sense, or the infamous umpire's discretion? What broke the camel's back for Rafa started with this. It was Rio; it had just gone 3 am in the morning - yes, 3 am in the morning and they're still playing tennis. Rafa had levelled the match with a 7-5 set; it's extremely humid and he had sweated like a pig. He goes off court at the end of the set to change his kit and realises once back on court that he's put his shorts on the wrong way round. He asks Bernardes if he can leave the court to sort them out, and he's told he'll get a time violation if he does. It's just so stupid, isn't it? But it's trench wars and stuffed shirts ...

And speaking of time violations, Murray got a couple yesterday. The second was because he was steadying himself to serve the next point but they hadn't finished showing a replay on the big screen of the previous one. So he stopped, and then got himself ready again - and Pascal Maria gave him a time violation. Stupid. If that had happened to Rafa, I would have been raging. But this Murray incident made the national TV this morning in the UK discussed as being some outrage delivered to him. The trench wars and stuffed shirts taking a different stance for the rules being applied to this player though. The "journalist" from The Telegraph who broke the story of the Rafa/Bernades situation also continued to outrage in his column about what happened to Murray. No mention of the validity for the other time violation given out because, umm ... was he slow? Did he break the rules? And do you know the underlying reason for this journalist's furor?
" ... Rafael Nadal – the slowest player on the men’s tour – got away with multiple breaches while Andy Murray was penalised twice ..."
Diddums.

I don't know why I persist in writing posts on a subject such as this because in the face of such overwhelming media and stuffed shirt bias, it doesn't change a thing. Everything that Rafa Nadal does is wrong, and every other single sodding player is right. But if a lay person who had no care about tennis looked at these incidents without the trench warfare and emotion, they'd surely think, "C'mon mate. Just let the guy quickly run off to the tunnel to change his shorts round. Give him a break." ... or "Really? How can you penalise a guy for not starting the next point when last the last one is still being shown in his face? ... and, "Look. Just because someone does something more than the next guy who does exactly the same thing but just less, it's still all breaking the rules, isn't it?"

It does make we wonder where all this will end up. But till then, I'm off to herd some cats ...

Thursday 28 May 2015

Post match interview ...



Utterly charming. Love Rafa speaking in his dreadful French - LoL.

Fabrice brought out that even more than before, he seemed to have great support, and with a shrug and an embarrassed smile, Rafa proceeded again to speak in his dreadful French about how special the court is and the public support and I could melt with every smile and every word.

Maybe there could be some truth in what Fabrice is saying. Who knows? Maybe it's just *meh* to win number 6, 7, 8 or 9. But maybe now when Rafa is on the precipice of something extraordinary, which is going double digits at a Slam, he has a little bit of support because the French would like to see this achievement at their event. Anyhow enough of that, let's just concentrate for now on today's loveliness. 

That will do ...


Absolutely lovely match today from Rafa.

Nico Almagro has had his own ranking issues due to injury and surgery and he's spending this year working to get back to his best - but he played a real high quality match. This wasn't your usual standard, second round stuff - that match was right up there.

The only blip today from Rafa was losing his serve when serving for the first set. And yes, he faced a number of break points, but as much as Rafa can craft a point whilst playing on clay, equally his opponents can craft points against him. But other than that game, he survived them.

Some things I enjoyed from the match today. Rafa's movement - it was excellent. His feet were moving quickly to get himself into position and run round his shots. It was lovely. His forehand was nice and there was even a lovely cross court backhand winner and a backhand down the line winner to enjoy too. His defence was outstanding. Fabrice Santoro said in commentary that you can't win the French Open without having fantastic defence, which is the reason why someone like Tomas Berdych is never going to win it. And speaking of defence, whilst many of the commies still like to spin this myth that Rafa runs down every ball and chases after every lost cause - which he probably hasn't since 1986, but hey ho - I did feel today that Rafa really did try to reach for everything. Whether it's because he has the space to do it on Philippe Chatrier so he's more able to slide into those shots, I don't know. But that was noticeable to me. Rafa was so good in the second set that even Nico had to smile when he lost it, and then went into a bit of a free fall. There was no coming back for him on Rafa's performance today.

There's still too much emphasis on Rafa of old vs. the Rafa of now. Comparisons aren't worth anything any more, just enjoy what we're able to watch and today was one of the much better ones and a lovely match. More steady progress, and I think Rafa will be thrilled with that performance today. Damn good show Rafa. Onwards to the next round!

Rafa Y La Decima ...


I think someone's been reading my blog and stolen my "La Decima" title. LoL.


Earlier this week, BBC Radio 5Live broadcast an hour long special on Rafa as he goes for his 10th French Open title. It's been massively well received, although I've yet to listen to it myself. *blushes* You can find a link to the podcast here - just scroll down and find the appropriate title. It works OK for me here in the UK, but I've no idea if it will do the same for you guys overseas, but give it a try.


Failing that, here's a link to the BBC article about it. Enjoy!