Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Arturo E. Hernandez's avatar

Very interesting recap and I also got the feeling that Dimitrov was less patient than in other matches. He probably needed to slice more just like Rafa did against Djokovic a few years back. Only Wawrinka would have his way against Sinner. No other backhand could push him back. And even Fed did not have that type of backhand. There was something else I noticed...

Dimitrov threw in the towel. He started making bonehead plays and just gave up. I have NEVER seen Rafa, Fed or Djokovic give up. Even Fed when he was being run around by Djokovic in an AO final a few years back, would keep playing. Maybe Fed on clay against Rafa was the closest to a meltdown. But still, Dimitrov stopped fighting. He did not try to change things up. Do something else. Slice everything. Just find a way to stay out there a bit longer. These are all qualities that a champion uses to their advantage. Even when the other player is firing just hang around. 6-3, 6-4 is better than 6-3, 6-1. It will stay in a player's mind the next time.

Even if he lost in straight sets, I think he should have tried to hang around and disrupt Sinner in some way. I suppose that there are only a few who can do this and Alcaraz is one of those who can change his game. I was a bit disappointed at Dimitrov laying down in the second set without trying to get Sinner to keep hitting at the same level.

I know that it is easy to judge from a distance but still. Even if you are losing don't throw away points. I am hearing Yogi Berra here.

Expand full comment
mst's avatar

A very low-importance correction: you note that FAA and Popyrin were the only two-handers whose average RPM exceeded Sinner's, but there's also Ruud -- whose forehand RPMs sent him so far off to the right that he's hard to spot!

Expand full comment
26 more comments...

No posts