First Serb
Like this journal’s esteemed High Life commentator, I too have been spending too much time watching the last fortnight’s Australian Tennis Open from Melbourne — but unlike my colleague I found it an absolute revelation, with potentially lethal levels of thrills, shocks, gut-wrenching excitement and great grace in victory and defeat. For most people in Britain, tennis tends to be something they think about over a couple of weeks in mid-summer. Damn shame, that. I was watching Roger Federer’s synapse-stunning third round victory over Serbia’s Janko Tipsarevic a few days back — Federer won 10-8 in the fifth against Janko, who with his specs and beard looks like a geography lecturer at Warwick, but whose favourite reading is in fact Dostoevsky — when the commentators went over to veteran tennis sage Bud Collins. ‘Well, Roger may be the greatest player on earth,’ said Bud, ‘But he’s up against someone who wants to share that earth with him. And that’s what makes sport so great ...’ I’ll drink to that.
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Mick
January 31st, 2008 1:12pm Report this commentI had an opportunity to speak to Novak in Melbourne. He is unbelievable funny and intelligent boy. He has such a spontaneous nature. After several minutes of conversation I felt I know him for ages.
Geoffrey Hazzan
February 2nd, 2008 9:57pm Report this commentWhen, oh when, will the tennis administrators limit the ball bounces before serving and caution against excessive grunting during the rallies?
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