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Messages - Mr.Tee
1
« on: June 12, 2015, 11:01:47 am »
Hmm, interesting things happening lately. Rafa is playing better on grass than on clay in my opinion. His serve has been pretty big, backhand is very solid, balls are landing deep close to the baseline. I know he only played 2 matches and it is too early to assess but he might have taken the grass season seriously this year. About freaking time, I would say  Tomorrow he plays Monfils, should be a fun match!
2
« on: June 01, 2015, 10:46:48 pm »
After watching the entire match against sock I noticed the following:
Positives: 1. Rafa is really hitting the backhand hard, trying to flatten it most of the time, not slicing much. 2. His footwork looked great. 3. The forehand was clicking during almost the entire match. 4. Rafa returned second serves deep, did not leave the returns short like before.
Negatives: 1. Rafa did not serve well. He absolutely MUST serve well against Djokovic! 2. That lapse of concentration when closing sets/matches really needs to stop (going from 5:3 to 5:7 in the third set). He cannot afford not serving out sets in Wednesday! 3. Rafa made some mind boggling unforced errors once again on easy, neutral rallies. He needs to minimize those.
So, I am cautiously optimistic for his match against Djokovic. It is also Rafa's birthday, maybe he will come out really focused and with great determination!
great post general Tee.
I am picking Rafa. I think have to believe that nole can have an off day.
and just what you said: rafa is long over due for a great match. a clean match where he is focused and intense beyond belief.
and where he is able to keep the unforced errors to around 10.
he had around 15-18 forehand errors alone today. that will have to change on Wednesday.
forehand has to fire and hit its marks.
all that being said, he also has to take nole out quickly. he has to try to bag the first 2 sets in order to take nole's will away.
I think rafa shows the world what he can when the chips are down. he has not had a good year.
he can change all that with this single match. expect a very intense and very focused rafa on Wednesday.
there is no other way to disrupt nole. you have to try to take his will away early.
Yep, he needs to come out swinging, cannot afford to dig himself a hole early on. Djokovic is as fit as a fiddle, Rafa can't keep up with him for 5 hours anymore! I am too hoping that Rafa can still keep a good level for more than one match! Plus, all the pressure will be on Djokovic which has been the case during their last 3 Roland Garros meetings.
3
« on: June 01, 2015, 10:13:04 pm »
After watching the entire match against sock I noticed the following:
Positives: 1. Rafa is really hitting the backhand hard, trying to flatten it most of the time, not slicing much. 2. His footwork looked great. 3. The forehand was clicking during almost the entire match. 4. Rafa returned second serves deep, did not leave the returns short like before.
Negatives: 1. Rafa did not serve well. He absolutely MUST serve well against Djokovic! 2. That lapse of concentration when closing sets/matches really needs to stop (going from 5:3 to 5:7 in the third set). He cannot afford not serving out sets in Wednesday! 3. Rafa made some mind boggling unforced errors once again on easy, neutral rallies. He needs to minimize those.
So, I am cautiously optimistic for his match against Djokovic. It is also Rafa's birthday, maybe he will come out really focused and with great determination!
4
« on: May 11, 2015, 08:45:38 am »
Hi all!
Well, I was waiting for the end of Madrid to say anything due to the up and down nature of Rafa's comeback this year.
And it manifested itself again.
But let's look on the bright side for a moment, shall we?
1. Rafa made it to the semis in Monte Carlo and lost to Djokovic - which was like playing a final. He got 4 matches in. He disappointed in Barcelona only getting 2 matches in, but in Madrid, he made it to the final and got 5 matches in. That's 11 matches. If he can get 4 or 5 matches in Rome, that gives him 15/16. If he can make it to the QF at RG, he'll have 5 more in for 20/21. That's enough to win RG, if he plays well of course.
2. He looks to be pretty healthy. He is gradually getting more fit.
3. From his effort, it looks like he is gaining confidence though still not sure of himself against the top guns, because he hasn't beaten them recently.
Unfortunately, there is a down side, as you all have pointed out.
1. Inconsistent play - looking great on some shots, but horrendous on others, and too many of those.
2. He has gotten outplayed by lesser players at the business end of the match indicating insufficient fitness still.
3. His confidence is not all there, even on clay with 46 titles and 9 RG.
4. Technically, he is still suffering. Don't let his wins over Berdych or Dimitrov fool you. He took advantage of Berdych, who doesn't move well enough and therefore defend well enough to compete with the best on clay. As soon as he reached both a competent shot maker and defender in Andy Murray, Rafa's weaknesses were all exposed for all to see. He couldn't match the Murray backhand to his forehand exchanges, which was a huge factor. Why? Rafa's forehand was just inconsistent. Balls were flying on him and sailing out. But I believe the reason is that Rafa hit too many off balance, due to not having the speed/fitness to reach them. Rafa's backhand and return were extremely short, those that went over the net giving Murray time and opportunity to step in to the court and hit wider angles deep to Rafa's forehand or backhand. Rafa was often on the back foot meters behind the baseline.
The bright point was Rafa's play at the net. He won virtually everything there. The trouble was that he didn't get more than 10 or so opportunities there.
His forehand was inconsistent at best. He hit many long or wide. His backhand was woeful at times, I think at least a couple hit the bottom of the net or didn't make it there. After getting broken in his first service game of the first set, Rafa hung in the set well on serve, but couldn't get through on Murray's serve. The second set started the same or worse I should say. He couldn't hold his serve the opening two service games, and couldn't make a dent in Murray's.
Sure, a lot of this was Murray's good, aggressive play, especially on his backhand wing. The trouble was that Rafa couldn't take his opportunities, and they were there. Murray's serve wasn't particularly good, hovering around 50% first serves in much of the match, ending up at 59%. And Rafa let Murray get away with winning 80+ percent of his second serves by standing too deep, instead of standing inside the baseline and whipping Murray's 84 mph serves back at him, like most of the rest of the tour has been doing. When Murray embarrassingly missed a drive volley in the second set at 2-0 his ad on Rafa's serve, it seemed a great opportunity for Rafa to turn the match around. Instead, he meekly lost his service game. Rafa just didn't play well enough to string a few points in a row and get enough rhythm.
Rafa said he just wants to delete this match from his mind and focus on his good matches. Well, good luck with that. You can't hide from your poor performances. You have to look at them in cold light and make the improvements necessary, or else you will run into those problems again, the next time you meet a top player.
We've said it before, Rafa needs to work on his fitness, his return of serve, and depth of shots. If he can't solve those, he won't be winning against top players, and he can lose to anyone who moves well on clay (like a Fognini).
The good news is there is still a little time, and he can make improvements if he works hard. But that window is closing fast.
Respectfully, masterclass
Great post, as usual, masterclass! Rafa losing those forehand-to-backhand rallies was really painful to watch, it used to be only Djokovic (and, to some extend Nalbandian) who could do that to him. But Rafa is indeed a step slower, what really boggles my mind is that he plays passive, short balls and he relies too much on defending. Well, he is not 26 anymore, those days are long gone! I have a question for you - do you thing that at this point of his career Rafa would benefit from hiring a coach? I am not talking about replacing Toni but rather hiring somebody on his team with perhaps a fresh perspective on his game.
5
« on: May 10, 2015, 02:09:36 pm »
Yeah, only Rafa can play his best and worst matches in the span of 24 hours! This was probably the worst match on clay I have ever seen him play. He picked up his level in the middle of the second set and then inexplicably started missing by a country mile.
I believe that this is rock bottom for him and he will realize it soon. There is no way but up from here.
6
« on: May 09, 2015, 10:42:22 am »
Today was EASILY Rafa's best match since I don't remember when! The forehand was vintage, deep, painting lines. The backhand was solid and I was very pleasantly surprised by Rafa's position on return! 7:6 6:1 against an in-form Berdych should give Rafa a lot of confidence! Let's see if he can play two consecutive matches keeping the same level! I'd rather he played Murray tomorrow than Nishikori though
7
« on: April 23, 2015, 12:12:18 pm »
Hey guys, I have notposted in a while  Yeah, times are tough for Rafa and his fans. But I am staying optimistic. Well, cautiously optimistic. Today he played passively, but in all fairness Fognini hit great, took the ball on the rise and attacked while not making too many UEs. Rafa, on the other hand... Where do I even begin! 1. Serving at a pathetic level. Maybe hiring a coach would help? 2. Returning from waaaay back. Come on, this is not Sampras serving, this is freaking Fognini! 3. Hitting "scared" Yeah, come on, one point he is being aggresive with his FH, hitting inside-out, next point pushes a sjort ball in the middle which is crushed by Fognini. Very inconsistent. I mean, come, just go all out, make 60 UEs but find your shots. 4. Tha backhand. OMG, what happened to his backhand??? It used to be so solid and reliable. Now he is running around it leaving the whole court open! Rafa, you are not 25 anymore, you can't chase every ball down! 5. His fitness level. He looked tired to me in the second set. How is he going to play 3 out of 5? So, unless he gets seriously to work (backhand/returns/serve mostly) in the next week and a half, nothing goog will come out of those 2 Masters and Roland Garros. Ok, on a lighter note, my Spurs played an awesome game yesterday defeating the Clippers in overtime. Timmy Duncan is 39 years old and he played 42 minutes scoring 28 with 11 rebounds and 4 assists. The guy us in great shape. Maybe Rafa should look up to him for inspiration! You guys take care, I will see you around
8
« on: July 06, 2014, 07:03:42 pm »
What a final it was! Filled with drama and momentum swings. Great tennis! So, Mr.Tee is now 3/4 on his "bold predictions for 2014" made before the season: 1. Nole will not defend AO. Check. 2. Grigor will reach the QF of a Slam. Check 3. Federer will reach the final of a Slam. Check So, the only prediction left is that Rafa will win 2 Slams this year. So, bring on the US Open
9
« on: July 01, 2014, 04:15:15 pm »
Who would have thought yesterday that Rafa would lose to Kyrgios in such fashion? I think that those 2 days off did not do him any favor. He played short, the return of serve was horrible, and on the big points Rafa just played bad. Deserved win by the young Aussie, he definitely has potential if he develops his talent!
Great matches tomorrow - Murray - Dimitrov, Fed - Wawa, Nole - Cilic, Kyrgios - Raonic. Let's see how much Kyrgios has left in the tank after that Gasquet match and today's 3 hour thriller!
10
« on: June 08, 2014, 06:41:20 pm »
Congratulations to all Rafa fans in here, well deserved victory! After the first set Rafa steadied the ship and except for that 4:2 service game in the fourth set was pretty solid. The forehand produced many inside-out and down-the-line beautiful winners and the serving was pretty descent.
On to the grass, hopefully Rafa is ok physically and makes it further than R2 at Wimbledon this year.
11
« on: June 08, 2014, 06:36:58 pm »
10 consecutive years winning at least one Grand Slam title.
12
« on: June 04, 2014, 10:41:46 pm »
So, both semi-finals are on Friday. A nice day of rest for Rafa, hopefully he serves well against Andy. And cuts down on those unforced errors, he was horrible today for the first 2 sets!
13
« on: May 12, 2014, 12:28:15 pm »
His inner motivation is not as strong as it used to be and that is understandable. He is definitely distracted with all the charity work, poker, golf and whatnot. So hopefully those losses to Ferrer and Almagro plus the scare against Nishikori give him a good dose of reality and he realizes that something serious needs to be done if he wants to be a contender for any big title from now on.
14
« on: May 12, 2014, 12:15:01 pm »
we need to verify this. I saw this on facebook as I was having a lightening quick look there.
Toni Nadal said," We don't deserve the victory, Nishikori deserves it. He played better than us the whole time... We had a lot of luck today. We didn't really come back, he was hurt."
it almost sounds like uncle tony is not really happy with the way clay warrior played.
I have been looking at the highlights. rafa did not return well and he also tried running around his backhand a bit too much.
also I thought rafa's shots lacked the venom and the mustard. he did not hard enough and forcefully enough.
rafa has one hell of a window. he really needs to be taking advantage of this:
nole has wrist issues andy murray is not 100% roger is getting old del potro is out of the game
rafa is allowing himself to be pushed around by the players he has not lost to in 10 years.
still there is a way out of this: just do all you can to win rome and RG and many of the issues go away temporarily.
for the long run, rafa has got to start putting in the hard yards in practice. that is the only reason others are catching up. they are more hungry and are working harder.
he has to do the following:
1. work on the backhand 2. the return 3. the serve 4. fitness
I agree with you 100%, the return of serve and backhand at the moment are not even Top 20. How can Rafa not see it? Focus on that, practice twice a day if necessary. He is getting lazy with all the fame and fortune.
15
« on: May 12, 2014, 12:13:28 pm »
Happy for Grigor but Karlovic in the next round is not going to be easy.
Rafa against Simon in R2. Simon has been playing horribly all year but won easily against Volandri today. Hoping for a showing by Rafa similar to the matches against Berdych and Nieminen in Madrid.
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