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kban1

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #160 on: June 24, 2009, 03:02:46 AM »
that 106-16 citation may be wrong because if you win 18 of 32, you can only lose 14. Unless the remaining 2 matches were part of some tour.

Well some tournaments had round robin matches, followed by a final.

good point, that did not even cross my mind.
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kban1

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #161 on: June 24, 2009, 03:03:51 AM »
Quote
Add to that, winning 18 tournaments in a year today would mean something like 18X7 = 126 Matches. Even if Laver lost in the first round of the other 14, it would mean playing at least 140 matches. However, the wikipedia record lists only 122 matches, with a 106-16 breakdown.


I dont think this is completely accurate.

Tournaments even today dont have 7 rounds.

Most tournaments have 5 rounds at the most. The 7 is reserved for GS where 128 players join in to be whittled down to 2 in the final.

So laver's 18 tournaments would have meant in reality 18*5 = 90 matches or if you wish

14*5 =70
+
4 GS * 7 = 28 or 4GS * 6 = 24

= 108 matches or 104 matches.

he lost 14 matches for a total of 122. or he won 2 more and then lost another 14 for a total of 122.

that 106-16 citation may be wrong because if you win 18 of 32, you can only lose 14. Unless the remaining 2 matches were part of some tour.

Yes, but that would also mean that he had to lose 14 tournaments in the first round. That, for Laver, was more impossible than winning 14 GS tournaments on the trot.

yes, losing 14 first rounders is a tall order for any player worth his / her salt.
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kban1

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #162 on: April 16, 2010, 10:17:34 PM »
Idolizing Ivan!

Rohit Brijnath

It was not a question of admitting it loudly, or in public. You simply did not mention it all.

Sure his forehand was faster than light, but that was all. He was cold, remote, owner of two facial expressions --- small grimace and large grimace --- an ugly duckling who'd never make a sporting swan. Sportsmen were supposed to be poetic, inspired, flexible, flamboyant: he fit not a single adjective.

Quite simply it was not fashionable to admire Ivan Lendl; but for a while I worshipped him. But very quietly.

Not always. I was in my early 20s, a disciple of Jim Morrison, and thus by extension an apologist for another rebel, John McEnroe. Some artists cut off their ears, he was sawing off umpires' with his razor-blade tongue. Simply delicious, all understandable. .

But the problem with McEnroe was this; he defied impersonation.

His service stance was absurd, he hit backhands from in front of his chest, c'est impossible. Then there were the drop volleys: "Collapsed like a punctured balloon," wrote Rex Bellamy once (a line happily used by every tennis writer including me thereafter). My drop volley settled too, halfway to the baseline, alas.

Connors was worse. No topspin, a girl's flat game --- nun's have more vicious serves --- and a brashness that did not sit well with us Indians. My club secretary would have had a minor coronary had I grabbed my crotch after one of his mis-hit aces.

That left Lendl, and a host of possibilities. McEnroe was rumoured to have said, "Lendl has as much talent in his body as I have in my little finger."

Finally, here was a guy like us. A dope. If he could do it, why not me.

So I bought two large wristbands, six inches or more across the forearm, and wiped the sweat off my face brusquely as he did. I even priced his adidas racket, but left it at that. While we were sending Thank You cards to racket manufacturers who gave us huge heads with an unlimited sweetspot, Lendl's racket had a small face, demanding an exactness us club players only dreamed of. And another thing: I couldn't lift it.

I would practice too, if not hour after hour then certainly minute after minute, but alas my forehand screeched while his screamed. It did not end there. Before serving, I would bounce the ball methodically like he did, then hurl it towards low flying aircraft (how European players manage to connect with three storey high ball tosses it is a tennis mystery), cock my racket and then nearly decapitate my doubles partner. Oh well.

It was no good; but boy was he.

He was the essential self-made man, a product of sweat not genes, of method not inspiration. That he ended with eight Grand Slam titles ( 3 US, 3 French, 2 Australian) to McEnroe’s seven proves not much but has a delicious irony to it.

Lendl arrived in tennis like a man at a Hollywood agents meeting with the wrong script. I once discovered that Ostrava, his birthplace, was known for its steel factories. Somehow it fit, he seemed this inhuman, unbending man, a product off some conveyor belt.

Western writers seemed conditioned to dislike him, as if he fit the East European stereotype: humourless, grim, unable to embrace the reality that sport was entertainment not a public funeral. There was McEnroe playing like an inventive jazz musician, Connors like a rock star high on some street drug, and there was Lendl, like some stilted, classical musician playing from dull sheet music.

But best of all, for them at least, he lost: in the finals of the 1981 French, 1982 US, 1983 Australian and US, 84 US, 85 French. The man was choking himself to defeat (He had won the 1984 French, down at one point two sets and 2-5 to McEnroe, but it was viewed more as an irritable McEnroe’s failure than his victory, though it remains a startlingly incorrect assumption).

Time magazine called him, "A chilly, self-centred, condescending, mean-spirited, arrogant man with a nice forehand." Sports Illustrated deemed him, "The champion everyone loves to hate" or something to that effect. In 1981, his first question at a post-match interview was a belligerent, "When are you going to defect?"

Oddly enough he was a funny man, hardly hysterical, but with a sly, intelligent humour. An interviewer, valiantly prodding him about his notorious, rivalry with McEnroe/Connors, found out the hard way:

Q: What about Connors?

Lendl: He has a nice backhand

Q: Connors accused you of trying to hit him with the ball when he's at the net...

Lendl: (smiling) I usually do that with McEnroe.

Lendl's inability to win Wimbledon became eventually tragic; initially, at least, it was ammunition to poke fun. That McEnroe and Connors had not won the French, somehow was less criminal than Lendl at Wimbledon (and Borg at the US). For sure Lendl's personality, his practical nature, hurt him on a surface that demanded imagination. His footwork never adapted, his tactics (serve and volley even on second serves?) were arguable, but you had to figure God was too preoccupied to care as well.

In Wimbledon 1989, I watched as he led Becker 5-7, 7-6, 6-2 in the semi finals and as my heartbeat went up, the rain came down. He was impeccable, but a rhythm that he had searched for all his life, that appeared one afternoon-evening, vanished with the rain-break.

Lendl's defiance made him further infuriating. When he said, "If you want tantrums and comedy don't come and see me", people groaned; when he said, "My mission is to win," people despaired. His genius was obscured, and make no mistake, he had genius.

It lay in detail, in his understanding of his own limitations, in his clear perception that to compete he must combat natural talent with a miner's work ethic. The result was a creation of tennis' first true professional, and a building of the prototype of the modern power player.

Speed, power, back up systems, are the mantras of today's tennis, and Lendl was its genesis. After losing three successive US Open finals he had a similar court laid in his backyard. He practiced six hours a day. He worked with a psychologist Alexis Castori. He had his diet specially prepared by a nutritionist, Robert Haas (to which McEnroe responded, "I'm on a diet too, a Haagen Daaz one.") He hired Warren Bosworth, racket guru, to customise his equipment. He changed his racket, pulling it out of its long plastic, after every ball change. He constructed a practical Beau Geste cap, with a flap over the neck, to combat the Australian Open heat.

He was going to do it his way; and he did.

In 1985, 2-5 down in the first set to McEnroe in the US Open finals, nothing seemed to have changed. Except he won that match 7-6, 6-3, 6-4. He didn’t stop. He would win (discounting his two Wimbledon finals) 6 of his next 9 Grand Slam finals. He was No.1 for 157 weeks straight, finished with 94 titles.

He was a great player. And worthy of worship.

I just wish I had said it loudly then.

At least, the Hall of Fame, in which this week Ivan Lendl has been enshrined, will glow brighter by his presence.



http://www.rediff.com/sports/2001/feb/19rohit.htm
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kban1

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #163 on: April 16, 2010, 10:28:10 PM »
Tennis still imbued in Lendl's blood

By Bonnie D. Ford
ESPN.com


ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- Ivan Lendl walks onto the court at Boardwalk Hall with a familiar controlled energy, a big saber-toothed cat risen from the record books and ready to prowl. He maps out his surroundings during the warm-up. The bounce is high; there's less space behind one baseline than the other; a sign is in his line of vision and needs to be moved. His voice, his presence and his drive fill the empty, echoing space.

Lendl limbers up visibly as the practice proceeds, hitting with more relish and pace. After smacking one winner, he grins and regards the man across the net from him, a young coach from Philadelphia named Lance Lee. "I'm not sorry, and I'm not going to say I am," Lendl declares.

His longtime agent Jerry Solomon materializes on the sideline. Lendl calls out to him: "See how much better the backhand pass is just in one week?" Then he lashes one to demonstrate. "Remember those?" he asks.

Boardwalk Hall has seen it all, from Louis Armstrong to Frank Sinatra to the Rolling Stones, from figure skating to bowling to hockey. Within a three-day span in the summer of 1964, the Beatles played here in concert and Lyndon Baines Johnson accepted the Democratic Party's nomination for President of the United States. Dozens of Miss Americas were crowned here. Saturday, the grand old edifice will be the site of Lendl's first tennis match before a paying audience in 16 years.

Lendl's encounter with his 1980s rival Mats Wilander will kick off the Caesars Tennis Classic, co-staged by the casino and Solomon's management company, StarGames. Venus Williams will serve as host and Pete Sampras, Andy Roddick and Marat Safin will be featured in subsequent matches.

There's a touch of mystique to Lendl's return. No one would have doubted that he could acquit himself honorably on the court at any age if his bad back had healed enough to allow that. But he seemed so contented without the game that as the years went by, the possibility of a return appeared increasingly remote.

In a courtside interview Thursday, Lendl clarifies his motivations with typical bluntness. He says he picked up a racket again simply because he could, not out of some deep longing or regret about a career he didn't end on his own terms.

Was it emotional to be able to play again? "I never thought about it,'' he says. He enjoyed it, "but there are a lot of things I enjoy. I try to avoid things I don't enjoy." That pleasure evolved. He'll play in front of a crowd Saturday, and maybe a couple of more times this year. He'll see how it goes.

"I don't know what's going to happen," Lendl says. "I'm going to make some bad decisions and I'm going to hit some poor shots. What will be essential is my decision-making and my determination to go after the shot when it's there, after I've missed a few. That will be the hardest part, how my mind will react to that instinctive thing."

Lendl, who turned 50 last month, was forced to retire by back pain that prevented him even from participating in hit-and-giggles, as casual exhibitions are known in the trade. He moved on, devoting himself to his family and his golf game. Two of his five daughters play for the University of Florida golf team, and Lendl is a scratch golfer who has won numerous club championships.

Two years ago, Lendl's back issues worsened to the point where they were impeding everyday activities, and he was eventually diagnosed with a ligament tear. He had two cortisone shots that seemed to remedy not only that condition but calm down the facet joint and disc problems that had been ailing him for years.

Lendl began to hit tennis balls again in late 2008, first with Tom Fish, father of ATP veteran Mardy Fish and a teaching pro in Vero Beach, Fla., where Lendl spends about half the year. He has a tennis and golf academy now, and started to think about what it might be like to "show the kids how to hit the ball rather than tell them how to hit it, and feel the shots they're hitting at me, and so on." He tore a tendon in his foot last summer and had to shut down for a couple of months, then resumed.

Last fall, Lendl got serious about getting back into tennis shape. Under the supervision of his trainer of many years, Gary Kitchell, he dropped 35 pounds and gradually ratcheted up his workouts. He's not quite the beanstalk he was in his youth, but the architecture of his jaw and cheekbones has surfaced again and his frame has reclaimed some of its former angularity.

Lendl looks surprisingly flexible, and has maintained his stamina over the years with cycling and, more recently, in-line skating. He isn't totally pain-free and can't play hard two days in a row. The biggest drawback may be that tennis is cutting into his golf time and hurting his follow-through. "Trying to make up for it with my short game," Lendl says. He plans to play in as many senior open golf events within reach of his Connecticut home as he can this summer.

Asked if he and Wilander might reprise one of their trademark 30- or 40-shot rallies in their single-set encounter Saturday, Lendl smiles but doesn't treat the notion as a joke. "I don't know," he says. "I don't mind it. I feel good."

Good is good enough right now, even for an eight-time Grand Slam event winner who was world No. 1 for 270 weeks. Lendl says he feels detached from his former self, which makes it easier for him to feel he's not competing with his own legacy. "The guy who played a long time ago, to me it's like somebody else," he says. "I'm so far removed from that. I went to such a different lifestyle immediately afterwards."

His daughters never saw him play competitively, and they're curious. Lendl told them -- and his wife -- not to come this weekend, partly because of pride and nerves, partly because he thinks they might be more enthralled by something else. "They want to see me play John [McEnroe]," he says with a mischievous expression. Suddenly, implausibly, it seems like he has a match on his racket again.

http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/tennis/columns/story?columnist=ford_bonnie_d&id=5069915
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ramshorns

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #164 on: April 16, 2010, 11:26:13 PM »
If at all there is a perfectionist ever this is the guy IMO - Ivan Lendl.
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CLR James

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #165 on: April 17, 2010, 09:41:51 PM »
If at all there is a perfectionist ever this is the guy IMO - Ivan Lendl.

True. Only that some else achieved perfection  >:D.
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kban1

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #166 on: April 19, 2010, 03:13:38 AM »
If at all there is a perfectionist ever this is the guy IMO - Ivan Lendl.

True. Only that some else achieved perfection  >:D.

Yep, Laver  ::Whip::

 ;D ;D ;D
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CLR James

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #167 on: April 26, 2010, 06:48:57 AM »
If at all there is a perfectionist ever this is the guy IMO - Ivan Lendl.

True. Only that some else achieved perfection  >:D.

Yep, Laver  ::Whip::

 ;D ;D ;D

Yes. Laver still dreams......
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kban1

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Re: The Ivan Lendl Interview
« Reply #168 on: April 26, 2010, 09:51:40 AM »
If at all there is a perfectionist ever this is the guy IMO - Ivan Lendl.

True. Only that some else achieved perfection  >:D.

Yep, Laver  ::Whip::

 ;D ;D ;D

Yes. Laver still dreams......

of how he would have won at least 30 GS if he had the pansies to beat up on like Roger does :P

 ;D ;D ;D
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