The Amazing Wimbledon

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

This is my first attempt at writing simply (I mean apart from in exams) and especially blogging.. So please bear with me, if it's tasteless and please do provide some suggestions as I intend to cultivate this habit somehow..

The date was 06 - 07 - 08. Three consecutive numbers.. Does that mean anything?? perhaps, or perhaps not.. There would have been a million things happening around the world. Elections, strikes, festivals etc etc.. But the entire sporting fraternity would have been glued onto their television sets, or the fortunate ones, directly to see things live in action. For there was not just one sporting event, but three things (which I followed, inspite of being sick at home) happening. The finals of the Asia Cup in cricket, The British Grand Prix and The Wimbledon Finals.

All the three happens once in a year (I am unsure of the Asia cup here) and have a great fan following all over the world. But I am sure the Wimbledon would be more remembered than the others for a very long time.

The setting was ideal. The World No.1 and No.2 battling it out. The Incumbent vs the Insurgent.. The Elegant Master vs The Aggressive Speedster. The man named Roger Federer who has been ruling World Tennis in general and Wimbledon in particular for the past 6 - 7 years. Against the man who is hailed to be the next ruler, Rafal Nadal..

Both have records to chase, points to prove and scores to settle.. Federer aiming for his sixth straight wimbledon victory to put him in the league of great men, and some points to prove for the rather dismal season so far (zero victories of three grandslams - now when was the last time that happened?? ) And of course, the much - written personal rivalry against Nadal, who treated him like a puppet in his arena - clay - in the French Open.

Nadal - The king of clay - had to mainly break that image and prove that he is a man of substance and can win everywhere. What better way than to try and beat the Lion in its own Den.. And for records as well, chasing an elite group of legends who had won the French Open and Wimbledon back - to - back and mainly for the Wimbledon crown which is perhaps the ultimate glory for the tennis players..

So with everything to play for, the match began. Nadal straight on to assume the lead and break Federer and forge ahead to a lead of 2 sets to zero. Perhaps the champion took some time to recover his mettle as he's put in these situations very rarely. But come back he did, and like a real champion. From what seemed like a clean sweep for Nadal at 6-4, 6-4 to breaking him in the third set, getting it to the tie-breaker and winning two sets with glorious shots that would have shown people why he is the King of Grass.. One can always argue that rain helped him regroup, but then it takes sheer greatness and genuis to claw back from such a drastic situation. I guess Nadal himself would not have wanted to defeat Federer in straight sets as it would have been a tame end to the great setting.

Final set - scores level at 7-7.. Anybody's game!! All the points scored till now, all the sweat till now do not matter at all, as the next few games would decide the winner.. And ultimately, after defending a few break points, Rafal Nadal, came through to conquer glory and the most cherished title. The joy in his face was boundless going straight to his parents in the stands and celebrating with tears of joy.. And perhaps, the sorrow on Federer was also boundless, which unfortunately, he had to bear alone.. He lost, but with admiration, character and like a hero..

The epic five-setter played by the best men in business today (or perhaps of all-time), would be held in the league of great games like the Bjorg-Mcnroe, Becker-Edberg, Ivanesivic-Hennman, etc for sure.. So then, is this the dawn of the new era - The Era of Nadal, is this the End of Federer, or is it just another game?? Or is this the truimph of Tennis itself to see another wonderful rivalry, perhaps after Sampras-Agassi?? Only time would say. But for the people who were fortunate enough to watch it, it would definitely be etched in their memory for a long time.

And of course, all eyes on the US Open now.. Hope it's another extravaganza.. :)


3 comments:

Unknown said...

very professional da.. the treatment of the subject was very ornate and magnanimous.. in other words.. lots of hype :) but amusing none the less.. it was sort of new breed between the sports column n the sunday magazine column in the HINDU :)

Varun said...

Nice start sri.
good going..
super topic to kick off... rock on..

Sancho said...

To merely say that the Wimbledon final between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal was epic would be to grossly understate the quality of tennis and also to severely underplay the quality and intensity of drama on show for the best part of 5 hours. For a tennis connoissieur the action could have been described as mouth watering - except for the fact that the action on court left your hearts throbbing and mouth dry. The racquet work on display was so sublime as to evoke in supporters of either player an admiration - untinged by any grudge for the other man. Today Federer supporters would have had no choice but to admire and applaud Nadal's intensity, strength, verve, tenacity and quickness of body and mind. And of course, the countless Rafa supporters had no choice but to marvel at the defending champion's breadth and depth of skill, the way how he had answers to every contortionist question that Rafa put to him, the way he was always unflappable - whether he was serving out a gamepoint or had to defend a championship point, how he manages to remain graceful as ever - even when fighting for his very life and of course for the sheer tennis skill and imagination of the Swiss champion.

Forget the 5 hours taken by this match. This was a match to be remembered for a lifetime and across generations. It was, in every way, a victory for tennis. And it showed sport as the transcendental pursuit that it is, from time to time!

great start Shiva!! keep going.. :)