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  • 2 weeks later...

Poland's Iga Swiatek defeated American Sofia Kenin 6-4, 6-1 on Saturday to win the 2020 French Open for her first Grand Slam singles title.

Here are the notable stats from Swiatek's title run:

 

1

Swiatek is the first Polish player, man or woman, to win a singles major in tennis history.

She is the third Polish player to win a Grand Slam singles or doubles title in the Open Era (since 1968) after Lukasz Kubot (men's doubles at 2017 Wimbledon and 2014 Australian Open) and Wojtek Fibak (men's doubles at 1978 Australian Open).

2

Swiatek is only the second unseeded woman in the Open Era to win the French Open, after Jelena Ostapenko in 2017.

Other unseeded women to win majors since WTA Rankings were introduced in 1975 are Sloane Stephens (2017 US Open, ranked 83), Kim Clijsters (2009 US Open, not ranked), Serena Williams (2007 Australian Open, ranked 81) and Chris O'Neil (1978 Australian Open, ranked 111).

 

54

Swiatek's ranking during the tournament, making her the lowest-ranked woman to win the French Open since 1975.

4

Swiatek is the fourth player, male or female, in the last 40 years to win a Grand Slam as their first career tour-level title. The previous three are Mats Wilander (1982 French Open), Gustavo Kuerten (1997 French Open) and Ostapenko (2017 French Open).

4

Swiatek is the fourth teenage woman in the Open Era to win the French Open without dropping a set, after Evonne Goolagong (1971), Chris Evert (1974) and Steffi Graf (1988).

The last woman, regardless of age, to win the French Open without dropping a set was Justine Henin in 2007.

Among all majors in the last 30 years, the only other teenage women to win a slam without dropping a set are Monica Seles (1992 US Open) and Martina Hingis (1997 Australian Open and 1997 US Open).

19 years, 132 days

Swiatek's age, making her the youngest woman to win the French Open since Monica Seles (18 years, 187 days) in 1992.

Among all players, Swiatek is the youngest winner at Roland Garros since Rafael Nadal won his first title in 2005 at the age of 19.

16-2

Kenin's win-loss record at Grand Slams this year is the best among all women. The 2020 Australian Open winner's other loss came against Elise Mertens in the fourth round of the US Open.

(Stats courtesy ESPN's Statistics & Information Group)

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Ne znam jeste li znali koliko je trajala najduža izmjena u povijesti tenisa? Ima već dosta vremena da sam naletio na taj podatak ali sam sad svejedno googleao da se još jednom uvjerim jer mi je i dalje nevjerojatan podatak. Tekst je u spoileru da pogađate ako ne znate

 

Spoiler
Quote

The Day They Belabored the Point

By Dave Seminara

Sept. 23, 2009

As the 642nd shot of the rally floated high above her head, Vicki Nelson decided it was time to go for a winner.

“I thought I was going to go crazy,” Nelson told reporters after the match. “No matter what I did with the ball, she kept getting it back.”

She added: “It took me a long time to get up the nerve to come in, but she finally hit a short lob and I put it away forever.”

Twenty-five years ago, on Sept. 24, 1984, Nelson and Jean Hepner, who were ranked No. 93 and No. 172 in the world, engaged in a 29-minute, 643-shot rally that remains the longest point played in a professional tennis match.

For comparison, during a match last month, Andy Murray and Julien Benneteau had a rally that lasted 53 shots, and it was the longest either of them could remember playing in competition.

The rally between Nelson and Hepner occurred in the first round of the $50,000 Virginia Slims-sponsored Ginny tournament at the Raintree Swim and Racquet Club in Richmond, Va., with Nelson finally prevailing, 6-4, 7-6 (11).

 

The 6-hour-31-minute marathon was itself the longest match in tennis history for nearly 20 years and remains the longest match completed on a single day. (In the 2004 French Open, Fabrice Santoro defeated Arnaud Clément in 6:33. That match, however, was suspended by darkness in the fifth set, so the final 1:55 was played the next day.)

Both Nelson and Hepner seem vaguely embarrassed that their names are in the record books.

“Even now, just thinking about it, my stomach is starting to hurt,” Hepner said. “I had a lot going on in my personal life at that time and I was trying to turn my career around and it was getting tougher to do. But I didn’t stay out there for six hours to get attention; I just wanted to win that match badly.”

 

Hepner, who was then 25, retired from the sport soon after and now lives in Redwood City, Calif. She is a teacher, property manager and competitive chess player, but only rarely plays tennis and no longer has any connections to the professional tennis world.

Nelson, who goes by Nelson-Dunbar after marrying, lives in Medina, Ohio, and remains involved in the sport. Her husband, Keith Dunbar, was a professional tennis coach and their 13-year-old son, Jacob, was the top-ranked player in the country in the 12-and-under division last year. Their son Ethan, 17, wants to play Division I tennis in college next year, and their 10-year-old daughter, Emily, has just begun playing.

The rally that put Nelson-Dunbar and Hepner in the record books came at set point for Hepner, who was ahead, 11-10, in the second-set tie breaker, which lasted 1:47 on its own.

“There was tons of lobbing,” Nelson-Dunbar said. “I would try to come in and she’d lob me again.”

After winning the point, Nelson-Dunbar collapsed with cramps in her legs. The chair umpire, who apparently maintained consciousness throughout the 643-stroke point, actually called a time-violation warning, but Nelson-Dunbar pulled it together and got back to the baseline to begin the next point.

How does a point go on for 29 minutes before one player or the other hits a winner or makes a mistake?

“We were both pretty much standing on the baseline lobbing,” Nelson-Dunbar said.

Hepner recalled, “I was just really concentrating and was very consistent.”

Two points later, Nelson-Dunbar closed out the match and apologized to the lines officials for its length.

 

Source - nytimes.com

 

 

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Sećam se ovoga sa starog foruma, nije mi bilo jasno ni tada a nije ni sada. Sve da su obe igrale balone pola sata, i na treningu kad se prebacuješ neko će pogrešiti mnogo brže, a kamoli u takmičarskom meču. Da ne pominjem trajanje TB-a i celog meča :smiley5:

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  • 2 weeks later...

OLDEST YEAR-END No. 1 (1877-2020)

* ATP, ITF, pro, amateur, undispute & co-reward


  Bill Tilden        (38) 1931.     Spencer Gore        (27) 1877.
  William Larned     (38) 1910.     John Newcombe       (27) 1971.
  Herbert Lawford    (36) 1887.     Don Budge           (27) 1942.
  Ken Rosewall       (36) 1970.     Ilie Nastase        (27) 1973.
  Norman Brookes     (34) 1911.     Pete Sampras        (27) 1998.
  Arthur Gore        (33) 1901.     Joshua Pim          (26) 1895.
  Novak Djokovic     (33) 2020.     Ellsworth Vines     (26) 1937.
  Rafael Nadal       (33) 2019.     Willoughby Hamilton (26) 1890.
  Pancho Gonzales    (32) 1960.     Stan Smith          (26) 1972.
  Fred Perry         (32) 1941.     Stefan Edberg       (25) 1991.
  Arthur Ashe        (32) 1975.     John McEnroe        (25) 1984.
  Jack Kramer        (32) 1953.     Jack Crawford       (25) 1933.
  Rod Laver          (32) 1970.     Guillermo Vilas     (25) 1977.
  Ernest Renshaw     (31) 1892.     Maurice McLoughlin  (24) 1914.
  John Hartley       (31) 1880.     Wilfred Baddeley    (24) 1896.
  Pancho Segura      (31) 1952.     Ernest Lewis        (24) 1891.
  Laurence Doherty   (31) 1906.     Bjorn Borg          (24) 1980.
  Ivan Lendl         (30) 1990.     Rene Lacoste        (24) 1927.
  Jimmy Connors      (30) 1982.     Mats Wilander       (24) 1988.
  Reginald Doherty   (30) 1902.     Gustavo Kuerten     (24) 2000.
  Anthony Wilding    (30) 1913.     Robert Wrenn        (24) 1897.
  Wilberforce Eaves  (30) 1897.     Gerald Patterson    (24) 1919.
  Bobby Riggs        (29) 1947.     Frank Hadow         (23) 1878.
  Andre Agassi       (29) 1999.     Malcolm Whitman     (23) 1900.
  Andy Murray        (29) 2016.     Jim Courier         (22) 1992.
  Henri Cochet       (29) 1930.     Boris Becker        (22) 1989.
  William Renshaw    (28) 1889.     Lleyton Hewitt      (21) 2002.
  Roger Federer      (28) 2009.     Andy Roddick        (21) 2003.
  Bill Johnston      (28) 1922.

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zbog "politicke korektnosti" ova godina jos nije boldovana ali to vise i nije toliko bitno... (ITF u decembru proglasava laureate)

ne-lose drustvance, mora se priznati

 

 

YEAR-END RANKINGS      NUMBER OF TIMES RANKED AS No. 1

 

8 years  Pancho Gonzales   1952, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960.
7 years  William Renshaw    1881, 1882, 1883, 1884, 1885, 1886, 1889.
              Bill Tilden               1920, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1931.
              Rod Laver              1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970.
              Novak Djokovic      2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2020.
6 years  Reginald Doherty   1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902.
             Jack Kramer            1947, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1953.
             Ken Rosewall          1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1970.
             Jimmy Connors       1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1982.
             Pete Sampras         1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998.
5 years Joshua Pim             1890, 1891, 1893, 1894, 1895.
             William Larned         1901, 1902, 1908, 1909, 1910.
             Laurence Doherty   1902, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906.
             Fred Perry               1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1941.
             Don Budge              1937, 1938, 1939, 1940, 1942.
             Ivan Lendl               1985, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990.
             Roger Federer        2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009.
             Rafael Nadal            2008, 2010, 2013, 2017, 2019.
   .....  ......

* In bold is shown an undisputed number one player for the year (without another player regarded as co-number one)

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Očigledno je čudno neko računanje jer imaju i undisputed i co-number one, izgleda da su nešto prilagođavali da mogu da preračunavaju i ove iz pre-open ere. Ne znam koliko smisla uopšte ima ubacivati 19. vek a i početak 20. Svakako ovo nije neka zvanična lista.

 

Ali Pančo Gonzales :18:

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On 10/28/2020 at 10:57 PM, stray_cat said:

Zamislite, možda, na kraju 2021., Noksa pored Panča Gonzalesa, 😁...

 

Tilden i Gonzales su najdominantnije teniske figure pre Open ere, najvise zahvaljujuci cinjenici da se radi o dvojici najvecih servera u istoriji igre.

e sad, Novak je sve samo ne servbot ...
mozemo pretpostaviti sta bi za ljetopise i almanahe belog sporta znacila jos ta 1 godina na tronu 😁

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Medju prvih 5 na kraju godine:

Roger Federer  15
Rafael Nadal  14 (bice 15 na kraju 2020)
Jimmy Connors 14
Novak Djokovic  12 (bice 13 na kraju 2020)
Ivan Lendl  11
Pete Sampras  10

Da li ce Rodzer dodati jos jednu sezonu i tako popraviti rekord  zavisi od Zvereva i Medvedeva. 

Edited by Milica
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