- A serious tennis fan is one that watches tennis outside of the four Grand Slams.
- A serious tennis fan is one who'll go to great lengths to find that stream of a first round match between the #49 and the #173 ranked players. At 2am in the morning.
- A serious tennis fan will be able to identify that the two players practicing on the court before him are Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Flavia Pennetta. He will also be able to spell their names.
- A serious tennis fan knows the difference between David Ferrer and Juan Carlos Ferrero.
- A serious tennis fan will regularly moan about the lack of coverage of doubles matches.
- A serious tennis fan will be able to name all the women who won a Grand Slam in 2011. He'll also recognize them if he were to see them on the street.
- A serious tennis fan has more than one favourite player to cheer for. Including players outside the top5, 10, 50 or 100.
- A serious tennis fan might *gasp* follow matches on the Challenger circuit, and even *double gasp* on the Futures level.
- A serious tennis fan will be able to name at least 5 chair umpires.
- A serious tennis fan is one who spent a few hours staring at a black little window called "livescores", while silently cursing to himself, and occasionally shouting out words in different languages.
Friday, 20 April 2012
"Serious Tennis Fan" - A Profile
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Journalists
Saturday, 7 April 2012
Davis Cup: Israel-Portugal, April 2012 - Day 1
The Davis Cup weekend is upon us once again. This time, it unfortunately fell on the same day of Passover Eve - which is a big holiday in Israel, so the matches began very early (so that everyone could get home before the festivities began).
Since the public traffic stopped quite early, I couldn't stay for the whole day, but it was quite an enjoyable affair nonetheless. The crowd was cheerful but civil, and the main attraction was the professional band that sat in the stands and played better songs than the DJ. And by that I mean "Ai Se Eu Te Pego" and "Macarena".
The first match was pretty uneventful, with the Israeli No. 1 Dudi Sela clinching the first point, 6-3 6-4 6-4 versus Frederico Gil. Gil was actually the higher ranked Portuguese player in the latest rankings, but since the "first" and "second" players of each country are determined by older rankings, the first day had the No.1s play each other.
The second match pitched local Davis Cup hero Amir Weintraub against Rui Machado, ranked some 100 places higher. Despite some troubles to serve out the match (he said he was already thinking about a win), Weintraub, once again, did not disappoint on home soil, and won the match 5-7 6-3 6-1 7-5 to give Israel a 2-0 lead after the first day.
In a few minutes, the doubles match will begin, with Israelis Ram and Erlich being the heavy favourites against any possible combination by Portugal. I will be watching it from home, but will be cheering hard nonetheless!
More photos of all players can be found on my facebook page.
Since the public traffic stopped quite early, I couldn't stay for the whole day, but it was quite an enjoyable affair nonetheless. The crowd was cheerful but civil, and the main attraction was the professional band that sat in the stands and played better songs than the DJ. And by that I mean "Ai Se Eu Te Pego" and "Macarena".
Photo: Yaniv Gonen |
Dudi Sela |
Rui Machado |
More photos of all players can be found on my facebook page.
[Translated] Interview with Sergiy Stakhovsky: Big earnings of tennis players are an illusion
The Ukrainian website LB.ua published a very interesting interview with Sergiy Stakhovsky this week. He talks about a lot of current issues on the ATP Tour - mainly prize money, and the supposed Federer-Nadal rift, but also match fixing, for example. Quotes from the interview generated a lot of talk on twitter, so I bring here the full translation of the interview to English.
Disclaimer #1: I do not own any rights to this material, the interview was done by the sports journalist of LB.ua, Evgeny Shvetz. The photos are taken from his article. No copyright infringement is intended here.
Disclaimer #2: English is not my first language. I tried to translate as closely to the origin as I could, any mistakes are mine, and so are any irregularities in language.
Thanks to @mikomonstr for the invaluable help!
******************************************************
Sergiy, don’t you think that the
tour – well, didn’t grow old, but definitely aged?
Disclaimer #1: I do not own any rights to this material, the interview was done by the sports journalist of LB.ua, Evgeny Shvetz. The photos are taken from his article. No copyright infringement is intended here.
Disclaimer #2: English is not my first language. I tried to translate as closely to the origin as I could, any mistakes are mine, and so are any irregularities in language.
Thanks to @mikomonstr for the invaluable help!
******************************************************
Sergiy Stakhovsky: Big earnings of tennis players are
an illusion
The
most successful Ukrainian tennis player of the 21st century is Sergiy
Stakhovsky – the grandson of the former director of the Korolev Science and Production
Organization. Of course, you can’t call his tennis “cosmic”.
But he plays like a person who grew up in an intellectual family in Kiev –
gracefully, thoughtfully, elegantly. LB.ua talked to Stakhovsky about the crazy
earnings in tennis and similarly crazy spendings, about Federer, who’s like a Swiss
watch, about slow courts and greedy tournaments.
Photo: segodnya.ua |
Not that long ago, they published a
statistic - the average age of the top-100 players is 27-years-old. Even though
in 2004 it was around 23 years. It’s the competition. It’s not enough to have
certain characteristics, you need the experience, too.
But tennis became more athletic, and
theoretically, the older players shouldn’t be able to cope with the tour’s
tempo. The same for 33-year-old Stepanek, for instance, whom you already admired
four years ago.
In fact, tennis became smarter. And
the higher-ranked players can afford themselves everything they need – a coach,
a fitness trainer or a physiotherapist. However, the majority of players, who are
just trying to make the top-100, don’t have that possibility.
And which kind of a player are you?
I’m among those who make their own profit,
self-supporting, and in recent years have been able to keep a positive balance.
Of course, after all - it’s problematic
to keep a negative balance.
You think? I don’t think it is.
So, Davydenko was right when he complained that the prize money for playing in the first round of Indian Wells doesn’t compensate for the expenses of travel and accommodation?
They don’t pay off at all. I’m in the
negative after the IW and Miami Masters. About five thousand [Note: probably
$US, but it’s not definite – Anna]. And that’s while reaching the second round
in Indian Wells.
But what about the rumors that in the USA, a tennis
player can get a full range of services for a small amount of money?
It works in specific places. In the
same Indian Wells, there are simply no cheap hotels. The cheapest room cost
$144 per day. And the tax on the prize money – 38%. You get there at least four
days before the tournament starts. You’re in the USA for at least three and a half
weeks. You pay your coach – weekly salary, food, hotel. If you have two –
another salary, food. And the flights? From Europe to the USA, inside the
country, and back – that’s at least 2,000 Euros per person. My net gain there
was about $11,000.
Is your coach full-time?
Yes. And I had a fitness trainer
with me. In addition, my management company has a physiotherapist, who travels
with several players at the same time.
Are you feeling comfortable at the
age of 26, being ranked 72nd?
My career is built so that I go a
little bit forward – and then backward, again forward, and again backward.
One step forward, two – backward?
No, rather: three forward – two backward.
For me it’s an everyday story. So I don’t really despair. There’s a lot that I
haven’t said in this sport, and a lot is still ahead of me, so I don’t think
about this negligible fall.
But when you’re 22, of course, it’s
easier to get through the flights, the travel. Physically, right now – I feel
the same after matches, but the flights and adaption are harder.
Didn’t you develop fear of flying
during that time?
No, but I started to fear the
landing.
A while ago Mardy Fish complained
that there are practically no tournaments left with fast courts.
He told the truth – there aren’t.
This year, the fastest courts were in Dubai. We came to Indian Wells with the
hope that the courts will be at least the same as last year. But they laid a
new surface, and they became super-slow with high bounce. In Miami it’s the
same, and additionally the balls fluff out more because of the humidity.
Why do the organizers do that?
Actually, the courts used to be too
fast, and they decided to slow it down to make the game more colorful. But they
overdid it. And nobody really liked the final in Australia, which lasted 6
hours.
Well, for the first time it will do.
But if this becomes a tendency,
people won’t understand. So you need either to change the structure of scoring,
or to make the courts faster. Because – well, no way. The fastest court was in
Bercy. But last year it was three times
slower than before. And now, even in Wimbledon the grass grows the wrong way –
to slow down the game.
How rude. Now I understand why
Federer started constantly losing there.
Five to seven years ago, the players
carved out a path to the net, and the grass was trampled there. Now the bald
parts are at the baseline because the speed and the bounce let you play a
baseline game.
And many players – Spaniards, other
clay-courters – are fine with that. It evens out the chances. Maybe that’s why
the tour became older: the game is more compact, everyone plays on everything.
A conflict between Federer and Nadal…
Federer plays a less physical
tennis. Someone has more God-given talent; someone has more of something else.
For me, Nadal is more talented in terms of discipline and hard work. Thanks to
that he became the No.1 player at the time. But Federer – that’s a tennis
player from God, a talent which found “his own” sports field. One reached success
through hard work; the other achieved more, while spending less efforts.
But Nadal is a former craftsman, who became a Master by learning a lot from the same Federer.
Everyone learns from Federer. In
2006-2008, Roger moved tennis in an absolutely different direction. He played
so quickly that everyone followed him. But then the slowing down of courts
started.
I almost fell asleep during the
second set of the match between Djokovic and Murray in Miami…
That’s an example of systematic
percentage tennis – a game without errors. Djokovic, in fact, is playing like a
wall.
What, squash?
No. He plays very close to the
baseline, he moves excellently, he passes well, and he doesn’t err. When I played
him in Dubai, he didn’t give me a crazy rhythm or tempo, or a huge variability.
Yes, he can shorten play.
Maybe, but he does it less
frequently. He becomes more primitive.
He just does on the court whatever
allows him to win. You won’t earn more by playing a beautiful game.
But the Sheikhs can invite you to
Dubai. They’ll say: “Dude, watching your game – is just a pleasure”.
Nothing like that.
Federer came to Dubai, where he
originally didn’t intend to play, just like that?!
Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, Murray –
that’s simply another world. What those four earn – isn’t comparable to all the
rest. We simply don’t exist in comparison with them.
Players who aren’t inside the
top-20, don’t have any money, except for the prize money. Contracts, clothes –
that’s all for the top-5 or top-10 players. I caught that period when all the
big brands understood that they only need to pay the top players, all the rest
are for free.
About Nadal’s offense with Federer…
He wasn’t offended by Federer,
exactly. He was disappointed that his ideas – useful for the tour, as he thinks
– aren’t heard. It concerns the 2-year ranking, among others. But if you start
that, then every player needs to vote, and that’s not entirely correct. Look:
in today’s pay for tennis players’ efforts, I personally support this new
change. It protects my ranking. The earnings of most players are, really,
laughable.
But when you look at the numbers:
you win one match – you earn enough for a car.
By the numbers, I’m a millionaire. But
I already told you about my expenses.
And if you don’t fly business-class,
but lowcost?
Lowcost to Dubai?! This year I’ve
been flying economy. From London to Dubai and back I flew for 1200 Euros. And
we can’t order tickets in advance. In addition, you can’t give up the cheap
tickets. Often, we buy the tickets on the day of departure. And those are
completely different numbers.
In a year, I spend 170 thousand
Euros on the “game expenses” category. Last year, only the tickets cost me 85
thousand. I earned $428 thousand. Take out 30%, on average, for taxes.
But you won’t be spoilt by the
money.
Yes, but I’m giving my life to this
sport. I miss studies, friends, I have a family. Let’s say, I retire at 32
years. Say even that I earn a net of 500 thousand Euros by that time. But I
need to live off this money for the rest of my life. And the name “Stakhovsky”
won’t work for me in this country, that’s for sure.
Going back to Nadal: the Grand Slam
tournaments, as we know, pay the players an abnormally low percent of their
earnings. For instance, the US Open spends 4-6% of their profit on prize money.
The ATP tournaments – around 30%. Since 2004, the prizes in the big tournaments
rose less than the inflation.
You lose the reason to enter the
top-100. If you travel with a coach – you’ll be in a small “plus”, $20-30
thousand per year. And those are the 100 best people in this sport all over the
world. If you take the 100th soccer player, the 100th
golfer, any sport that’s on TV – their salaries will be immeasurably greater.
Even the 100th soccer player in Ukraine earns more.
The Slams are holding everything, and if they start sharing
their profits, it’ll make sense to make it to the top-100. Yes, it will look
vulgar if a player who lost in the first round, makes $50-100 thousand, but how
much he invested in himself to even play there. To fly to Australia – that’s
already a feat. It’s 24 hours. I’m not risking flying economy there, it’s just unrealistic.
If the Slams make concessions, I’m
against a 2-year ranking. Because many players will need two years to make it
in the top-100. And now people are really working on it. Now, the 70- or the
200-ranked player – are the same.
My financial situation is also not
that smooth. Can you tell me on which of your matches I should bet a “Total
unders”?
(Laughing hysterically) What’s a “Total
unders”? Just so I’d understand. But of course, I heard talks about tennis
players involved in betting.
Is this ugly, or does everyone
decide for himself?
Each person is his own decision-maker,
but I consider it ugly. But there are exceptions. I don’t think it’s ugly for
players who are almost top-100, and one such match guarantees them further
growth in tennis. But if the bets, and not the tennis, are the main income
source, then of course, I don’t approve.
Another nuance: now, if you arrive
at a tournament without a coach, they think you’re there to throw the match.
And the trainers’ salaries, I’ll tell you, got higher lately. Some “extremists”
even travel with their own dieticians.
Your brother Leonard, whom some
people consider a bigger talent than you, “tied” with active performances. Did
you not have enough means to sponsor his professional growth?
He started college in the USA. And
he can start playing after college, just like Isner, like Blake, like Benjamin
Becker. And I’m not his father – I’m his brother. I always supported him. But
there are our parents, who decided that it’ll be better. And by the way, if I
had kids now, I’d never send them to play tennis. Because to go through what I
went… And I, to tell the truth, got lucky – if not for Zagreb (the first ATP
tournament won by Sergiy – LB.ua) – I wouldn’t exist. I’d waste ten years of my
life on it, without any return. Except moral.
If I didn’t make it in the top-100 –
what next? I mean, I become a tennis instructor, and what life is that? To be
on court from 8 till 8 for the rest of my life, to play with amateurs? Yes, it
can be financially rewarding, but it’s a hell of a work.
In fact, Leonard chose that path for
himself. It’s a good university, it’s a good faculty – he’ll be an oil
engineer, there’s a good tennis school there – Roddick’s brother is a coach
there.
And he needs to spend a certain
amount of hours in training. They’ll follow it. If he doesn’t train – they take
away his privilege for free tuition. In the US, the sports budgets of colleges
are higher than the analogous budget for our whole country. And for them, good sports
results of their graduates – are a question of prestige.
Alexandr Dolgopolov shows some crazy
tennis this year.
He always played like that. When
playing him, a big part of the result doesn’t depend on you. Either yes or no –
but it’ll depend only on him. Even players in the top-10 who go and play Sasha
can’t be sure that the match depends on them. Well, maybe except for Federer.
Dolgopolov plays “two strikes”. If the rally isn’t over by that time, the opponent
gets a chance.
Do you often communicate with
Federer?
I do it constantly.
And what’s he like?
He’s a good person, but too neutral
for my taste. He’s too Swiss. He wants to keep out of any bad stories too much.
When players want to change something, he looks at it too passively, because it
can harm his image.
I respect Nadal more in that
context, because he openly supports the players’ interests.
So why won’t the players oust Federer
from his role as president of the players’ council?
Federer says the same, just not in
the presence of all the other players. He doesn’t want to speak publicly about
certain things. Because if suddenly there’s a scandal with the boycott of Grand
Slams by players, it can be connected to his name.
In fact, Nadal didn’t leave because
of Federer, and the players’ council, for the most part, doesn’t decide
anything. It’s a consulting body. But there are three people who represent the
players in the ATP. And Rafa thought that they didn’t defend the players’
interests in the extent that they should. And about certain things, I’m
prepared to agree with him.
You have an interesting manner of
play.
I try to invent things, but
sometimes I go overboard. I need to keep a check on myself, not overdo the
imagination.
Isn’t it tough to return to the
Ukraine after…
Actually, it’s easy. I love Ukraine,
I was born in Kiev – it’s my city. I come back here happily, because here are
my friends, acquaintances. It’s more difficult to perceive everything that’s
going on in this country, yes…
Fast facts by LB.ua
Sergiy Stakhovsky – an Ukrainian
tennis player, winner of four ATP singles titles (didn’t lose a single final).
Born: January 6, 1986, in Kiev
Ranking: 72 (Best – 31)
Career prize money: $2.316 million
Matches: 178 ATP-level matches (W-L 86-92)
Family status: Married Russian Anfisa
Bulgakova in 2011, the couple lives in London.
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