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Tennis: Tortoise 2.0: David Nalbandian

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  • Tennis: Tortoise 2.0: David Nalbandian

    Most Valuable Network, MA
    Feb. 24, 2008


    Tortoise 2.0

    By Nate Cunningham | February 23rd, 2008


    The tortoise and the hare metaphor is often applied to David
    Nalbandian, and for good reason, especially in the light of his
    victory lap last year after everyone had long counted him out. But if
    he wants to catch the Grandest, most elusive hare of all, he may need
    to stop pacing himself and just pounce.

    Yesterday I was busy on the computer with a few different things, but
    I had the score-tracker from the ATP website fixed on the
    Nalbandian-Starace match. First set progresses without incident to
    4-4. Then, suddenly, Starace up a break, and serving for the first
    set. I look again: Starace wins the first set. And, seemingly thirty
    seconds later: Starace up a break in the second. The thought `What
    the hell is wrong with Nalbandian?' goes through my head for (a
    conservative estimate) the nine-hundred twenty-seventh time since I
    became a fan back in 2003. I glance at the scoreboard again and
    there's a rain delay. The thought comes: `Maybe D-Nal can use this,
    make a fresh start on the match...' But I don't really believe it.
    Career-long, his M.O. has always been `Show up for the Majors, phone
    in most everything else'.

    I doubt there's another player in tennis history who's been to the
    semis or better of every Slam (and to the quarters routinely), won a
    Masters Cup Title, and finished in the Top Ten for five straight
    years, but has only four titles at small events. He hadn't even won a
    regular season Masters Series tournament, until last fall when he
    rattled off those two in a row out of nowhere, against the best
    competition in the game. If you look closely at his career highlights
    outside the Slams, you realize that two of his titles were at the
    same event, Estoril, another was at Basel-where he would go on to
    make the finals two more times-and that the Madrid Masters title was
    presaged by a run to the finals three years earlier. So most of his
    best lower level results have occured at tournaments he's played well
    at in the past (maybe he gets up for Basel because it's Federer's
    hometown, and he has happy memories of taking him out there in the
    `02 semis).

    Even the solid Slam results aren't quite as simple as that. Nalby
    will go five with Danai Udomchoke in the first round of the
    Australian Open, and then make it all the way to the semis-that's
    routine for him, just his way of finding a rhythm. It's also a good
    explanation for his disproportate success at the Slams vs. all other
    tournaments, because it takes him longer to find that rhythm than any
    other player with such a complete game. But why does it take him
    longer? He's a gorgeously clean ball-striker on both wings, much like
    Andre Agassi, with whom he also shares Armenian blood and a penchant
    for grinding his opponents into dust. Agassi, though, was ready to go
    >From the first point in a match-he was nothing like the whimsical
    competitor Nalbandian is. But I would assume that, during his best
    years, Agassi's practice ethic was on a par with his fitness ethic
    (to say nothing of the estimated 3,000-5,000 balls he hit per day as
    a kid), while it's well-documented that Nalbandian isn't too fond of
    practicing. Neither was Agassi at first, but, as with so many things,
    he grew out of it, while D-Nal-even at the age of 26-still claims he
    doesn't need much practice. But isn't that the simplest, most
    sensible explanation for why he so often has to gradually work his
    way into matches and tournaments-because he doesn't hit enough balls
    outside of competition?

    I'm not going to bother attacking his fitness; it probably doesn't do
    him any favors with the injuries, but I can't remember Nalbandian
    ever looking tired on the court. His powers of endurance would appear
    to be a genetic gift-just something he was born with, like the
    ball-striking and the court instinct. It was amazing to see all of
    that working for him last fall, mostly because the way he was winning
    all those matches just made sense. When Fed's at the top of his game
    it doesn't seem real, or fair. When Nadal's at the top of his, it
    feels like one of the god-favored warriors from The Iliad has just
    stepped onto a tennis court and doesn't understand there's no blood
    at stake. But watching Nalbandian check-mate both of them twice in a
    row-along with a bunch of other top players-was eerie because it felt
    like a rational, natural force was taming the supernatural,. It made
    you think, `Wow, can beating Federer really be so simple?' The
    virtuoso behind whose progress all the history books are being daily
    re-written was schooled by the dusty old text-book whom we all
    assumed he'd rendered obsolete years earlier.

    I hope Nalbandian can build on that run, which really was far more
    impressive in almost every way than his Masters Cup Triumph in `05.
    With the rise of Djokovic and the threat of guys like Tsonga, as well
    as the simple fact of Nalbandian's advancing age, the time for him to
    finally realize his potential may be short; it may be just these next
    two seasons. He didn't look right at the Aussie, and there is an
    injury to possibly blame it on. But there he was just a couple days
    ago, getting worked by a journeyman on home soil. Only, this time he
    was able to turn the match around. Then he blitzed Chela in the next
    round, and finds himself facing yet another fellow Argentine (and, so
    far, another under-achiever), Jose Acasuso, in the final. I'm
    choosing to view that match symbolically: if he wins he's in the
    running this year, if not he's...Ok, that's silly, but it's the kind of
    mind-game we long-suffering Nalbandian fans have to play with
    ourselves in order to go on watching...
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