I think most of Tiafoe's future will hinge on how well he matures into his body. He's 6'1" and I think around 165 right now. You'd expect maybe a little more growth, but probably not a ton more. If he harnesses the power aspect with consistency then he's got a bright future. The plus of course for players like Tiafoe, Coric, Kyrgios, etc. who are in the late teens, early 20s is within a couple more years there likely will not be a dominant player at the top any more. They will start catching the top tier guys in some scale of decline. So with the young guns improvement + their decline, there could be some big jumps for these young guys. All depends how hard they work and how level headed they can stay. I think Kokkinakis has a chance to be in this mix too.
Once Djokovic and Murray hit 30, they will have to work even harder to maintain success because they are speed and agility guys. They certainly have weapons too, but they are not like Federer who has high level weapons that can off-set a decline in speed and agility with age.
I think most of Tiafoe's future will hinge on how well he matures into his body. He's 6'1" and I think around 165 right now. You'd expect maybe a little more growth, but probably not a ton more. If he harnesses the power aspect with consistency then he's got a bright future. The plus of course for players like Tiafoe, Coric, Kyrgios, etc. who are in the late teens, early 20s is within a couple more years there likely will not be a dominant player at the top any more. They will start catching the top tier guys in some scale of decline. So with the young guns improvement + their decline, there could be some big jumps for these young guys. All depends how hard they work and how level headed they can stay. I think Kokkinakis has a chance to be in this mix too.
Once Djokovic and Murray hit 30, they will have to work even harder to maintain success because they are speed and agility guys. They certainly have weapons too, but they are not like Federer who has high level weapons that can off-set a decline in speed and agility with age.
Good showing for Big Foe, could not finish off Bellucci though. That third set should be a good learning experience. Fought back from a break down, but then blew a break lead.
Good showing for Big Foe, could not finish off Bellucci though. That third set should be a good learning experience. Fought back from a break down, but then blew a break lead.
Not big on Sousa. Tsonga either. I think you have to see some of these bigger name guys play a match first before you see if they care or not. Simon a prime example, pushed to the end by Bedene. I like Querrey this week, but the price is in that icky range where yeah you kinda have to find a parlay partner.
Not big on Sousa. Tsonga either. I think you have to see some of these bigger name guys play a match first before you see if they care or not. Simon a prime example, pushed to the end by Bedene. I like Querrey this week, but the price is in that icky range where yeah you kinda have to find a parlay partner.
This isn't isolated guys. 250 events before a Grand Slam, big name guys don't usually have much to gain. If you bet chalk these weeks, you're going to hate yourself.
This isn't isolated guys. 250 events before a Grand Slam, big name guys don't usually have much to gain. If you bet chalk these weeks, you're going to hate yourself.
I think most of Tiafoe's future will hinge on how well he matures into his body. He's 6'1" and I think around 165 right now. You'd expect maybe a little more growth, but probably not a ton more. If he harnesses the power aspect with consistency then he's got a bright future. The plus of course for players like Tiafoe, Coric, Kyrgios, etc. who are in the late teens, early 20s is within a couple more years there likely will not be a dominant player at the top any more. They will start catching the top tier guys in some scale of decline. So with the young guns improvement + their decline, there could be some big jumps for these young guys. All depends how hard they work and how level headed they can stay. I think Kokkinakis has a chance to be in this mix too.
Once Djokovic and Murray hit 30, they will have to work even harder to maintain success because they are speed and agility guys. They certainly have weapons too, but they are not like Federer who has high level weapons that can off-set a decline in speed and agility with age.
Agree 100%, I think Kyrgios may fall off though. I don't know how passionate he is about Tennis, he's said he loves basketball more than Tennis before and that he was pushed into Tennis at 14.
I think most of Tiafoe's future will hinge on how well he matures into his body. He's 6'1" and I think around 165 right now. You'd expect maybe a little more growth, but probably not a ton more. If he harnesses the power aspect with consistency then he's got a bright future. The plus of course for players like Tiafoe, Coric, Kyrgios, etc. who are in the late teens, early 20s is within a couple more years there likely will not be a dominant player at the top any more. They will start catching the top tier guys in some scale of decline. So with the young guns improvement + their decline, there could be some big jumps for these young guys. All depends how hard they work and how level headed they can stay. I think Kokkinakis has a chance to be in this mix too.
Once Djokovic and Murray hit 30, they will have to work even harder to maintain success because they are speed and agility guys. They certainly have weapons too, but they are not like Federer who has high level weapons that can off-set a decline in speed and agility with age.
Agree 100%, I think Kyrgios may fall off though. I don't know how passionate he is about Tennis, he's said he loves basketball more than Tennis before and that he was pushed into Tennis at 14.
Like all of them, Kyrgios needs the right coach around him. His choice of his next coach will tell you a lot about him I think. If he's somewhat serious, he'll go for someone out of the ordinary and not a yes man.
Like all of them, Kyrgios needs the right coach around him. His choice of his next coach will tell you a lot about him I think. If he's somewhat serious, he'll go for someone out of the ordinary and not a yes man.
Thoughts on any of the following:Janowicz +1.5 setsChung +1.5 setsPliskova -1.5 setsJohnson +1.5 setsAll except Johnson are chalky so i would parlay them down. Thanks
Both Janowicz and Johnson ML are good plays IMO, so +1.5 is great value for both. I just wasn't impressed at all with Tsonga and KA yesterday, and think both aren't completely committed this week. I think Lu-Chung ends in 3 sets and is a compete toss up. Chung had a solid win yesterday over Paire and continues to impress, but Lu still has the slight upper hand to me based off his past success here in NC. BOL on whatever you do though
Thoughts on any of the following:Janowicz +1.5 setsChung +1.5 setsPliskova -1.5 setsJohnson +1.5 setsAll except Johnson are chalky so i would parlay them down. Thanks
Both Janowicz and Johnson ML are good plays IMO, so +1.5 is great value for both. I just wasn't impressed at all with Tsonga and KA yesterday, and think both aren't completely committed this week. I think Lu-Chung ends in 3 sets and is a compete toss up. Chung had a solid win yesterday over Paire and continues to impress, but Lu still has the slight upper hand to me based off his past success here in NC. BOL on whatever you do though
Never trust Janowicz. Not sure about Johnson either. He is good against the one dimensional types like Groth, but Tsonga could pose a different challenge ... but Tsonga could also be light on motivation, who knows.
Never trust Janowicz. Not sure about Johnson either. He is good against the one dimensional types like Groth, but Tsonga could pose a different challenge ... but Tsonga could also be light on motivation, who knows.
Getting him at a nice price, likely aided by the fact that he lost to Chung in that Korean Challenger (where he was considerably better than Chung on 2nd Serve). Not that W-S is a "big stage" tourney, but hoping Chung plays a little tight.
Hope we start the day with a "W". And, if I jinxed this, I won't comment on your thread again.
Getting him at a nice price, likely aided by the fact that he lost to Chung in that Korean Challenger (where he was considerably better than Chung on 2nd Serve). Not that W-S is a "big stage" tourney, but hoping Chung plays a little tight.
Hope we start the day with a "W". And, if I jinxed this, I won't comment on your thread again.
Long list of guys you simple cannot trust, Paire, Dmitrov, Klizan, headline list of paid off ATP black list, of course find them in a big dog spot and watch how hard they get that Plus money.
Long list of guys you simple cannot trust, Paire, Dmitrov, Klizan, headline list of paid off ATP black list, of course find them in a big dog spot and watch how hard they get that Plus money.
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