| An American
Ericsson
The fifth tennis grand slam drew huge crowds as usual this year and the
action was definitely worth it. I made my way over the causeway bridge
to Key Biscayne on several occasions and enjoyed hours of intense
competition including a few major upsets.
The Ericsson is very well organized. Tennis reporters from all over
the globe assemble in a modern media center overlooking live action on
center court. While I always enjoy watching and charting matches, it's
almost equally rewarding wandering around the tennis paradise watching
practice sessions with a large smoothie and talking strategy with
players and coaches. I became acquainted with several characters from
the tennis media this year including the colorful Bud Collins. When Bud
arrives on the scene, you know the tournament has finally kicked into
full gear. He's a work of art.
Last year I wrote about the women's finals, so it's only fair in this
age of equality to give the men the attention and credit they deserve.
Let's take a look at Andy Roddick's match with Pete Sampras, and Andre
Agassi versus Jan Michael Gambill in the finals.
A new kid has
arrived, and I believe he will be around for a very long time. His name
is Andy Roddick and he grew up only a few miles from where I was raised
in Boca Raton, Florida. I'll go out on a crazy limb here and predict
that Mr. Roddick achieves the number-one spot in the world within the
next two years. Although he made serious waves as a junior tennis
player, and was #1 on the ITF junior rankings, few projected him to
advance so quickly on the ATP Tour. When I spoke with him a few weeks
prior at the Citrix in Delray Beach, he was very modest in trying to
gain entry to the major tournaments. Playing Pete Sampras at the
Ericsson would be a major opportunity to show his potential to the local
crowds. Let's take a closer look.
Prior to this match, Roddick had defeated Harel Levy and upset
Marcelo Rios. He described himself as feeling very comfortable in this
Florida backyard event. One thing I always notice about Andy is that he
appears to be extremely mature and confident for his age. He has a good
sense of humor and playfulness, and a real take charge attitude which
sets him apart from the others. I didn't even mention his booming 140
mph serve! Since we already know Pete Sampras, nothing more to say here.
The first set was a thrilling back and forth which Andy pulled out in
a tiebreak. Let's pick up the action in the second set. Roddick served
to start and clearly dominated with big service winners to take a 1-0
lead. With Sampras serving 0-1, Roddick kept up the pressure on Mr. Pete
by hitting three great forehand winners down the line to go up 2-0.
Sampras seemed rattled by Andy's raw confidence and Roddick continued
his assault by hitting three powerful service winners to win the next
game at love for a 3-0 lead! Was an upset brewing?
Sampras served well in the next game and won easily to close the gap
to 3-1. Roddick took his game to an even higher level, slamming an Ace
and two service winners to take a 4-1 lead. After winning the first two
points of the game with amazing service returns, Roddick finally showed
some nervousness, missing an easy volley, overhitting a return, and
missing an easy backhand volley to make it 4-2. Re-focusing in a hurry
(an essential mental skill), Andy again won four straight points on his
serve to put Pete on the ropes 5-2. Sampras fought back hard and showed
why his serve has been key for so long, hitting two aces and a service
winner to take the set to 5-3. Roddick would not be denied, however, and
again won four straight points with two big service winners, and an
amazing 7-6, 6-3 victory.
The Men's Finals
This was a great tournament for the red, white and blue. Two home boys
were dueling it out, while Venus Williams would defeat Jennifer
Capriatti in the woman's final. Is this indicative of a major resurgence
of tennis in the United States? Let's keep it going!
In any event, Andre Agassi was playing incredible tennis. He had
rolled over Taylor Dent, David Prinosil, Tommy Haas, Ivan Ljubicic, and
Patrick Rafter to soar to the finals. For his part, Jan Michael Gambill
had continued his winning ways from his Delray Beach title by ousting
Andrew Ilie, Thomas Enqvist, Jonas Bjorkman, Gaston Gaudio, and Lleyton
Hewitt. When I caught up with Gambill prior to his first match, I
advised him to keep hitting that backhand passing shot. He smiled and
said, "you mean that backhand down the line?" He smiled and said he
would. Something more than one shot clicked because he was on a serious
streak before the finals.
The first set was close. Gambill was down 3-1, but raced back to take
a 4-3 lead with that backhand winner and some great serving. Players
held all the way to a first set tiebreaker. Andre hung in there with
several key shots including an incredible backhand volley winner and his
trademark forehand power groundstroke to wrongfoot Gambill, and then a
big serve to grab the first set.
While most people thought this would be a great match, it was only
great for Andre the Giant. Gambill would only win one more game the
entire match! Agassi put on a USTA sponsored clinic for the whole world
to watch. While Gambill's serve went South, Agassi began defining the
word angle with his precisely controlled groundstrokes, and an attitude
that defines killer instinct. The word "zone" also comes to mind. There
was a singleness of purpose and awesome efficiency that rarely occurs in
professional sports.
Agassi, in short, was the Tiger Woods of tennis on this day. He keeps
getting better with age. Perhaps he is getting ready to endorse a new
wine.
I hope you enjoyed this glimpse into the 2001 Ericsson Open. It was
red, white and blue all the way, and perhaps the biggest news was not
Agassi's continued dominence, but the birth of a future champion that
will eventually outshine them all. Go A-Rod! |