Venus ousted from French Open
Posted by John Paulsen (05/29/2009 @ 10:41 am)

Venus Williams was upset in the French Open on Friday.
The third-seeded Williams, who reached the 2002 final at Roland Garros, lost to No. 29 Agnes Szavay of Hungary 6-0, 6-4.
The seven-time Grand Slam champion was playing for the third straight day. She lost the first set of her second-round match against Lucie Safarova on Wednesday before play was suspended because of darkness. Williams saved a match point before beating Safarova on Thursday.
She was also stretched to three sets in the first round.
Sounds like fatigue had something to do with it. Bummer.
Blogging the Bloggers: J.R. Smith’s gang signs, Canseco’s MMA debut and more
Posted by John Paulsen (05/26/2009 @ 4:15 pm)
- SPORTS BY BROOKS has an update on Jenn Sterger (pictured). Did you forget who she is? Yeah, me too.
- BLACK SPORTS ONLINE takes J.R. Smith to task for flashing “gang signs” in Game 4.
- CAMEL CLUTCH BLOG has video of Jose Canseco’s first MMA fight. (It didn’t go well.)
- DEADSPIN has the story of an umpire who convinced a catcher to let him call the pitches for Randy Johnson for an entire game.
- BLEACHER REPORT has fashion hits and misses from the French Open.
Posted in: Humor, Mixed Martial Arts, MLB, NBA, Rumors & Gossip, Tennis, Video, Women
Tags: French Open, French Open fashion, J.R. Smith, J.R. Smith gang signs, Jenn Sterger, Jose Canseco, Jose Canseco MMA, MMA, Randy Johnson, Randy Johnson umpire
Is greatness slipping away from Roger Federer?
Posted by Thomas Conroy (09/09/2008 @ 9:10 pm)
The record book will show that Roger Federer won the 2008 U.S. Open Men’s Championship over Andy Murray. But something is missing. His dominance in the sport hasn’t been noticeable this year. Let’s just face it; Roger Federer is not Roger Federer anymore.
Wait a minute, a terrible year? How many players on the men’s tour would take a semifinal appearance at the Australian Open, two finals appearances at the French Open and Wimbledon, and a Grand Slam victory at the U.S. Open, all in the same year?
Is Federer dominating? No. We are not used to seeing him struggle in the early rounds. What use to be a brisk workout for him has now become nervy five-set encounter. Federer’s brilliance ultimately prevails, but never once does he look like he’s in control of the match.
So what has changed in his game? Well, Federer is not setting up balls for the kill shot that usually keeps his opponents’ off-balance. Balls that have rocketed off his racket in the past are now just dribbling over the net as a return or an unimpressive point. Instead of ripping through sets, he is now winning a series of mini-marathons.
The last set of his semi-final match against Novak Djokovic on Saturday was reminiscent of the old Federer. He regained his cross-court backhand that, in years past, would go by his opponent like a shortstop reaching for a line drive off a hitter’s bat.
Maybe Federer won’t return to the #1 ranking, and maybe he’s not a sure thing anymore on the tour. His dominance is slipping. But Federer did remind everyone this weekend at Flushing that he still has a few bullets left in his racket. Was this a return to greatness or just a brief glimpse of the past?
Only time will tell.
Reign Man: Federer beats Murray for 5th straight U.S. Open title
Posted by Thomas Conroy (09/08/2008 @ 9:28 pm)
No matter what was said or written about his recent play, Roger Federer knew he had one more chance to salvage a disappointing season. After missed opportunities in the French Open and Wimbledon finals, Federer easily defeated Andy Murray 6-2, 7-5, 6-2 on Monday evening to win his fifth consecutive U.S. Open Championship.
Murray didn’t feel fatigue contributed to his straight set defeat. Instead, he felt his defense stance behind the baseline was no match for Federer’s offensive game. And the final numbers do not lie about his dominance in every facet of this final. Federer accumulated a 36-16 advantage in winning shots, a 7-2 lead in service breaks, and winning a point on 31 of 44 trips to the net.
Murray had less than 24 hours to prepare for the men’s finals after defeating the World’s #1 player Rafael Nadal in a rain-interrupted semifinal that concluded late Sunday afternoon.
Federer became the first man since Bill Tilden in the 1920’s to win this tournament five times in a row. He also upped his Grand Slam tally to 13, which puts Federer one behind the men’s record holder Pete Sampras.
Nadal defeats Federer in French Open final
Posted by Gerardo Orlando (06/11/2006 @ 11:22 am)
Something happened on Roger Federer’s quest to become the greatest player in tennis history – Rafael Nadal. The French Open has been a roadblock for many great players, and the same thing is happening to Federer. Now he has a true rival to contend with after dominating tennis over the past several years.
This is great for tennis. It was a great match. Now let’s see if Nadal can become a force on other surfaces as well. At twenty years old, he can continue to improve.