A round up of sorts of a very gloomy tournament Or When Good Tournaments Go bad
It probably seems quite fitting that a bizarre week of elite tennis came to a bizarre end on Sunday, when Roger Federer in all his cardigan-ed glory walked onto court to announce his withdrawal from the final.
To audible gasps he explained he had tried everything to be ready for the final against the ‘exhausted’ Djokovic, but that he would not be able to compete. The greyness of the woolen top seemed to match the general mood around this tournament this week. We can’t blame the weather – it’s November in the UK, for heaven’s sake!
However the crowd were informed they would be treated to a Pro-set exhibition between Andy Murray and Novak Djokovic, followed by the whippersnapper partnering John McEnroe in a doubles against Tim Henman and Pat Cash, amidst rumours of a fall-out in the Swiss camp aired by McEnroe in an ESPN interview.
The good folks at the ATP provided us with their interview transcripts after Federer spoke to them following his announcement to the paying punters.
“I can’t compete at this level with Novak. In finals like this, it would be too risky at my age to do this right now. I hope you understand.”
The gasps changed to sympathetic applause, and ironically to shouts, cheers and excited jumping up and down when they found out who the support act would be.
The simple fact is this tournament has struggled for a variety of reasons. We could reasonably expect that the best eight players in the ATP could put on a competitive show, but as Marin Cilic pointed out, they would not expect to play top guys in the opening rounds of tournaments so it was difficult to adjust to that kind of format.
The round robin also seems to throw people with the whole “you lost but get another chance” mentality. Which also seemed to throw people for a loop. Will the tournament stay here? Federer wanted it to, Djokovic feels it needs to move around and take tennis to a larger audience, and now with the emergence of Kei Nishikori as a contender for the big prizes, surely there is an argument for the World Tour Finals to move back and perhaps necessitate a change to the schedules to switch the Asian and the European swing around.
Either way, this year is best swept under the rain clouds that hung over the giant dome of the O2, until we all traipse back here to do it again!
Topics: ATP Finals, Barclays Championships, global chick, Tennis, World Tour Finals
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