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Tennis Cruz arrow TENNIS ARTICLES arrow Tennis Articles arrow US Open 2010 - Does Andy Roddick have a clue?
US Open 2010 - Does Andy Roddick have a clue? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Sergio Cruz   
Sep 03, 2010 at 02:37 AM

US Open 2010 - Does Andy Roddick have a clue?


After watching Andy Roddick being given a tennis lesson by Serbian Janko Tipsarevic on controlled aggression and a scoreline of 3-6, 7-5, 6-3, 7-6(4) for the Serbian, I had to find out, why?

What Janko Tipsarevic had to say did not surprise me:

- 'I was playing a little bit more risky (in the third set), but I don't feel that I was rushing too much. I was trying that in the first set, and I played a really good first three games and then I made two mistakes... and there's the break. Of course, I made a couple of unbelievable shots from back of the court, but most of the winners that I made I was stepping in and being close to the line. That's the point on the court where I'm most dangerous.'

On the other hand what Andy Roddick had to say completely floored me!

Andy Roddick;

'On my little cheat sheet that (coach) Larry (Stefanki), and I put together, I wanted to keep my unforced errors down, which I did.

He's going to take big swings at the ball. I wanted to make him do that from stretch positions, maybe on the move; I did that. I wanted to get a very high percentage of returns in play; I did that... He played very high risk and executed for four sets. I kept telling myself, 'This has to have an expiration date on it.' Unfortunately, I needed another set for that.'.

Does Andy Roddick have a clue about what he said?

The 'plan' was to get a high percentage of returns in play and keep unforced errors low and wait for Janko to miss, great!

But what did Andy Roddick forget in the plan?

- His first serve! In one of the fastest tennis courts in the world, Roddick at 6 ft. 2 in. ( 1.88 metres ) tall edged Tipsarevic a 5 ft. 11 in. ( 1.8 metres ) 17 to 16 aces! Roddick should have been less worried with percentages, have thrown caution to the wind and served 40 aces instead! That is why he has a BIG serve, to hit aces!

- The serve and volley! In a super fast court like the one he played on at the US Open, with an opponent totally stretched out on the returns, you DO NOT wait for the ball to bounce! You run straight at it (go after it) and put it away with decisive volleys!

- To get inside the court! A big slow man like Roddick can not afford to stay 6 to 12 feet behind the baseline, especially with someone who is at least 30 percent faster then him! You must hug the line and take control and muscle your opponent from there and inside the line! The plan of, 'keep my unforced errors down' and hope for your opponents mistakes is just wishful thinking not professional tennis!

- To attack/approach down the line or down the middle from difficult positions! When is Roddick going to learn?

- To take on Tipsarevic's serve close to the baseline and second serves completely inside the line and spank them from there! That is what I call pressuring your opponent.

Of course this goes on and on...the volleys...but yes, I made my point and the question remains Does Andy Roddick have a clue?

Sergio Cruz 


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User Comments

Comment by J.B. on 2010-09-13 22:49:19
yes, you make perfect sense to those who understand the importance of court positioning (not many). For years, I have told anybody who would listen that Roddick can strike the ball perfectly on every shot and it won’t matter if he is hitting his ground strokes from 10 feet behind the baseline. The angles into the opponents court are just too small from that far back, and you end up doing way too much running. 
 
 
 
Your comment at the very end of the article says it very well in just a few short words … “hoping for your opponents mistakes is just wishful thinking, not professional tennis!” That is SO true with the modern pro game. You CANNOT win consistently at the highest level anymore by only playing defense. Maybe in 1975 or even as late as 1980, but not any more … not even on clay! If you wait, you lose. 
 
 
 
The physical nature of the modern game demands that you think offensively and play offensively. And it is such a shame to see someone so big and strong like Roddick not taking full advantage of his physical gifts. I thought he did a much better job of court positioning at 2009 Wimbledon. He was taking returns earlier, driving his backhand up the line for winners, and most importantly, he was standing on the baseline during rallies, which takes time away from the opponent. He outplayed everybody at Wimbledon that year, including Roger, and was unlucky not to walk away with the trophy. 
 
 
 
But I was at the Cincinnati Masters two weeks ago watching Roddick vs. Thiemo de Bakker, and once again Andy is playing from 10 feet behind the baseline and struggling to beat someone he should overpower. With a fine coach like Stefanki, I’m not sure why they abandoned the strategy that served them so well at Wimbledon in 2009? 
 

Comment by Sergio Cruz on 2010-09-13 22:51:33
Correct J.B., you are an excellent observer of the game and potentially you would be also a great coach!

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