Dear United States Tennis Association,
My name is Sean, and I am a tennis fan. My father played in college and taught me how to play when I was young. I was a member of my high school tennis team, and although I have not touched my tennis racket in nearly a year, I enjoy following and watching the Grand Slam events.
Naturally, I watched Sunday’s Wimbledon final between Roger Federer and Andy Roddick. With the match tied at 6-6 in the fifth set, I thought to myself, I would love to see a tiebreaker right now. As the match continued with Roddick and Federer tied at 8-8, 11-11, and 14-14, I thought, this is terrible and lacking drama; I would much rather have seen the match end 30-60 minutes ago via a tiebreaker.
I hope that you can sense my sarcasm in the last paragraph. If the Federer-Roddick match took place at the US Open, it would have ended with a fifth set tiebreaker. The US Open is the only Grand Slam tournament with this format. I mentioned my displeasure with the fifth set tiebreaker before, but maybe you weren’t reading my blog at that time. Based on Sunday’s exciting Wimbledon final, I think it’s time to reconsider how US Open matches conclude. Get rid of the fifth set tiebreaker (or third set on the women’s side) and follow the lead of your Grand Slam compatriots!
Sincerely,
Sean
P.S. The semi-final match between Elena Dementieva and Serena Williams that ended with an 8-6 final set was also lousy!
Monday, July 06, 2009
Message to the USTA (Take 2)
Posted by Sean at 10:13 AM
Labels: Andy Roddick, Elena Dementieva, Roger Federer, Serena Williams, USTA, Wimbledon
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1 comment:
You are preaching to the choir, bro. I wholeheartedly agree and wonder when the USTA will pull their heads out of the asses and get with the program.
Excellent post.
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