Tuesday, July 15, 2025
Tennis Connected
  • Home
  • News
  • Newsletter
  • Tennis Tickets
  • Live Scores
  • Rankings
    • ATP Rankings
    • WTA Rankings
  • Podcast
  • Gear Reviews
  • Partners
    • Tennis Warehouse
    • Tennis Warehouse Europe
    • Tennis TV
    • ESPN+
    • P1 Travel
  • Tennis Shop
    • NikeCourt Men’s
    • NikeCourt Women’s
    • Adidas Men’s
    • Adidas Women’s
    • Fila Men’s
    • Fila Women’s
    • Babolat Racquets
    • Wilson Racquets
    • HEAD Racquets
    • Yonex Racquets
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Newsletter
  • Tennis Tickets
  • Live Scores
  • Rankings
    • ATP Rankings
    • WTA Rankings
  • Podcast
  • Gear Reviews
  • Partners
    • Tennis Warehouse
    • Tennis Warehouse Europe
    • Tennis TV
    • ESPN+
    • P1 Travel
  • Tennis Shop
    • NikeCourt Men’s
    • NikeCourt Women’s
    • Adidas Men’s
    • Adidas Women’s
    • Fila Men’s
    • Fila Women’s
    • Babolat Racquets
    • Wilson Racquets
    • HEAD Racquets
    • Yonex Racquets
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Tennis Connected
No Result
View All Result

ADVERTISEMENT
Home Blogs

Tennis Elbow: Two titans lost, but a third one’s still there at the French Open

Charles Blouin-Gascon by Charles Blouin-Gascon
May 30, 2016
in Blogs, Charles Blouin-Gascon, Features
0

Welcome to Tennis Elbow, the column that looks back on the week that was in the world of tennis. This week, Charles Blouin-Gascon recaps the first week of the 2016 French Open and looks ahead at the second.

A week ago, we said that the 2016 French Open seemed destined to become one of the better ones in recent memory.

Well we were wrong on it being “better”: a French Open that lacks the people’s champ in Roger Federer AND the best clay court player ever in Rafael Nadal can’t be “better” in any sort of way.

But we were right on the nose in predicting that it would indeed be memorable.

While we’ve had over a week to process the Swiss’s absence—maybe we’ll just need to start acknowledging that he’s an old man now?—Nadal’s withdrawal stings a whole lot right now.

Nadal has played 12 French Opens
9 titles
72 wins
2 losses (Soderling, Djokovic)
1 withdrawal with left-wrist injuryhttps://t.co/Wb1S4i000A

— Carl Bialik (@CarlBialik) May 27, 2016

Consider that this is the first time in the Spaniard’s career that he withdraws from a Grand Slam event he has entered, and that it comes at the French Open, the tournament he has traditionally owned.

Life comes at you fast, and now’s probably as good a time as any to think about a tennis world where neither Nadal nor Federer is as relevant as they have been.

Let’s see, what else did we get over the first week at Roland Garros?

Hmm, well we know that Milos Raonic, though he was very much still in the running when it was announced (i.e. the Canadian has since lost 2-6, 4-6 and 4-6 against unseeded Albert Ramos-Vinola), will add the great John McEnroe to his coaching staff for the grass season.

'Milos has a great team with Ricardo Piatti and Carlos Moya. I'm going to be a consultant on the grass. I'm excited'. McEnroe (Eurosport)

— DavidLaw (@DavidLawTennis) May 27, 2016

Raonic is probably one of a select few players capable of winning Wimbledon, and his hope has to be that the presence of McEnroe can help make the difference in a tight match.

Oh, there was also tennis played this week in Paris and, as usual at the French Open, it was excellent; perhaps none as crazy as this point between Barbora Strycova and Agnieszka Radwanska.

The most fun point of the year, from Barbora Strycova and Agnieszka Radwanska. #RG16: https://t.co/MOzJshp5ZZ

— Ben Rothenberg (@BenRothenberg) May 27, 2016

As for what lies ahead, all eyes will be on the likely two favourites, Serena Williams and Novak Djokovic.

For the former, this French Open is a chance to fully sink her teeth into this 2016 season, where she still has only one title to her name. She’s won a bunch of matches, as she typically always has, sure, but Serena Williams is known for winning tournaments. Better yet, she’s known for winning major tournaments: of her 70 career titles, a full 30 per cent have occurred at Grand Slams.

Williams very well may add a 22nd major title this week in Paris, as she’s yet to truly be bothered in winning her three first matches in straight sets. She’d take it.

Meanwhile, Djokovic will hope to make history at the end of this week by winning his first French Open title, thereby completing the career Grand Slam. It’s become harder and harder to ever doubt his credentials, but possessing at least one title at each Grand Slam would forever etch his name in tennis lore. If ever there remained doubt whether he belonged alongside Federer’s and Nadal’s names, this win would fix everything—and possibly push him over the top.

Djokovic is odds-on favorite to win the French Open. Murray is a distant second; Wawrinka a really distant third https://t.co/SFAvGs6qyK

— Carl Bialik (@CarlBialik) May 27, 2016

And with the withdrawal of his two chief rivals, Djokovic has as good a chance to win Roland Garros as he ever has.

Since Sept. 2010, Djokovic has won 74 of 78 matches against the guys he could face before the final: https://t.co/cYZ582wTo0

— Carl Bialik (@CarlBialik) May 27, 2016

The folks at FiveThirtyEight believe Djokovic would already two French Opens if not for Nadal. Let’s go get the first one.

Follow Charles Blouin-Gascon on Twitter @RealCBG

Tags: Novak DjokovicRafael NadalRoger FedererRoland GarrosSerena Williams
Previous Post

French Open 2016 Day 10 Preview: Vintage Venus has a new Swiss Miss on her hands

Next Post

French Open 2016 Day 11 Preview: Time for Andy Murray to be the villain

Next Post

French Open 2016 Day 11 Preview: Time for Andy Murray to be the villain

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Ruud ATP Tour

ATP Tour & WTA Tour 2025 Schedule of Play for Wednesday July 16: Los Cabos, Gstaad, Bastad, Hamburg, Iasi

July 15, 2025
Potito Starace Bonuses Casino Swiatek

Wimbledon Conquered: Is the US Open Next for Swiatek?

July 15, 2025
WTA Wilson

Wilson Unveils Ultra v5

July 15, 2025

Get in touch!

Tennis Connected

TennisConnected is where tennis fans from around the world come to view the latest insider news. Hottest tennis fashion trends. Newest product releases and reviews. Engaging Podcasts. Insightful interviews. Enticing articles.

Newsletter

Dont miss out on valuable updates; subscribe to our newsletter today.

Partners

Tennis Warehouse

Tennis Warehouse Europe

Babolat

TopCourt

ESPN+

Tennis TV

P1 Travel

Express VPN

Headlines

ATP Tour & WTA Tour 2025 Schedule of Play for Wednesday July 16: Los Cabos, Gstaad, Bastad, Hamburg, Iasi

Wimbledon Conquered: Is the US Open Next for Swiatek?

Wilson Unveils Ultra v5

Dzumhur Advances in Bastad; Cerundolo Wins in Gstaad

ATP Tour & WTA Tour 2025 Schedule of Play for Tuesday July 15: Los Cabos, Gstaad, Bastad, Hamburg, Iasi

De Jong Advances in Bastad; Majchrzak Wins in Gstaad

  • Home
  • News
  • Fixture Calendar
  • Live Tennis Scores
  • Flash Scores
  • Tennis Travel
  • Tennis News
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Tennis Connected

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Newsletter
  • Tennis Tickets
  • Live Scores
  • Rankings
    • ATP Rankings
    • WTA Rankings
  • Podcast
  • Gear Reviews
  • Partners
    • Tennis Warehouse
    • Tennis Warehouse Europe
    • Tennis TV
    • ESPN+
    • P1 Travel
  • Tennis Shop
    • NikeCourt Men’s
    • NikeCourt Women’s
    • Adidas Men’s
    • Adidas Women’s
    • Fila Men’s
    • Fila Women’s
    • Babolat Racquets
    • Wilson Racquets
    • HEAD Racquets
    • Yonex Racquets
  • Contact

© 2025 Tennis Connected

×