As a Canadian, I wanted success for him so much. When I went to watch him in Montreal, he seemed as though he was dying of embarrassment or shame in front of his hometown crowd. I think he has such a good heart; maybe he’s not brutal or warriorlike enough. I honestly thought he might be better as a model - he wears clothes beautifully. Tennis is not for everyone. But he and his family have invested in this dream so heavily for years. Commentator Gill Gross has said he wants Felix to show his feelings more when things are not going his way.
Felix… I really like this guy, but I can’t help to feel that there’s a weird stiffness in his ground strokes, especially his BH. A little bit like his idol Tsonga. Neither his regular backhand and slice is good enough to carry him through matches when he is off on his serve, so yeah I think there’re some technicality issues. I don’t think his mental game is particularly bad, but you won’t have the confidence to hit big if he can’t really count on his ground strokes.
Completely agree with the BH statement, it seems like he can't control the rally with that wing, most of the time the BH shot is loopy with nothing on it, placements are too central as well. Have to say that his mental game is pretty shaky, hence the 5-9 in finals. Reaching those finals at his age at the time was impressive but if he wanted to set the tone of being a future "big 3-4", he had to win those finals and not playing catch up now. His results at masters and slams are below par so far. Hope that he can turn it around, he's still pretty young and like his idol Federer, he was kind of a "late bloomer" with his first slam and masters title at 22.
Hi Noah, I am beyond happy to hear you're gonna tackle the WTA tour. As a female player, it is infuriating how little we get in terms of quality content about female players next to the wide range of quality analysis concerning the men's tour. Love your channel either way. 🎉
The WTA died a long time ago. No 5th setters in the slams, stereotyped game (0 female players in the TOP 100 with one handed backhand, no service volley as a variation, only hard hitting and powers get you through GS) and the overall quality is really poor. 20 years ago, n you had Henin, the Williams' sisters, Sharapova, (and it was already not that great compared with the Graff era)... who do you have now?
Hi Noah, I just wanted to tell you that I've been watching your videos for so long because I love tennis almost as much as you, and the videos you make are truly stunning! I haven't been this hooked on a youtube channel for years and the way you structure your videos is incredible. I can't imagine how much research you must do but I hope you know that you make incredible tennis videos and keep doing what you're doing bro, you're amazing! - Take care
I feel like not only Felix's coaching entourage needs a bit of a revamp, but also, perhaps Felix might need an equipment change as well (We saw how Fed has changed from his slightly smaller 95 sq inch Wilson frame, to a 98 sq.inch frame; IT MADE A HUGE DIFFERENCE circa 2017, and then we saw Novak pre-2011 making small, but vital tweaks to his service technique, his pre/post conditioning training and workouts; diets, etc. and look how he is now) I don't think Felix needs to change entirely, with his form, appearance, or technique at all. It's rather more something of hopefully a small change in his forehand/tactical game, that helps him make that HUGE JUMP into winning a grand slam!
Change to an elegant Wilson Pro Stuff wand eh racquet and it will pay dividends from the day #n. That Babolat Aero is such an ugly, clumsy hacker's potato smasher.
Great analysis, which answers a lot of questions I’ve wondered about during Felix’s often-baffling career. As the whole world says, I think first and foremost he needs to change coaches. And, like Canada’s other underperforming tennis stars, he should spend as much time as possible with a sports psychologist. More mental toughness in the difficult moments would help a lot.
The most valid argument and 100% accurate was at @10:50 - he is an ''indoor court player''; the reason however is not mentioned and that is he comes from Canada - especially Montreal - where is very very cold in the winter and everyone practically lives indoors for at least 3-4 months per year. Let's not forget that Toronto - a bit warmer than Montreal - has the largest, longest underground shopping mall in the world for this exact reason; keeping people away from cold during winter and offer them shopping.. Soo FAA's ''preference'' to playing indoors has its roots in the environment he grew up in.
@@nt4081 Now yes. But he grew up in Montreal and the neuro-plasticity establishes before 6yo when the human brain is one single mass (the division in two hemispheres happens at 5-6 soo whatever happens before is forever, no-one and nothing can change it). Hence his psycho-mechanics in the brains are for indoors living. No matter where he is going to live - and train - for the rest of his life.
@@superalpha6026 Shapo is born in Israel and moved to Canada when he was l9 months old. He grew up in Vaughn (Toronto) which, unlike Felix is an area a bit more ''warmer'' than Montreal and people are playing tennis outside very late (even in late November - sometimes December, weather permitted -, and as early as March) in compare that's not possible in Montreal (from October to May everything is indoors). Canada has a very large territory - second largest in the World - and the temperatures varies greatly. I hope this explains a bit.
Superb comment. Thanks for the insight! So rare to read intelligent comments nowadays. It surely is from his environment and to transcend that he would need some herculian efforts, a thing that only those obsessed to succeed have. He is nowhere near obsessed, but rather bland and nice.
Excellent analysis, I can't agree more! You are so right regarding the need to change coach. Magnus Norman would be the perfect coach for Felix. Actually, Felix is experiencing something similar to what Wawrinka went through before working with Norman: lack of aggressivity. Norman said exactly that about Wawrinka's tennis when they started, before the first GS title. FAA must develop a killer shot, he has good pace, but no a single killer and certainly he must work his approach. It is amazing how many times he get passed approaching to the net with his 6 foot 4. By the way, Brad Gilbert would be a complete disaster, personalities would not fit at all and you are right: FAA has problems firing his team he generates too much personal relations there (which is the complete opposite of Raonic who never hesitated to change coaches and always kept separated personal and professional relations). Maybe he needs a better management team more than a psychologist.
Though I agree that Norman is a great coach and could definitely help him, Norman's contributions to Wawrinka's rise were as much (if not more so) mental than they were technical. Stan has always had amazing shots and potential, especially in Switzerland he was incredibly hyped up from an early age. But he was always inconsistent, would play poorly tactically (always going for the insane winner rather than being patient and building a point). Norman seems to have brought out his self confidence, and his consistency. Hence Stan's celebration of always pointing at his temple, showing that he better manages stressful situations.
Could not agree more re: APPROACH SHOTS. It seems so obvious ('I FEEL LIKE I'M TAKING CRAZY PILLS') at times that it begs the question if it is a matter of nerves (i.e. approaching too soon because he is anxious) rather than a true gap in his tactical/mental acuity. Somewhat coincidentally, even the highlights IN THIS VIDEO show a disproportionate amount of points being lost on bad approach shots. He hits a highly conventional ball (lots of topspin, very clean, predictable) and often leaves approach shots in the middle of the court and almost always to the open court where his opponent is already moving to cover. Those type of approaches simply don't work in the modern game. If you consider the fact that, at this level, matches are often decided by a margin of 5-10 points over the entire match, there is a fair argument to be made that his winning percentage could increase significantly if he were to fix this piece of the game (and perhaps his second serve). Those two things + a little more confidence and he might look like a totally different player.
@@lespaul5734 Good point, but I think recovering confidence is key for FAA. He has tennis to do much more, but he needs somebody to give him a better game pattern and confidence. Norman did that with Wawrinka. Stan became a beast in terms of power at both wings generating damage with every shot. I would keep my bet on Norman.
Thank you for yet another well researched video. Keep em coming! I agree on all points. He's had success in team events such as the Davis and Laver cups - both indoor events. I think the team aspect also helps bring out his aggressiveness and confidence. I personally would have fired Toni - what was Felix paying him for?? To be absent in one of the biggest matches of his career? Felix is too nice, too accommodating. That's the Canadian in him.
Their knee was the big factor since is décline he still young and I still believe in him a lot of people put a lot of pressure on him and Toni Nadal was not a great coach i remain optimist believe Felix 23 year old is young that still better than last year
Once you lose your confidence on the ATP tour, it's very difficult to get it back. Lower rating means you are no longer seeded and 1st round matches get much tougher. Maybe best to go to the Challenger tour and regain your confidence.
Two main focuses for him: Work on that kick serve for his second serve Work on his backhand technique, his wrists are way too loose. Hugh Clarke has some great analysis on this
Excellent analysis of the enormous challenges Felix faces. The main point is that Felix - whom I admire immensely as a human being, by the way - is indeed far too loyal to his current - mediocre - coach Frédéric Fontang. It is urgently time to make a decision and join forces with a coach who 1) puts the absolute emphasis on RESOLUTE AGRESSIVE tennis, and not just from the baseline - 2) helps him to firmly improve his second serve. Because the saying "A player is only as good as his second serve" is still more valid than ever in today's tennis world. In that respect, Pete Sampras could be an excellent coach, but the question is, of course, whether he has any ambitions as a coach at all. Either way, the first three months of 2024 have again been disastrous for Felix, and it is high time to make the necessary changes if he wants to make full use of his immense talent. The opposite would be dead wrong. Good luck and above all courage, Felix!
To be more aggressive, not only from the baseline, you need handskills at the net, which Auger Aliassime doesn't have. You can improve it, but it's not something that you teach, you have it or not.
A part from his forehand, which has a very pure technique, his strokes are awful. Poor serve motion (which leads him to make huge amount of unforced errors and low %), golf swing backhand, almost no serve and volley (unlike Alcaraz), no variety, terrible handskills,...
The biggest problem I see with Felix's game is his backhand. I think due to his technique, it looks he can't really hit the ball sharply crosscourt. The ball goes more to the middle than out wide. So he can never drag his opponent out to their backhand side enough to open up anything for his forehand. Also, while his backhand has an extremely heavy topspin, it looks like he's unable to flatten it out. That makes it really hard to hit winners off that wing. Plus, the lack of spin variety allows top players to adjust to his pace and time his balls too well.
When i saw felix on tour 2020,2021 and i found hiis sets always 6-7 or even when he looses he loses in tie break he looses like 6-4 0r 6-7 . I told to my friend auger is good talented upcoming player and in 2022 season he was top 10 player but he lost the way in 2023 . Hope he comes back very soon
don't need to watch the video because the answer is simple, but i will for entertainment purposes. the answer is, not enough development with his backhand (he cannot attack with it, can mainly on send it back cross court), serve becomes one dimensional, and his baseline game as a whole is a little predictable. if you're going to play a predictable gamestyle, you better be damn good at it! i firmly believe he needs to unleash on some shots when he has opportunities instead of always playing the percentage play.
He is capable of going on hot streaks and winning titles. That’s not enough to win a Slam IMO. His one dimensional style is feast or famine. That can only take FAA so far.
@@sookiezboly4502They most assuredly are different, especially on the men's side. Best 3 of 5 is WAY different from 2 of 3, plus the tournaments are two weeks long instead of one. Plus, the pressure is immensely greater and many have folded under the pressure, especially as the tournament goes on
@@TraeBeneck Aside from the prestige, Slam tournament are nothing special. Players have a unreasonable pressure they self infliicted. I say that because from media to players they all say X, W, Z should have this and that numbers of slams whereas they cant for the simple fact that they dont win enough tournament anyways regardless of the prestige of the tournament. They either lack talents or just not that good compare to their rivals Players that win slams usually win a lot of tournament per years anyways so at some point a slam fall into it. Tsitsipas, Tiafoe etc.. barely win 3 tournaments a years and yet we talking about slams as if the pressure, the mental, concentration, etc.. were the reasons they couldnt win. That's why aside from the prestige, slams are not that special. The people winning them win a lot tournies per years or atleast reach finals per years.
@@sookiezboly4502 1) GS are best of 5 matches, that alone changes the physical and mental dimension of a match, because you need to win one more set, which means extra pressure and a more exigent physical fitness. 2) The proof of this is how the greatest are always tougher to beat by the average players in GS compared with other tournaments. Djokovic's win % skyrockets in the GS compared with any other events, as well as most of Nadal and Federer's upsets got caused outside of GS.
Felix has three issues. These are not new issues but he has managed them better in the past. 1. He doesn’t serve consistently big enough and consistently enough for a 6’4” generational athlete(watching he yesterday he can uncork one but he doesn’t do it enough) 2. His forehand is one dimensional. Top players can hit heavy, flatten it out depending on the ball, court position, intent, etc. Felix has one forehand. Heavy and generally deep for modern tennis, leading to misses and also leaving him vulnerable on approach shots. He also is not consistent where he takes the ball out of the air. This leads to all lot of missed balls. 3. Lastly his backhand is unreliable at best. He can’t consistent go down the line to change the pattern and get it back in his forehand. So he gets pinned to that side like a junior. When he brought on Uncle Tony he managed this by clearly running around it more and hitting more forehands which was very effective. The issue is his spacing on his backhand is not good. He has to fix this if he ever wants to improve his consistency on this side…. If you watch he makes too much content with his racquet tip at 6 or 7 o’clock
'Generational athlete' i can name 10 players that are more gifted than he is athletically. -Zverev -Nadal -Alcaraz -Djokovic -De Minaur -Medvedev -Dimitrov -Monfils -Fils -Sinner
As soon as FAA started posting more pictures of him and his GF traveling and visiting cool places around the world together, his tennis career took a nose dive. I think he started focusing more on his personal relationship and life outside of tennis and not continuing to polish his tennis. Nothing wrong morally if that is the case! Just unfortunate for tennis fans.
He is the best when he gets out of the tournament. I don’t watch it. All I need is watch Felix. I just love him. I love the way he play. Good luck to him this year.
Felix won 3 finals in a row last year at the end of the season. He gave it his all. As we know, everything has to fall into place to achieve any success. He has it in him. Tennis is very unpredictable. You never know how a game/match will turn out. And you don't get a second chance. You go all the way or you don't. It's also a career. So at least he's getting somewhere and he's making money to survive on. Good for him. He'll get his chance. We know he can do it. I wish him all the best. (fellow Canadian)
He's overhyped, that's it. People believe he was a big thing but he was never in my textbook. Poor bachand technique, no handskill, mediocre awareness and an average serve for his size.
I’m surprised Felix hasn’t changed his main coach, Fontang, after the results he had in 2023. I know he had injuries in the first half of the year but he never really recovered performance wise, other than winning that one title. I like him but until he changes his coach my expectations for him will be low, but my hopes for the long term remain high as he has a lot of time left in his career to make the necessary improvements.
I'm uncertain if this will reach him, but as avid fans, we're let down. Despite his humility, Felix should consider altering his tactics mid-match, particularly seen against Medvedev. Enhancing his mental strength and seeking guidance, spiritual or otherwise, could bolster his performance. Notably, he seems more confident with his mom in the box, a presence that clearly boosts his game. We remain always hopeful for his success and continue to stand by Felix, looking forward to future triumphs.
I think Francis has won more titles than Felix, but Francis plays great for a match, and then it seems like he intentionally loses. I think he came to Dallas for a few days, but allowed Giron to have this one and play Paul, Sheleton, or Mannariono. I've seen this with him a couple of times. One commentor said, Francis can make a flight home for his promotional appearance on the weekend involving a bubble head in his likeness.
I have been watching Felix since he was a teen sensation. His weaknesses are now glaring. His backhand is passive, defensive and he doesn't drive rhe ball. Coaching and mechanics are his huge problems.
Why do tennis fans think every good young player will be Future 1 & win Grand Slams. Just getting into the Top 20 is more than enough. After that is just Icing & sprinkles on the cake.
Thanks for the sharp analysis- I very much agree with it. He should fire Toni Nadal IMMEDIATELY (which he should have done already after RG), and create a new environment with new coaches in which he feels comfortable. However, I feel that he will have a comeback.
Interesting comment mate. I can see your opinion. But in my opinion, I see parallels in their physical abilities but differences in their playing styles. Physical abilities we can see in African blood in players like Monfils, Tiafoe, Tsonga. All players that ever won a Grand Slam despite their athleticism. The only one that did it but only once is Yannick Noah. One thing we can say of all these players is that they are all amazing human beings. Going back to FAA and Monfils, I feel Monfils ruined his talent by being the sot of the tournament player while being an over defensive player. Being Canadian/ Québécois I am rooting for FAA. But watching him play, he makes me go bunkers with his number of unforced errors and bad tactics or lack of killer instinct. He is such a nice chap. Maybe he needs to learn to become an asshole like Djokovic can be at times. Because of all of this, for sure he needs new coaching. I would go to Mouratoglou or Boris Becker. What is missing is definitely better shot selection in critical moments. I don’t know if this can be teach.
Maybe in terms of results, sure, but as players Monfils was pure flair, whereas FAA is pure grind IMO. He should be an easy top twenty player, would be top ten in any other era but the Men’s tour has soooo much depth at the moment. It’s going to be an uphill battle for him for sure, but the raw material is there.
@@carlkligerman1981true competition is mad man…. Felix is still suffering from juniors expectations he will get it right in a couple of years he will grow out of it and understand reality im sure
@@carlkligerman1981 Mate, Tiafoe and Tsonga are not athletic, FAA isn't specially athletic either. Monfils is, not the other 3. Besides, that's racist as f*ck.
I don't know if it's feasible, but I think Felix should try to get Brad Gilbert at least as a consultant. Whether you like him or not, Gilbert is an expert at evaluating talent and tactics. Great analysis!
@@lelouch3 Yes i agree, it has more to do with his game, but at the end of the day, he lost most of his matches against players that are ranked far below him.
Felix needs to quickly improve his backhand, which he often hits too close to the ball. Also his backhand grip has too much space between the hands, reducing his left hand whip and leverage. Finally, he has to vary more his shots patterns, including more short cross balls. And, as explained in the video, using a reliable second kick serve, while occasionally surprising with a slice, might be a good idea. But he has the talent and the intelligence to improve and reach higher levels, the question is does he have the will and the fire to surpass the others ?
He needs to switch match strategy approaches and become a transitional player. He practices twice the amount of time from the baseline than he does at net yet his volleys are twice as good as his inconsistent spraying groundstrokes. Lol
@@virat5828 You don't reach the main draw of a Grand Slam, let alone three Grand Slam finals without a tremendous amount of talent (and hard work). Regarding personality: Obviously everyone has personality, you just don't like Casper's.
@@virat5828 Yes he did. And again: You said he had 0 talent. If you knew anything about tennis, you would know that anyone with only 1 ATP point has a tremendous amount of talent.
So you don’t know his coach and what he’s doing on a daily basis but you’re saying stuff like « he’s mediocre » ! Félix has been with Fontang and Marx for a while. Obviously looks like they are not so mediocre when you look at his evolution and his achievements as a young player. And reached number 6 in the world also! Not too bad for mediocre.
Felix is on is way back. He is coming back form injuries to his left knee and right shoulder. Since the beginning of 2024, he could hardly reache 10 aces per three sets. In the last tournaments, he got back to his normal service ration, with an avarage of 10 aces per sets and seveval power serves unreturned. And he almost won it againts Rubleve last week. He had three match points that he has not been able to win. FAA needs his big serves to win his game to compensate his high number of unforced errors due to his agressive style. I'm telling you, if he does not get injured again, we will see great tennis from him.
Tony Nadal was what happened he try to make feliz play like Nadal when they don’t have same body size and Felix can actually hit the ball more flat ! Was a disaster 😫
You could say the same about most of the upcoming young stars. They just aren't good enough, that's it. Inevitably the bulk of the professional circuit, though good, simply won't be good enough. It's normal. However, if you want to go into specifics, he's too passive. You should strive to get better and better at high-risk high-reward tennis i.e. Aiming to hit lines at every shot and sadly FAA isn't doing this. A bit like Musetti who, although plays some lovely tennis, all too often doesn't kill points off. I think a good experienced tennis player will aim to win a rally as quickly as possible and not get drawn into 'playing' and that's part of the problem, a lot of the young players tend to play a bit too much. If FAA became more aggressive I reckon his results would improve, provided he maintained his mental resilience - a lot of the younger players are mentally weak, and tennis can be a lonely game, esp when losing. Ironically, they all know how to celebrate, albeit a bit too much, but not so much the digging deep part when things get tough. Going back to FAA, you shouldn't really single him out because as I said there are so many of the young talent (Fritz, Zverev, Tsitsipas, Ruud, Shelton, De Minaur, Musetti, Korda, Bublik, etc etc to name but a few) that are all great to watch but just aren't consistent enough. Sure they might get to a semi-final of a slam then drop out in the first round of the next ATP event. Hopefully, with any luck, he'll get a slam and I wish the same for all the guys on tour but consistency is another animal and I just don't see it in the current crop of young talent, unfortunately.
There is something deeply flawed about our tennis in Canada that this keeps happening to our young stars… Genie, Bianca, Dennis and now Felix all flopping as they age 😢
It’s like he went from 100 to zero. I think something else is the problem. Domestic. Girlfriend. Relationship. Whole thing looked like sudden loss of interest
He's always been like that. Basilashvili is dogsh*t the whole year then shows up with unbelievable hard hitting for 1 or 2 tournaments. He also had problems with the justice.
getting really convoluted here. Too many unforced errors - nothing else matters. FAA cant even reliably keep his back hand slice in play. How do you solve that? No clue.
Thank you for this video. Felix is stubborn he needs to fire Frederick Fontang. Why hang on to this coach? Felix got passed by Alcaraz & Sinner. So Felix second serve is the problem. This is a detailed video. It is disturbing Felix has fallen off. I heard Felix got injured he is a nice young man. His backhand is crap. The Canadian tennis media ignoring Felix decline. He is only 23 years old.
Felix was never as talented as Sinner and Alcaraz to begin with. Both Sinner and Alcaraz have no major technical issues and both have good hanskills (Sinner not as amazing as Alcaraz, but still good enough), FAA has neither of those things.
All of that just describes what happens not the why. I have the answer and it is because he is Canadian. I am not even joking. Canadians cannot handle the pressure properly (too soft)
Players wise up,to the top players games and it’s really only Djokovic that’s the enigma when u play him,he never gives us the same ball twice well rarely, FAA was extremely over hyped his backhand is what I knew would always let him down it’s not a weapon, and the second serve is just not practiced enough that’s extremely evident.
The backhand technique is wonky. Sure flawed technique can work...if the flaw is small enough. His flaw is massive on the backhand side, and I'd call the visible overutilization of the arms in the two-handed backhand as something of a "death move".
@@king0vdarkness No, Aliassime has poor handskill, an inconsistent serve, a golf swing backhand and no tactical awareness. His title win in Basel hardly means anything as the top players are usually exhausted at the end of the season and every TOP 30 players have their moments anyway.
@@king0vdarkness He has tossing issues and his arm motion isn't fluid enough, which means he mistimes a lot his hitting point. Alcaraz also has an arm motion issue you may say, but Alcaraz is Alcaraz.
As a Canadian, I wanted success for him so much. When I went to watch him in Montreal, he seemed as though he was dying of embarrassment or shame in front of his hometown crowd. I think he has such a good heart; maybe he’s not brutal or warriorlike enough. I honestly thought he might be better as a model - he wears clothes beautifully. Tennis is not for everyone. But he and his family have invested in this dream so heavily for years. Commentator Gill Gross has said he wants Felix to show his feelings more when things are not going his way.
disrespectful ass comment 😭😭😂
Felix… I really like this guy, but I can’t help to feel that there’s a weird stiffness in his ground strokes, especially his BH. A little bit like his idol Tsonga. Neither his regular backhand and slice is good enough to carry him through matches when he is off on his serve, so yeah I think there’re some technicality issues.
I don’t think his mental game is particularly bad, but you won’t have the confidence to hit big if he can’t really count on his ground strokes.
Completely agree with the BH statement, it seems like he can't control the rally with that wing, most of the time the BH shot is loopy with nothing on it, placements are too central as well. Have to say that his mental game is pretty shaky, hence the 5-9 in finals. Reaching those finals at his age at the time was impressive but if he wanted to set the tone of being a future "big 3-4", he had to win those finals and not playing catch up now. His results at masters and slams are below par so far. Hope that he can turn it around, he's still pretty young and like his idol Federer, he was kind of a "late bloomer" with his first slam and masters title at 22.
@@Askaa88
He's older than Federer when Federer won Wimbledon.
Hi Noah, I am beyond happy to hear you're gonna tackle the WTA tour. As a female player, it is infuriating how little we get in terms of quality content about female players next to the wide range of quality analysis concerning the men's tour. Love your channel either way. 🎉
The WTA died a long time ago.
No 5th setters in the slams, stereotyped game (0 female players in the TOP 100 with one handed backhand, no service volley as a variation, only hard hitting and powers get you through GS) and the overall quality is really poor.
20 years ago, n you had Henin, the Williams' sisters, Sharapova, (and it was already not that great compared with the Graff era)... who do you have now?
Hi Noah, I just wanted to tell you that I've been watching your videos for so long because I love tennis almost as much as you, and the videos you make are truly stunning! I haven't been this hooked on a youtube channel for years and the way you structure your videos is incredible. I can't imagine how much research you must do but I hope you know that you make incredible tennis videos and keep doing what you're doing bro, you're amazing! - Take care
I feel like not only Felix's coaching entourage needs a bit of a revamp, but also, perhaps Felix might need an equipment change as well (We saw how Fed has changed from his slightly smaller 95 sq inch Wilson frame, to a 98 sq.inch frame; IT MADE A HUGE DIFFERENCE circa 2017, and then we saw Novak pre-2011 making small, but vital tweaks to his service technique, his pre/post conditioning training and workouts; diets, etc. and look how he is now) I don't think Felix needs to change entirely, with his form, appearance, or technique at all. It's rather more something of hopefully a small change in his forehand/tactical game, that helps him make that HUGE JUMP into winning a grand slam!
nah, he needs to change his citizenship. Being Canadian is his major weakness.
Fed went from 90 to 97 sq inch
I think felix was making a change, making his technique a little bit mor roundy which i liked, but lately went back to his cluby backhand
@@odil50 This. And people still think he is not the indisputable, undeniable G.O.A.T. Or rather the true King of the game.
Change to an elegant Wilson Pro Stuff wand eh racquet and it will pay dividends from the day #n. That Babolat Aero is such an ugly, clumsy hacker's potato smasher.
Great analysis, which answers a lot of questions I’ve wondered about during Felix’s often-baffling career. As the whole world says, I think first and foremost he needs to change coaches. And, like Canada’s other underperforming tennis stars, he should spend as much time as possible with a sports psychologist. More mental toughness in the difficult moments would help a lot.
The most valid argument and 100% accurate was at @10:50 - he is an ''indoor court player''; the reason however is not mentioned and that is he comes from Canada - especially Montreal - where is very very cold in the winter and everyone practically lives indoors for at least 3-4 months per year. Let's not forget that Toronto - a bit warmer than Montreal - has the largest, longest underground shopping mall in the world for this exact reason; keeping people away from cold during winter and offer them shopping.. Soo FAA's ''preference'' to playing indoors has its roots in the environment he grew up in.
believe Felix lives in Mone Carlo now, It has nothing to do with Canada's facilities. He is based in Monte Carlo.
@@nt4081 Now yes. But he grew up in Montreal and the neuro-plasticity establishes before 6yo when the human brain is one single mass (the division in two hemispheres happens at 5-6 soo whatever happens before is forever, no-one and nothing can change it). Hence his psycho-mechanics in the brains are for indoors living. No matter where he is going to live - and train - for the rest of his life.
What about Denis Shapovalov? He is also from Canada
@@superalpha6026 Shapo is born in Israel and moved to Canada when he was l9 months old. He grew up in Vaughn (Toronto) which, unlike Felix is an area a bit more ''warmer'' than Montreal and people are playing tennis outside very late (even in late November - sometimes December, weather permitted -, and as early as March) in compare that's not possible in Montreal (from October to May everything is indoors). Canada has a very large territory - second largest in the World - and the temperatures varies greatly. I hope this explains a bit.
Superb comment. Thanks for the insight! So rare to read intelligent comments nowadays. It surely is from his environment and to transcend that he would need some herculian efforts, a thing that only those obsessed to succeed have. He is nowhere near obsessed, but rather bland and nice.
Excellent analysis, I can't agree more! You are so right regarding the need to change coach. Magnus Norman would be the perfect coach for Felix. Actually, Felix is experiencing something similar to what Wawrinka went through before working with Norman: lack of aggressivity. Norman said exactly that about Wawrinka's tennis when they started, before the first GS title. FAA must develop a killer shot, he has good pace, but no a single killer and certainly he must work his approach. It is amazing how many times he get passed approaching to the net with his 6 foot 4. By the way, Brad Gilbert would be a complete disaster, personalities would not fit at all and you are right: FAA has problems firing his team he generates too much personal relations there (which is the complete opposite of Raonic who never hesitated to change coaches and always kept separated personal and professional relations). Maybe he needs a better management team more than a psychologist.
Though I agree that Norman is a great coach and could definitely help him, Norman's contributions to Wawrinka's rise were as much (if not more so) mental than they were technical. Stan has always had amazing shots and potential, especially in Switzerland he was incredibly hyped up from an early age. But he was always inconsistent, would play poorly tactically (always going for the insane winner rather than being patient and building a point). Norman seems to have brought out his self confidence, and his consistency. Hence Stan's celebration of always pointing at his temple, showing that he better manages stressful situations.
A top coach ? Why not Moya, after Nadal's retirement, or Nalbandian, or Vallverdu ?
Could not agree more re: APPROACH SHOTS. It seems so obvious ('I FEEL LIKE I'M TAKING CRAZY PILLS') at times that it begs the question if it is a matter of nerves (i.e. approaching too soon because he is anxious) rather than a true gap in his tactical/mental acuity. Somewhat coincidentally, even the highlights IN THIS VIDEO show a disproportionate amount of points being lost on bad approach shots. He hits a highly conventional ball (lots of topspin, very clean, predictable) and often leaves approach shots in the middle of the court and almost always to the open court where his opponent is already moving to cover. Those type of approaches simply don't work in the modern game. If you consider the fact that, at this level, matches are often decided by a margin of 5-10 points over the entire match, there is a fair argument to be made that his winning percentage could increase significantly if he were to fix this piece of the game (and perhaps his second serve). Those two things + a little more confidence and he might look like a totally different player.
@@benjamins6371 Is so clear that you don't need more evidence to demonstrate the low level of coaching FAA is having.
@@lespaul5734 Good point, but I think recovering confidence is key for FAA. He has tennis to do much more, but he needs somebody to give him a better game pattern and confidence. Norman did that with Wawrinka. Stan became a beast in terms of power at both wings generating damage with every shot. I would keep my bet on Norman.
Thank you for yet another well researched video. Keep em coming!
I agree on all points.
He's had success in team events such as the Davis and Laver cups - both indoor events. I think the team aspect also helps bring out his aggressiveness and confidence.
I personally would have fired Toni - what was Felix paying him for?? To be absent in one of the biggest matches of his career? Felix is too nice, too accommodating. That's the Canadian in him.
He lacks handskills and his technique is flawed, not something easy to fix even for the best coaches.
I saw improvements in Felix’s game at AO. I think he’s on the come up this year. His ranking will go up. I say top 20.
What kind of improvements ?
No improvements as yet in season 2024.
I wish, but the inability to close against a sluggish Rublev- suggests not.
Lol go up and it's top 20? Not even 15?
Noah this is an amazing break down. I love your channel so much, please don’t stop giving us updates
Their knee was the big factor since is décline he still young and I still believe in him a lot of people put a lot of pressure on him and Toni Nadal was not a great coach i remain optimist believe Felix 23 year old is young that still better than last year
Once you lose your confidence on the ATP tour, it's very difficult to get it back. Lower rating means you are no longer seeded and 1st round matches get much tougher. Maybe best to go to the Challenger tour and regain your confidence.
Two main focuses for him:
Work on that kick serve for his second serve
Work on his backhand technique, his wrists are way too loose. Hugh Clarke has some great analysis on this
Excellent analysis of the issues with Felix’s tennis! 👍👍👍👏👏👏
watching this video after he lost 3 match point agaisnt rublev hits different
So sad what happened to Felix !
Idk. Ppl act live success was a guarantee. Felix still top 100 in the world and thats definitely not for granted
Excellent analysis of the enormous challenges Felix faces. The main point is that Felix - whom I admire immensely as a human being, by the way - is indeed far too loyal to his current - mediocre - coach Frédéric Fontang. It is urgently time to make a decision and join forces with a coach who 1) puts the absolute emphasis on RESOLUTE AGRESSIVE tennis, and not just from the baseline - 2) helps him to firmly improve his second serve. Because the saying "A player is only as good as his second serve" is still more valid than ever in today's tennis world. In that respect, Pete Sampras could be an excellent coach, but the question is, of course, whether he has any ambitions as a coach at all. Either way, the first three months of 2024 have again been disastrous for Felix, and it is high time to make the necessary changes if he wants to make full use of his immense talent. The opposite would be dead wrong. Good luck and above all courage, Felix!
To be more aggressive, not only from the baseline, you need handskills at the net, which Auger Aliassime doesn't have.
You can improve it, but it's not something that you teach, you have it or not.
Look at Alcaraz or Nadal or Federer, they always had amazing handskill.
Most elegant player since federer. I love the style of his strokes !
A part from his forehand, which has a very pure technique, his strokes are awful.
Poor serve motion (which leads him to make huge amount of unforced errors and low %), golf swing backhand, almost no serve and volley (unlike Alcaraz), no variety, terrible handskills,...
Love this type of videos, hope you do more deep dives into more players in the future
The biggest problem I see with Felix's game is his backhand. I think due to his technique, it looks he can't really hit the ball sharply crosscourt. The ball goes more to the middle than out wide. So he can never drag his opponent out to their backhand side enough to open up anything for his forehand. Also, while his backhand has an extremely heavy topspin, it looks like he's unable to flatten it out. That makes it really hard to hit winners off that wing. Plus, the lack of spin variety allows top players to adjust to his pace and time his balls too well.
When i saw felix on tour 2020,2021 and i found hiis sets always 6-7 or even when he looses he loses in tie break he looses like 6-4 0r 6-7 . I told to my friend auger is good talented upcoming player and in 2022 season he was top 10 player but he lost the way in 2023 . Hope he comes back very soon
don't need to watch the video because the answer is simple, but i will for entertainment purposes. the answer is, not enough development with his backhand (he cannot attack with it, can mainly on send it back cross court), serve becomes one dimensional, and his baseline game as a whole is a little predictable. if you're going to play a predictable gamestyle, you better be damn good at it! i firmly believe he needs to unleash on some shots when he has opportunities instead of always playing the percentage play.
His shots are beautiful to watch
He is capable of going on hot streaks and winning titles. That’s not enough to win a Slam IMO. His one dimensional style is feast or famine. That can only take FAA so far.
As if slams are different from any others tournament.. There are not.
@@sookiezboly4502They most assuredly are different, especially on the men's side. Best 3 of 5 is WAY different from 2 of 3, plus the tournaments are two weeks long instead of one. Plus, the pressure is immensely greater and many have folded under the pressure, especially as the tournament goes on
@@TraeBeneck
Aside from the prestige, Slam tournament are nothing special. Players have a unreasonable pressure they self infliicted. I say that because from media to players they all say X, W, Z should have this and that numbers of slams whereas they cant for the simple fact that they dont win enough tournament anyways regardless of the prestige of the tournament. They either lack talents or just not that good compare to their rivals
Players that win slams usually win a lot of tournament per years anyways so at some point a slam fall into it.
Tsitsipas, Tiafoe etc.. barely win 3 tournaments a years and yet we talking about slams as if the pressure, the mental, concentration, etc.. were the reasons they couldnt win. That's why aside from the prestige, slams are not that special. The people winning them win a lot tournies per years or atleast reach finals per years.
@@sookiezboly4502
1) GS are best of 5 matches, that alone changes the physical and mental dimension of a match, because you need to win one more set, which means extra pressure and a more exigent physical fitness.
2) The proof of this is how the greatest are always tougher to beat by the average players in GS compared with other tournaments.
Djokovic's win % skyrockets in the GS compared with any other events, as well as most of Nadal and Federer's upsets got caused outside of GS.
What happened to Shapovalov? What happened to Raonic? What happened to Eugenie? What happened to Bianca?
Injuries
Felix has three issues. These are not new issues but he has managed them better in the past. 1. He doesn’t serve consistently big enough and consistently enough for a 6’4” generational athlete(watching he yesterday he can uncork one but he doesn’t do it enough) 2. His forehand is one dimensional. Top players can hit heavy, flatten it out depending on the ball, court position, intent, etc. Felix has one forehand. Heavy and generally deep for modern tennis, leading to misses and also leaving him vulnerable on approach shots. He also is not consistent where he takes the ball out of the air. This leads to all lot of missed balls. 3. Lastly his backhand is unreliable at best. He can’t consistent go down the line to change the pattern and get it back in his forehand. So he gets pinned to that side like a junior. When he brought on Uncle Tony he managed this by clearly running around it more and hitting more forehands which was very effective. The issue is his spacing on his backhand is not good. He has to fix this if he ever wants to improve his consistency on this side…. If you watch he makes too much content with his racquet tip at 6 or 7 o’clock
'Generational athlete' i can name 10 players that are more gifted than he is athletically.
-Zverev
-Nadal
-Alcaraz
-Djokovic
-De Minaur
-Medvedev
-Dimitrov
-Monfils
-Fils
-Sinner
As soon as FAA started posting more pictures of him and his GF traveling and visiting cool places around the world together, his tennis career took a nose dive. I think he started focusing more on his personal relationship and life outside of tennis and not continuing to polish his tennis. Nothing wrong morally if that is the case! Just unfortunate for tennis fans.
He is the best when he gets out of the tournament. I don’t watch it. All I need is watch Felix. I just love him. I love the way he play. Good luck to him this year.
-Terrible serve motion
-Golf swing backhand
-Poor handskill
-Stereotyped game
I don't see how is he appealing at all.
Every since his lost to Alcaraz in Indian Wells 2023 he's never been the same. He was probably playing at his best in that match and still.
In 2022 he was playing great though !
exactly innit
Thanks for this an amazing video about Felix.
Felix won 3 finals in a row last year at the end of the season. He gave it his all. As we know, everything has to fall into place to achieve any success. He has it in him. Tennis is very unpredictable. You never know how a game/match will turn out. And you don't get a second chance. You go all the way or you don't. It's also a career. So at least he's getting somewhere and he's making money to survive on. Good for him. He'll get his chance. We know he can do it. I wish him all the best. (fellow Canadian)
He's overhyped, that's it.
People believe he was a big thing but he was never in my textbook.
Poor bachand technique, no handskill, mediocre awareness and an average serve for his size.
I’m surprised Felix hasn’t changed his main coach, Fontang, after the results he had in 2023. I know he had injuries in the first half of the year but he never really recovered performance wise, other than winning that one title. I like him but until he changes his coach my expectations for him will be low, but my hopes for the long term remain high as he has a lot of time left in his career to make the necessary improvements.
FAA has huge technical limits, there's so much a coach can do.
He needs a new coaching team!
Totally agree with you he needs to sack his coach he could play a lot better than what he’s doing 🙏
Great video man, keep it up!
He needs to improve his volleying skills and add more variety to his game.
He’s always been one to watch. Beautiful muscular lines and techniques.
FAA is skinny man, like any tennis player taller than 6'3 except Murray and Berrettini.
I'm uncertain if this will reach him, but as avid fans, we're let down. Despite his humility, Felix should consider altering his tactics mid-match, particularly seen against Medvedev. Enhancing his mental strength and seeking guidance, spiritual or otherwise, could bolster his performance. Notably, he seems more confident with his mom in the box, a presence that clearly boosts his game. We remain always hopeful for his success and continue to stand by Felix, looking forward to future triumphs.
-Poor backlhand
-Mediocre handskill
-Flawed serv
-Perfectible fitness
-Below average mental strength
do Frances next
I think Francis has won more titles than Felix, but Francis plays great for a match, and then it seems like he intentionally loses. I think he came to Dallas for a few days, but allowed Giron to have this one and play Paul, Sheleton, or Mannariono. I've seen this with him a couple of times. One commentor said, Francis can make a flight home for his promotional appearance on the weekend involving a bubble head in his likeness.
@@nt4081
Tiafoe also has major technical issues.
I have been watching Felix since he was a teen sensation. His weaknesses are now glaring. His backhand is passive, defensive and he doesn't drive rhe ball. Coaching and mechanics are his huge problems.
Also his serve (not effective, especially in terms of % of a man his size) and hanskill.
Why do tennis fans think every good young player will be Future 1 & win Grand Slams.
Just getting into the Top 20 is more than enough.
After that is just Icing & sprinkles on the cake.
Thanks for the sharp analysis- I very much agree with it. He should fire Toni Nadal IMMEDIATELY (which he should have done already after RG), and create a new environment with new coaches in which he feels comfortable. However, I feel that he will have a comeback.
You can't fix huge technical flaws.
I'm feeling Gael Monfils vibes with FAA☹️
Interesting comment mate. I can see your opinion. But in my opinion, I see parallels in their physical abilities but differences in their playing styles. Physical abilities we can see in African blood in players like Monfils, Tiafoe, Tsonga. All players that ever won a Grand Slam despite their athleticism. The only one that did it but only once is Yannick Noah. One thing we can say of all these players is that they are all amazing human beings. Going back to FAA and Monfils, I feel Monfils ruined his talent by being the sot of the tournament player while being an over defensive player. Being Canadian/ Québécois I am rooting for FAA. But watching him play, he makes me go bunkers with his number of unforced errors and bad tactics or lack of killer instinct. He is such a nice chap. Maybe he needs to learn to become an asshole like Djokovic can be at times. Because of all of this, for sure he needs new coaching. I would go to Mouratoglou or Boris Becker. What is missing is definitely better shot selection in critical moments. I don’t know if this can be teach.
Maybe in terms of results, sure, but as players Monfils was pure flair, whereas FAA is pure grind IMO. He should be an easy top twenty player, would be top ten in any other era but the Men’s tour has soooo much depth at the moment. It’s going to be an uphill battle for him for sure, but the raw material is there.
@@carlkligerman1981true competition is mad man…. Felix is still suffering from juniors expectations he will get it right in a couple of years he will grow out of it and understand reality im sure
@@carlkligerman1981
Mate, Tiafoe and Tsonga are not athletic, FAA isn't specially athletic either.
Monfils is, not the other 3.
Besides, that's racist as f*ck.
I don't know if it's feasible, but I think Felix should try to get Brad Gilbert at least as a consultant. Whether you like him or not, Gilbert is an expert at evaluating talent and tactics. Great analysis!
Brad Gilbert is a worst coach..he’ll make Felix’s game worst!
The point is he's too one dimensional and his window of opportunity is now closed. This happens in tennis all the time
The butterfly has emerged out of the cocoon. His game has matured and as we all can see, it's not good enough for winning against the top 10.
The question on mentality isnt about the drive to succeed but to succeed against his opponents during big points.
That, he lacks
He has a winning record in tiebreaks. So whats your point on his mentality in big points..?
@@lelouch3
Aliassime lost an immense amount of matches when he lead 2-0 or had match points.
He also won only 5 of his 15 finals.
@@quentinhirschfeld9382 there are issues with his game right? not his mentality
@@lelouch3
Yes i agree, it has more to do with his game, but at the end of the day, he lost most of his matches against players that are ranked far below him.
same as Tsitsi or Med, he reached his maximum potential, without a major technical facelift he will slowly but surely sink away
Medvedev has been in the TOP 5 for 5 years now, don't compare him to FAA in terms of 'ceiling'.
Great guy but he doesn’t have IT and he never will.
Felix needs to quickly improve his backhand, which he often hits too close to the ball. Also his backhand grip has too much space between the hands, reducing his left hand whip and leverage. Finally, he has to vary more his shots patterns, including more short cross balls. And, as explained in the video, using a reliable second kick serve, while occasionally surprising with a slice, might be a good idea. But he has the talent and the intelligence to improve and reach higher levels, the question is does he have the will and the fire to surpass the others ?
Seriously game issues and it seems he can't fix them easily and frequent injuries don't help.
He needs to switch match strategy approaches and become a transitional player. He practices twice the amount of time from the baseline than he does at net yet his volleys are twice as good as his inconsistent spraying groundstrokes. Lol
His volleys are meh.
Mental. Game
How about Casper Ruud next?
@@virat5828
Says you. Get a life.
@@virat5828
Haters gonna hate
@@virat5828
Was #2 in the world in 2022.
@@virat5828 You don't reach the main draw of a Grand Slam, let alone three Grand Slam finals without a tremendous amount of talent (and hard work). Regarding personality: Obviously everyone has personality, you just don't like Casper's.
@@virat5828 Yes he did. And again: You said he had 0 talent. If you knew anything about tennis, you would know that anyone with only 1 ATP point has a tremendous amount of talent.
FAA is boring to watch. volleying is weak, no variety, no second serve
damn
So you don’t know his coach and what he’s doing on a daily basis but you’re saying stuff like « he’s mediocre » !
Félix has been with Fontang and Marx for a while. Obviously looks like they are not so mediocre when you look at his evolution and his achievements as a young player. And reached number 6 in the world also!
Not too bad for mediocre.
He had a phenomenal comeback win against Jannik Sinner
When?
@@quentinhirschfeld9382 not recently
He has beautiful ground strokes.
nah
🤦♂️
Anyone know what website or app those tennis stats are from at the 5:45 mark?
Felix is on is way back. He is coming back form injuries to his left knee and right shoulder. Since the beginning of 2024, he could hardly reache 10 aces per three sets. In the last tournaments, he got back to his normal service ration, with an avarage of 10 aces per sets and seveval power serves unreturned. And he almost won it againts Rubleve last week. He had three match points that he has not been able to win. FAA needs his big serves to win his game to compensate his high number of unforced errors due to his agressive style. I'm telling you, if he does not get injured again, we will see great tennis from him.
Aged poorly.
Tony Nadal was what happened he try to make feliz play like Nadal when they don’t have same body size and Felix can actually hit the ball more flat ! Was a disaster 😫
You forgot one of the main theories: the loss of focus due to the Break Point series (the curse), which got to a lot of players.
He may have been in an episode or two, but that was awhile ago. The first Break Point series.
Don't let Netflix convince you that they had any significance to professional tennis, because they didn't
On the point.
You could say the same about most of the upcoming young stars. They just aren't good enough, that's it. Inevitably the bulk of the professional circuit, though good, simply won't be good enough. It's normal.
However, if you want to go into specifics, he's too passive. You should strive to get better and better at high-risk high-reward tennis i.e. Aiming to hit lines at every shot and sadly FAA isn't doing this. A bit like Musetti who, although plays some lovely tennis, all too often doesn't kill points off. I think a good experienced tennis player will aim to win a rally as quickly as possible and not get drawn into 'playing' and that's part of the problem, a lot of the young players tend to play a bit too much. If FAA became more aggressive I reckon his results would improve, provided he maintained his mental resilience - a lot of the younger players are mentally weak, and tennis can be a lonely game, esp when losing. Ironically, they all know how to celebrate, albeit a bit too much, but not so much the digging deep part when things get tough. Going back to FAA, you shouldn't really single him out because as I said there are so many of the young talent (Fritz, Zverev, Tsitsipas, Ruud, Shelton, De Minaur, Musetti, Korda, Bublik, etc etc to name but a few) that are all great to watch but just aren't consistent enough. Sure they might get to a semi-final of a slam then drop out in the first round of the next ATP event. Hopefully, with any luck, he'll get a slam and I wish the same for all the guys on tour but consistency is another animal and I just don't see it in the current crop of young talent, unfortunately.
There is something deeply flawed about our tennis in Canada that this keeps happening to our young stars… Genie, Bianca, Dennis and now Felix all flopping as they age 😢
New Coach Yesterday… I expect his salary for his coaches are their livlihoods, but he has to get a new coach. I like George mouratoglou
He’ll be back eventually
Hope so !
He just beat Ruud! Maybe he took your critiques to heart.
one of the most frustrating players to watch for me
I totally agree and I am Canadian
Frustrating, why ?
@@vivisolbiac365because he bottles alot
This is the problem with hype.
He seemed like he was about to win a big title but then ... nothing unfortunately
Nice guy but his game just doesn't seem natural enough. Idk. He just misses too much.
It’s like he went from 100 to zero. I think something else is the problem. Domestic. Girlfriend. Relationship. Whole thing looked like sudden loss of interest
No, the problem is technical and slightly mental, nowhere else.
Youre a 🤡 keep hating casual
He’s just a servebot, that’s it, only serve and then forehand or volley
And you are just a nimrod
He needs to split a case of bud ICE with Brad Gilbert.
New crop of ATP player are very good, make Flex just average now!😮
the new crop has so much more variety
One word "Confidence"
Technique
Hey, do you know what happened to Basilashvili? Saw him playing in challenger the other week & looks like a shell of his former self
He's always been like that.
Basilashvili is dogsh*t the whole year then shows up with unbelievable hard hitting for 1 or 2 tournaments.
He also had problems with the justice.
just ditch that nobody Tony Nadal and you´ll be fine.
That will not give him magical handskill, consistent serve and good backhand technique.
Damn bro, tell us how you really feel.
getting really convoluted here. Too many unforced errors - nothing else matters. FAA cant even reliably keep his back hand slice in play. How do you solve that? No clue.
He played really good yesterday against rublev but at the end mental weakness made him lose.
I blame it on Toni…
Bro u look like ruud
Thank you for this video. Felix is stubborn he needs to fire Frederick Fontang. Why hang on to this coach? Felix got passed by Alcaraz & Sinner. So Felix second serve is the problem. This is a detailed video. It is disturbing Felix has fallen off. I heard Felix got injured he is a nice young man. His backhand is crap. The Canadian tennis media ignoring Felix decline. He is only 23 years old.
Felix was never as talented as Sinner and Alcaraz to begin with.
Both Sinner and Alcaraz have no major technical issues and both have good hanskills (Sinner not as amazing as Alcaraz, but still good enough), FAA has neither of those things.
All of that just describes what happens not the why. I have the answer and it is because he is Canadian. I am not even joking. Canadians cannot handle the pressure properly (too soft)
Their knee was the only reason why he is not the same now
Wrong
Yes, he needs better coaches and better tennis IQ
one thing, mentality
like you say with a sports pshychatrist and fixing the other errors you raise, he can do it!
weak backhand terible return game etc.
Players wise up,to the top players games and it’s really only Djokovic that’s the enigma when u play him,he never gives us the same ball twice well rarely, FAA was extremely over hyped his backhand is what I knew would always let him down it’s not a weapon, and the second serve is just not practiced enough that’s extremely evident.
His backhand technique is strange, and his touch is nonexistent. Hopefully he’ll find a way to get his game back on track
Great video title for views. Yet you have no first hand knowledge of or standing to make your sweeping assertions. Get a real job.
The backhand technique is wonky. Sure flawed technique can work...if the flaw is small enough. His flaw is massive on the backhand side, and I'd call the visible overutilization of the arms in the two-handed backhand as something of a "death move".
You're confusing 'unhortodox' with 'flawed'.
@@quentinhirschfeld9382 I'm not.
@@trevorhunka7689
You are
5:56 zverev used to have this issue
Zverev's issues where more mental (and still are) than technical.
@@quentinhirschfeld9382 I feel it's thet same with felix, he proved it, owning the top players around basel tourny. but can't do it year round...
@@king0vdarkness
No, Aliassime has poor handskill, an inconsistent serve, a golf swing backhand and no tactical awareness.
His title win in Basel hardly means anything as the top players are usually exhausted at the end of the season and every TOP 30 players have their moments anyway.
@@quentinhirschfeld9382 fair enough, why is his serve inconsistent?
@@king0vdarkness
He has tossing issues and his arm motion isn't fluid enough, which means he mistimes a lot his hitting point.
Alcaraz also has an arm motion issue you may say, but Alcaraz is Alcaraz.
if he peak to young, we will never seen him again. Just like coric. beat murray at age 16 then boom gone
This guy is the male Sakkari. Get rid of Toni. Get a sports psychologist.
Is he still working with Toni Nadal?