The Day GOD Took Control of Roger Federer's Forehand

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  • Опубликовано: 12 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 407

  • @RogerBiwandu
    @RogerBiwandu 10 месяцев назад +607

    This is EXACTLY the kind of match Kyrgios is talking when he says that when playing Fed, he put you on such a misery that you just don't want to be there and leave the court as quick as possible... 🙂

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 10 месяцев назад +9

      I think that Fed's opponent here made the 2nd round of a slam.... once. Career-high of 110. One to remember. Kyrgios has more recently said - "Novak Djokovic is the best player to ever touch a racket - the best player to ever walk the Earth.” Looks like he has given someone else than Fed the nod. Although don't just take Kyrgios's word for it. The long reigning pre-Big 3 GOAT anointed Djokovic even 2 years ago - "he is the greatest of all time". Sampras's voice does carry a decent amount of weight in these matters it's pretty obvious to say.

    • @leumas0412
      @leumas0412 10 месяцев назад +82

      How is Djokovic related to the original comment? @@huzcer

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@leumas0412 Kyrgios's view is the pretty obvious connection. Fairly obvious I would have thought. Although I personally put more store in what Sampras has to say as I said.

    • @hetsahk
      @hetsahk 10 месяцев назад +22

      @@huzcer Fed GOAT

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@hetsahk forgive me if I go with Pete Sampras on that over you.

  • @skylaxx
    @skylaxx 10 месяцев назад +167

    Really appreciate how you keep the memories alive. Miss the fella terribly. Not the same without him.

    • @NikolasHerrera
      @NikolasHerrera 10 месяцев назад +8

      i'll feel the same until i die .. tennis will never be the same

    • @alexvaldiers9788
      @alexvaldiers9788 10 месяцев назад +12

      I didn’t know people still played tennis after he retired.

  • @stonew1927
    @stonew1927 10 месяцев назад +272

    RF hits the ball so early, with so much power and precision. Unmatched in the history of the game . . .

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@PrecisionPointTennis Andre was a great player. People often get too caught up in the Big 3 and forget bout all the other brilliant players.

    • @yongli4304
      @yongli4304 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@PrecisionPointTennis Andre's forehand is not as versatile as Federer's.

    • @dieguito578
      @dieguito578 10 месяцев назад +2

      with such precision that at Wimbledon 2019 he sent the match ball to the moon that they are still looking for it

    • @bodhisattvaoflazyness
      @bodhisattvaoflazyness 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@dieguito578 unlike you dieguito, who never missed a wimbledon match ball.

  • @terryallen5328
    @terryallen5328 9 месяцев назад +65

    Djokovic may have the most titles to his name but he never had the majestic shots of the genius that is Roger Federer.

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 6 месяцев назад +2

      Djokovic always thought that Fed's topspin backhand shot was such a majestic gift alright!

    • @bakimc4722
      @bakimc4722 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@huzcer : Yes, Djokovic was killing him through the backhand 😆

    • @AJD09FB
      @AJD09FB 3 месяца назад +2

      @@huzcer And now Alcaraz feels the same about *all* of Djokovic's shots! 😂

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 3 месяца назад

      @@AJD09FB Woger was not seen anywhere near a slam final 5 weeks after knee surgery that's for sure!

    • @AJD09FB
      @AJD09FB 3 месяца назад

      @@huzcer True, but I don't really care. I'm not a Federer fan. Cry yourself to sleep tonight knowing that Novax is Alcaraz's b*tch now. 🤣

  • @thejaymartino
    @thejaymartino 10 месяцев назад +37

    Miss this effortless play on tour. Rf always makes it look so easy

  • @leumas0412
    @leumas0412 10 месяцев назад +57

    Fun fact: In 2018, Polansky became the first player in the Open Era to qualify for all four Grand Slam tournaments as a lucky loser within the same calendar year.

  • @charloubermudezii3916
    @charloubermudezii3916 10 месяцев назад +21

    3:05 That volley is absolutely nuts

  • @richellis5166
    @richellis5166 10 месяцев назад +74

    big Federer fan here so not dismissing how good he is in this match, but seriously it was like Polansky was aiming for Federer's strike zone on every shot . Fed didn't really have to do that much to blast him off the court .

    • @danielsmith5032
      @danielsmith5032 10 месяцев назад +1

      Same thoughts here and I said so much with my comment too 😂. He gave him a lot or short balls right in his favorite strike zone

    • @zella417bcarter9
      @zella417bcarter9 10 месяцев назад

      TRUE LOL

    • @simonabel8419
      @simonabel8419 10 месяцев назад

      It’s more likely his footwork on every single point

    • @seankeegan8285
      @seankeegan8285 9 месяцев назад

      he couldn't deal with fed's ball the whole match, just too heavy for him to hit decent shots consistently, overpowered xD

    • @zabaleta66
      @zabaleta66 7 месяцев назад

      Hahaha, yeah! Polansky played like a lot of the women play......hitting the ball straight down the middle of the court!!

  • @SH1974
    @SH1974 9 месяцев назад +18

    He was the absolute benchmark for so many Years. 237 conclusive weeks (that's a bit more than 4,5 Years!) as No.1, that record will probabbly never get broken.
    Miss this dude on court.

    • @svevo
      @svevo 9 месяцев назад +2

      Jannik Sinner: hold my Gewurztraminer (no, I don't think Sinner will be that good, I just wanted to make the Traminer joke...)

    • @SH1974
      @SH1974 9 месяцев назад

      @@svevo Probably more "hold my Vernatsch" or "hold my Lagrein". Those (excellent) vines are more Südtirol specific than the Gewürztraminer.

    • @ancapatrascu1545
      @ancapatrascu1545 9 месяцев назад

      @@svevohey that's actually one of my favourite wines and i had a killer one in northern italy.
      With you on this one😅

  • @mlrmlr4919
    @mlrmlr4919 10 месяцев назад +18

    Thank goodness, another video, thank you. I must have watched the 'ruthless' one 6 or 7 times now. These no-hope opponents are pure victims, and must feel wretched, as RogerBiwandu says below. And Federer just gets so much confidence that he plays 'what shall I try out next' kinds of shots. From the count of views after 2 hours I feel a lot of people out there are lost without Federer (including me).

  • @felixy23
    @felixy23 10 месяцев назад +33

    RF : "thank you Lord, with your blessings i proudly compete with everyone mostly who're 5-20 years younger than me. i destroyed them fairly to take my glorious victory. thanks for everything amen."

  • @davidkennerley2463
    @davidkennerley2463 10 месяцев назад +37

    Cant believe how many people are saying Polansky sucked. Yes he only got to 110 in the world but if you make it to 110 in the world you are still an insanely good tennis player! Federer was just on a completely other stratosphere in comparison to Polansky

    • @stefanoberetta1145
      @stefanoberetta1145 9 месяцев назад +1

      Well tennis is pretty much the sport where if you pick the top 100/200 in the world, there is the biggest gap between the first 7/10 and the rest... and probably its 99% a mental gap..
      to be in top 10 and mantain that spot you gotta have such a mental strength and consistency.. it's insanely hard to stay at the top for so long like roger rafa and nole did... they kinda made all of us think what they did is normal, but honestly its not so normal haha

  • @manjitkmohan
    @manjitkmohan 10 месяцев назад +13

    This is why RF will always be the GOAT for me!
    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @lsb9073
    @lsb9073 8 месяцев назад +3

    The Fed Express in free-flow😊.
    Sure, the opponent was no match for him, but not just the fh, his serve was on - 81% 1st serves did they say? Waaay above his tour avg of 64%. The confidence he was clearly feeling gave him the chance to demonstrate his sheer excellence & variety. Us Fedfans loved these short matches where practically every stroke was peRFect. Just gorgeous to watch.
    Big fat smiles all the way.😀

  • @chethan2621
    @chethan2621 7 месяцев назад +1

    Federer Fan Forever.......
    Miss you Play....

  • @rociioro
    @rociioro 10 месяцев назад +3

    Looks so easy when he does it, it's crazily beautiful

  • @mainakbiswas2584
    @mainakbiswas2584 10 месяцев назад +3

    at the end he was playing in practise mode❤. His genious can never be matched.

  • @fureyhiggins3289
    @fureyhiggins3289 10 месяцев назад +6

    No one has ever played the game more beautifully than Roger. Just sublime

  • @thefixerman1
    @thefixerman1 10 месяцев назад +5

    Love the title Raz! Amazing compilation of Roger's unmatched brilliance, thank you!

  • @philips6182
    @philips6182 4 месяца назад

    Could watch a slow-mo of any fed shot but especially that forehand perfect preparation, head still, how relaxed his wrist is and the lateness of the wrist, the straight elbow everything beautiful shot. Wish my forehand looked as good

  • @thebatman7192
    @thebatman7192 3 месяца назад +1

    6-2, 6-0.
    Cool Performance By The Ice Cool Federer 😎

  • @pawshands9706
    @pawshands9706 10 месяцев назад +86

    Obviously GOD never got bored with Roger. The most aggressive and complete of players. One and only GOAT😊❤🎉

    • @lukazweverink9233
      @lukazweverink9233 10 месяцев назад +1

      true at least my GOAT

    • @pawshands9706
      @pawshands9706 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@lukazweverink9233 Pure magic was Roger. He mastered the entire court.

    • @matthewchang7252
      @matthewchang7252 10 месяцев назад +2

      I agree! ❤🎉

    • @thesoccergod
      @thesoccergod 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@lukazweverink9233 There's really no need to say "my". :)
      Anybody who's watched Fed play (vs Djoko and others) knows he's a greater *player* than Djoko is. (Djoko is the marginally more successful winner.) Fed illustrated this himself by outplaying Djoko when he was in his mid 20s, in his late 20s, in his mid 30s, and in his late 30s. In fact, Djoko only approached 20 slams on the back of his two fluked wins over Fed - at USO11 & Wimby19. If Fed had closed those matches out like he should have, Djoko would have _at least_ two fewer slams & their H2H would be 25-25.
      Basically, my point is this: I don't care for the 'GOAT' discussion or debate, but Fed has _just as much_ of a claim to being the GOAT as Djoko does.

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 10 месяцев назад +11

      @@thesoccergod Djokovic was beating 26 year OLD Federer at the Australian Open. Federer could never beat Djokovic at the Australian open again. Fed won 1 set TOTAL in 4 matches Djokovic beats just turned 29 year OLD Federer at the US open in 2010. Federer could never beat Djokovic at the US open again. Whenever Djokovic first beat Federer at a slam Federer could NEVER beat Djokovic there again.. Federer's last ever slam match win against Djokovic was when Federer was still only 30 Federer was not able to beat Djokovic anymore at the slams long before he was "OLD". Federer didn't retire for more than another 10 years. Looking at the career outsets, Federer got past a first slam 1/4 final a few weeks off turning 22 in a soft period of tennis, appropriately facing the completely unseeded Philapoussis in his first final. Not being able to make even last four of a slam in that era until that age in retrospect is a fail. Fed had 3 completely unseeded players in slam finals 03 to 07. Bagdatis who barely spent a career couple of months in the top ten being the most "notable". Nadal wasn't able to contend at either the US open or the Australian open, not making it past a 1/4 final at either until 2008. Djokovic was dominating both Federer still in his 20's and Nadal in 2011 at just 23 in the strongest era of tennis. Completely different competitive landscapes to have to do it in.

  • @AgataCorsaro-s7z
    @AgataCorsaro-s7z 10 месяцев назад +11

    No onelse like Roger now and forever

  • @zabaleta66
    @zabaleta66 7 месяцев назад +2

    I don't care about the grand slam numbers, Roger is still the GOAT 🐐

  • @5s4l1p1fcw
    @5s4l1p1fcw 10 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for the audio and the video, Raz. Without the video, I would have thought that umpire's "Game Federer" was a broken record! :-)

  • @antburman
    @antburman 10 месяцев назад +9

    I think he could have played on water. An astonishingly gifted person. Not a backhand like Wawrinka but I'm always lost when critics say he had a weak backhand.

    • @altruism8637
      @altruism8637 10 месяцев назад +3

      watch 2006 federer vs blake atp finals shanghai...dont think anyone can call that backhand weak

    • @antburman
      @antburman 10 месяцев назад

      @@altruism8637 Blake gave him some good battles!

    • @pierdomenicosommati443
      @pierdomenicosommati443 10 месяцев назад +2

      It was a really great backhand as well, with something less and something more than Wawrinka's. Less brute force (which has never been his style), but amazing timing, impressive angles and extremely quick setup for the shot, which's equally important.

    • @antburman
      @antburman 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@pierdomenicosommati443 Yeah, that's a really good observation. Agree.

    • @shankar0307
      @shankar0307 10 месяцев назад +2

      Federer didn't have a weak backhand, he had an inconsistent backhand. The moment you put him under pressure, at times he is uncertain. So Djoker & Nadal targeted that part of his game again and again causing more doubts. [As a die hard federer fan, this is my take on it]

  • @johnanderson8385
    @johnanderson8385 10 месяцев назад +5

    Roger was so special 🥉

  • @Shankar-Bhaskar
    @Shankar-Bhaskar 10 месяцев назад +5

    That forehand is a dream..

  • @Mr-pt3yl
    @Mr-pt3yl 10 месяцев назад +37

    When Fed is on he is better than everyone

    • @RazOls
      @RazOls  10 месяцев назад +1

      Preach!

    • @jay_kulina
      @jay_kulina 10 месяцев назад +4

      Well, as much as i prefer Roger over the rest big-3 (Delpo fan), that's debatable. For one, no one could ever beat 2008 Rafa on RG, no matter the form. Generally, in-form Rafa on clay is the most unbeatable force tennis has ever seen! As for Roger, we can't be sure! We've seen Novak played some flawless, maybe unparalleled tennis on some occasions. 2016 F in Doha against Rafa (Rafa said he had never seen anyone play at that level) and the first two sets of AO against Roger, same year. I'd love to see that Novak against AO 2009 Roger (match against Delpo) or the version against Blake in 2006 Masters Cup. Too bad it can't happen!

    • @ryaniam22
      @ryaniam22 10 месяцев назад +1

      I think the French Open semi final 2011 I believe where Roger and Djokovich played and Roger ended Novak's 41 match win streak or something was the best match I've ever seen. Incredibly competitive tennis. Novak won 3-4 majors that year and Roger had to up his game to take him down. It was amazing to watch

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 10 месяцев назад

      @@ryaniam22 A good win for Fed there alright - Fed's 2nd last ever slam win against Djokovic. The last would be next year at Wimbledon, still only 30 at the time. 2011 into 2012 AO was an amazing year. "Prime Fed" took 7 years to get 7 wins from Nadal 2004-10 (with 14 losses to go with) and Djokovic did it in 7 months. beat Nadal 7 times in a row from March 2011. all matches were finals, including 3 slam finals. 2 consecutive masters clay finals also. Fed never did win Rome or Monte Carlo. PIty.

    • @jay_kulina
      @jay_kulina 10 месяцев назад

      @@ryaniam22 Definitely the best match Roger has played on clay. And considering how invulnerable Novak looked at that point (41 wins in a row bf that match), probably a top-5 match of Roger's career, maybe top-3. Shame he couldn't keep it up in the Final. Not to mention that had Djokovic won against Roger, he probably would've beaten Rafa in the final as well. He had his number that year and already 4 wins in a row against him, 2 of which on clay finals in Rome and Madrid.

  • @alexku3348
    @alexku3348 10 месяцев назад +8

    I miss this godlike player!

  • @kougamishinya6566
    @kougamishinya6566 9 месяцев назад +1

    Best thumbnail I've ever seen

  • @h.g.1409
    @h.g.1409 8 месяцев назад +1

    you have the best thumbnails and titles

  • @danielsmith5032
    @danielsmith5032 10 месяцев назад +5

    Polanski was giving him sitters! Federer smoked him definitely, and I could watch Federer’s attacking style all day. But Polansky had nothing threatening with his ground game.
    If the ball is gonna sit at the service line, fed is gonna eat it alive. And I’m here for it

  • @initialize21
    @initialize21 10 месяцев назад +2

    Damn. It's performances like these where I actually feel bad for the opponent lol

  • @flanker909
    @flanker909 10 месяцев назад

    AHAHAAH I liked before even watching because of the HILLARIOUS thumbnail 🤣🤣
    That the Famous FedExpress Era!

  • @shogunrua1040
    @shogunrua1040 9 месяцев назад

    Roger has had time to become a pro and retire, but we have yet to see a someone play as smoothly as he did. Most beautiful technique ever seen in tennis.

  • @Nicotine46
    @Nicotine46 10 месяцев назад +6

    The GOAT

  • @MarcosMarcosMarcos
    @MarcosMarcosMarcos 10 месяцев назад +1

    Tennis needs Roger Fereder ♥

  • @ricetogo
    @ricetogo 3 месяца назад

    If Federer didn’t catch mono, he would have won a few more grand slam. His performance went down after 2008 when mono kicked in. He used to move much quicker and played like he had much more energy before 2008.

  • @emilioemele
    @emilioemele 27 дней назад

    This is easily the best (if not top 3) outfit Federer ever wore

  • @someone-cs1ix
    @someone-cs1ix 10 месяцев назад +1

    If that first return happened to me on what appears to be the second point of the match imma be like "we're gonna be here a while... or maybe not"

  • @RogerFleischer-p3f
    @RogerFleischer-p3f 8 месяцев назад

    These tennis videos that are enhanced to make the important content highly visible are great! A sight for sore eyes, as they say.

  • @j1mster3
    @j1mster3 10 месяцев назад +1

    Wow I was at this match in 2014, the last time ever he came to Toronto.

  • @douglas864
    @douglas864 5 месяцев назад

    "Son, that s my racket". Genious title.

  • @guilhermeluisfrancarego266
    @guilhermeluisfrancarego266 10 месяцев назад

    This was a cold blooded muder, so much agression with a lot of precision

  • @shadowagent6051
    @shadowagent6051 10 месяцев назад

    That was a nice crowd on this Federer training session 🤔

  • @dondgamer
    @dondgamer 10 месяцев назад +5

    Peak Federer is "absolutely" the greatest of all time.

  • @rendez-vousauchateau5094
    @rendez-vousauchateau5094 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video, as usual, thanks a lot.

  • @alankingchiu
    @alankingchiu 8 месяцев назад

    It’s the Rogers cup in Toronto, Federer didn’t want anyone touching his cup.

  • @summer5684
    @summer5684 8 месяцев назад

    I love the caption ❤

  • @rjari8578
    @rjari8578 10 месяцев назад +4

    Roger without pressure have arguably the best forehand or backhand of all time

    • @goderer2057
      @goderer2057 10 месяцев назад +3

      Federer’s 5 years older than rafa and beat him at AO 2017 at 35/36 coming back from injury and 6 months off. He came back from a break down in the 5th…talk about pressure huh. Do me a favour and never voice ur opinions on a tennis video ever again. Cheers

    • @rjari8578
      @rjari8578 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@goderer2057 WT hell are you on about buddy?
      Its a complement
      Stop being too emotional

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 10 месяцев назад

      @@goderer2057 yeah Nadal off clay (fed was never a competitor to him on clay really with never even taking more than a set off him at RG) was about as useful as Anne Frank's drum kit against the other 2 of the big 3 since 2014. Fed didn't do so well against Djokovic tho - last slam match win over 10 years before he retired. Still only 30 at the time.

    • @goderer2057
      @goderer2057 10 месяцев назад

      @@rjari8578 u said without pressure u idiot. Ur giving him a backhanded compliment. Go to school you’re late.

    • @goderer2057
      @goderer2057 10 месяцев назад

      @@huzcer 30 was considered old in 2011/2012. They were calling him a grandpa at that time. Also fed was still playing very well and people were amazed at how well he was playing at 30. Context is very important, maybe u should learn what it means. 🤣

  • @remnant24
    @remnant24 10 месяцев назад

    The title and description make it sound like Fed was unusually good in this, when it's really just the opponent who was slow, had poor footwork and sent balls right in Fed's comfort zone.

  • @Greebstreebling
    @Greebstreebling 10 месяцев назад

    God: 'Son, that's my racquet'. RF: 'Sorry mate, it's mine'.... :) :)

  • @germanff
    @germanff 10 месяцев назад +1

    thumbnail is great hahaha

  • @travisbarron7218
    @travisbarron7218 10 месяцев назад +1

    And the AO 2017 final vs Rafa was when God took control of his backhand

  • @diegomunoz8173
    @diegomunoz8173 9 месяцев назад

    Simplemente Roger Federer ❤️

  • @sicboi
    @sicboi 10 месяцев назад +1

    Roger looks so slight with skinny arms and thin torso, yet THE POWER OF GOD runs through it 😮

    • @pierdomenicosommati443
      @pierdomenicosommati443 10 месяцев назад

      I took a photo with him, and was amazed at how thin he was, looking at him from aside!

  • @samsbookbook3425
    @samsbookbook3425 5 месяцев назад

    The title 😂😂🎉ist love it

  • @Rob-gg4it
    @Rob-gg4it 10 месяцев назад

    just a suggestion, you might consider amending to "Son That's My Staff"

  • @mandelakhan
    @mandelakhan 10 месяцев назад +2

    these forehands would have been important at 2 matchpoints at wimbledon.

  • @ajnicks3251
    @ajnicks3251 10 месяцев назад +1

    The sad part is Fed did not always play with this aggression especially against djokovic and Nadal and instead just passively blocked balls back and ultimately succumbed to injuries😢

    • @AC-wl7ve
      @AC-wl7ve 10 месяцев назад

      I imagine it’s a bit harder to play this style against a player like joker.

    • @codegeek-il5fm
      @codegeek-il5fm 9 месяцев назад

      @@AC-wl7ve On a fast surface, he could do this with anyone including Djoker and Nadal. On slower surfaces which are more common since late 2000s, he is weaker and thats where Djoker and Nadal went past him. Just look at the US Open 2023 surface speed vs US Open 2005/2006 speed.

  • @fireice1348
    @fireice1348 10 месяцев назад

    I’m not sure where Polansky’s ranking was, but he just couldn’t keep up with Fed’s pace. He kept giving fed beach balls which ass blasted him off the court. (Which as we know “beach balls” at ATP level are like 60 mph 😅). I now understand what is meant by “The top players simply hit a different type of ball”

  • @SHVideografie
    @SHVideografie 10 месяцев назад +2

    I think the USO final against Hewitt wil always be his most godlike FH performance.
    And tbh, where was this fh in the final of Wimbledon against Djokovic that year? It seemed almost nonexistent.

    • @tomsd8656
      @tomsd8656 10 месяцев назад

      Mental. It's much easier to play freely and connect with all your shots when you know the other side can't hurt you. After Djokivic had beaten Federer in a few tight match, the mental advantage went to Djokovic.
      You also saw the mental advantage switched to Federer after he beat Nadal at AO 2017, coming back from behind in the fifth set. He dominated Nadal in all subsequent matches except clay. Nobody does that to Nadal on clay, especially at RG.

    • @pierdomenicosommati443
      @pierdomenicosommati443 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@tomsd8656Age. What about age instead? Everybody's talking of late Nole/Roger clashes like three six years difference didn't exist, pretending they were matches played at even conditions... Well, they weren't. Roger, because of changes in technical equipment, and because of an obligated (by aging, with injuries to knee and back and consequent diminished court coverage) switch to extreme constant aggression, with a shift forward by one full meter in his average court positioning, was forced to modify his forehand movement during 2013 off-season, as well as his backhand... and while this fact gave an unbelievable new "youth" to his backhand, it didn't help his forehand consistency at all. Hence his relative diminished confidence.

    • @tomsd8656
      @tomsd8656 10 месяцев назад

      @pierdomenicosommati443 You should look no further than Federer's dominance of Nadal after the 2017 AO. Age difference is the same. That was just mental. Against Djokovic, he had match points at Wimbledon. You can't be compromised by age and hold match points. You need to watch Wimbledon 2019. When Federer held two match points, Djokovic didn't do anything special at all, just trying to get the ball back, but Federer was just missing, and it looked 100% mental to anyone, even amateurs, who had played tennis and be in the same position. The reason for that was a result of Federer's losing many closed big matches to Djokovic before, like US Open semi 2010, 2011, Wimbledon 2014. Federer had match points in both US open semi 2010 and 2011. That must have haunted him in Wimbledon 2019.
      Yes, Federer's tennis can reach a God like level, which Nadal and Djokovic can't reach, which is why Federer bageled Djokovic at Cinci, but Federer is still human, and human is affected mentally by a lot of things.

    • @pierdomenicosommati443
      @pierdomenicosommati443 10 месяцев назад

      @@tomsd8656 the main reason why Federer looks mentally weaker, is his type of tennis. In topic moments, grinding even more or continuing to pick lines or hitting winners are two completely different things.
      In tight situations, the problem of tension is universal... but it's far easier to fight tension by running even more and trying harder and harder, compared to what Federer always does in all his matches. The risk of playing less briliant pivotal points is inherent to his tennis, not to his person. And yes, age matters. When he was younger, this problem was much less relevant, and he was very notorious for hitting ace after ace when he faced very delicate situations on serve. Being 6 years older than your opponent, and feeling the risk of a long fifth set against a 6 years younger Djokovic if match doesn't end soon, is not gonna make things easier, like at all. It's a thing which can vastly impair one's confidence.
      Condidence in Federer's style of play, was everything. After his January 2008 mononucleosis and subsequent multiple unexpected losses, he suffered a visible loss of confidence, which ultimately was the main reason behind his loss to Nadal at Wimbledon, particularly in those two poorly played first sets.

    • @tomsd8656
      @tomsd8656 10 месяцев назад

      @pierdomenicosommati443 I don't really know about your analysis. I am not those players, so it's hard to say. But regardless of style, amy player could lose a mental match, Nadal and Djokovic too. Federer basically won the AO 2017 on mental will, then dominated Nadal since then. Federer is also very good at defending. It's not just finishing points.
      Age matters overall, which is why Federer is retired now, and Djokovic and Nadal are still playing. But in a specific match, if you hold match points in the fifth set, and then you were able to last until 14-12, it's ridiculous to blame age.
      Djokovic in the late part of his career had improved his mental game quite a bit. All of the very top players do a lot of work mentally. Tennis is a highly mental sport. You cannot win as much as Federer, Nadal, Djokovic without the mental game. But what I saw is that near the end, Djokovic edged out both Federer and Nadal just a tiny bit on the mental game.

  • @stuewz
    @stuewz 10 месяцев назад +2

    I have been a Nadal fan all my life and I hated Federer most of his career. I have come in conclusion that Federer is the most gifted player ever and he is the greatest player of all time. His style, elegance and charisma is something inexplicable. The more I see Djokovic the more I realize he’ll never be anything like Federer and Nadal. He can win as many titles as he wants, he always remains the #3 who will have chased these 2 giants almost all his career.

    • @jimmysp4des229
      @jimmysp4des229 10 месяцев назад

      Please explain how the guy in the lead is chasing someone?
      When you're in the lead, and read this part carefully, EVERYONE ELSE IS BEHIND YOU!!!!
      so please explain, how the guy that has the better head to head win percentage against both fed and rafa is chasing ?
      The man with the most weeks at number one in the HISTORY of men's tennis????
      Novak isn't even my favorite player, I like Becker, and rafa the most, but id never make such false statements jist because I prefer another player.
      That's just silly.

    • @stuewz
      @stuewz 10 месяцев назад

      @@jimmysp4des229 Djokvovic was #3 most of his career. He chased his 2 biggest rivals until the end of their career. Because he was able to overtake them at the very end of their career statistically speaking, because Federer is retired and Nadal has been OUT for 1 year, he would become the greatest player? Hahaha it’s so ridiculous. If Djokovic was the greatest player in history he only had to be #1 statistically against these 2, but this is not the case. He will remain the #3 who will have chased his 2 biggest rivals ALL his career.

    • @jimmysp4des229
      @jimmysp4des229 10 месяцев назад

      ​@stuewz once again, novak holds every important statistical record, so he's not chasing anyone.
      When you're the best ever, you don't chase, you run away from the pack.
      Pete sampras says novak is the goat, I'll take one of the greatest players opinion over yours, you're using emotional arguments, not statistical facts.

    • @stuewz
      @stuewz 10 месяцев назад

      @@jimmysp4des229 Lol, the name dropping argument I love it. Pete Sampras says Djokovic is the GOAT because it’s his opinion. I can name you a lot of names who says Federer and Nadal are still the GOAT. It goes both ways. And If it was only for the statistics, Lebron James would be the GOAT in basketball, but Michael Jordan is still seen as the GOAT.

    • @jimmysp4des229
      @jimmysp4des229 10 месяцев назад

      @@stuewz basketball is a team sport kid, no comparison there.
      Novak played both fed and nadal, and he has a winning record against both, so we have hard factual numbers.
      These are facts, undeniable facts, Novak has beaten them both more, making him the better player.
      When you get beat more than you beat the other guy, that makes the other guy better.
      Or do you have some alternate way or perceiving getting beaten that has no bearing on reality?

  • @5s4l1p1fcw
    @5s4l1p1fcw 10 месяцев назад

    Fed must have some sort of a magnetic attraction towards the net. Every chance he gets to use his forehand, he is looking to charge the net

    • @blegh277
      @blegh277 10 месяцев назад

      Later in his career he lacked the stamina that younger players had, so he’d come to net to end points faster

  • @MatthewBluefox
    @MatthewBluefox 10 месяцев назад

    Roman Polansky played Tennis? I had no idea. Hopp Schwiiz! :)

  • @Shiftito
    @Shiftito 10 месяцев назад

    2:05 someone in the public having pasta

  • @YesSirPhil
    @YesSirPhil 10 месяцев назад

    Goodness me, full of confidence!!

  • @reubenkearns5417
    @reubenkearns5417 10 месяцев назад +1

    Love these titles/thumbnails 😂

  • @AlainReneP
    @AlainReneP 10 месяцев назад

    The title of this video is well adapted ! GOD is somewhere in the game of RF.

  • @argmined
    @argmined 10 месяцев назад

    This is a horror show. I won't be able to forget what I've seen next time I give a short ball to someone 😂

  • @jorginhoregista
    @jorginhoregista 10 месяцев назад

    Federer will always be the most skillful player

  • @biggabenne
    @biggabenne 10 месяцев назад

    Ump called "40-30" on Polansky's serve where Federer was up 5:44

    • @nichitaionete3415
      @nichitaionete3415 9 месяцев назад

      Yup, i thought the same thing. Then instead of Federer breaking 5-0 he called deuce, and he had to win another 2 points.

  • @ElectricGuitarStyles
    @ElectricGuitarStyles 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is how Tsitsipas imagines himself in his head .

  • @Sam-vl3er
    @Sam-vl3er 10 месяцев назад

    Goat

  • @junyorsheik2693
    @junyorsheik2693 10 месяцев назад

    own Federer

  • @Aiyume22
    @Aiyume22 9 месяцев назад

    Anyone know what Racket Federer is using?

  • @Wushtheel
    @Wushtheel 10 месяцев назад

    federer magnifique bon vid

  • @raghavchaudhary5748
    @raghavchaudhary5748 9 месяцев назад

    I would USO 2005 final was the match that FH was godly!!

  • @AG-js1bl
    @AG-js1bl 10 месяцев назад +1

    It is nice that somebody admit that sone human beings are God gifted and another human beings are "normal" with nor abillity and another are just garbagge in the world.

  • @unowen7591
    @unowen7591 4 месяца назад

    5:42 Scoring is weird here...Then it changes to 5-0 as it should be, but then it goes Ad Polansky. Mistake by the umpire?

  • @utkarshdeshmukh6414
    @utkarshdeshmukh6414 10 месяцев назад

    Federer's greatest matches are always against lower ranked opponents due to his ability to simply bamboozle them like amateurs. Given the ticket prices and Roger's record, I would prefer watching Federer play in the 2/3rd round than the finals.

  • @JohnDoe-dp4kx
    @JohnDoe-dp4kx 10 месяцев назад

    One small glitch though...I for once landed my own racquet to Roger for the 2008 French Open final....Rafa obviously borrowed God's racquet this very day....oopsy!

  • @SoubhikDasMusicession
    @SoubhikDasMusicession 10 месяцев назад

    So we are measuring the quality of his forehand vs Polansky? How many GS he won again? How many weeks at no 10 he spent?

  • @Frenzinh0
    @Frenzinh0 10 месяцев назад +1

    Remember god was once a human.

  • @Turrican60
    @Turrican60 10 месяцев назад

    This alleged 'God' should not get all the credit - on the contrary, it belongs to the player himself for all the hard work he put in, over many years, to maximise his potential.

  • @iansmirna5183
    @iansmirna5183 10 месяцев назад

    Big thanks to Polansky for holding a racquet on the other side of the net that day.

  • @controversialmusic9141
    @controversialmusic9141 10 месяцев назад

    The best ever

  • @JK-vc7ie
    @JK-vc7ie 10 месяцев назад

    GOAT

  • @MASSCAL01
    @MASSCAL01 10 месяцев назад

    Lmfao that thumbnail

  • @douglas864
    @douglas864 8 месяцев назад

    It s true, God said " my racket is in your hands "

  • @innerparty1
    @innerparty1 9 месяцев назад

    top quality opponent, too.

  • @tonyt50
    @tonyt50 9 месяцев назад

    Maybe others one more slams, or were more consistent. But if you had any two players playing their best tennis, on any day, nobody beats Roger.

  • @jimklein6958
    @jimklein6958 10 месяцев назад +1

    To bring GOD down to this level is ridiculous. Show respect at all times! GOD could care a less about Fed’s forehand.

  • @drummersinger5324
    @drummersinger5324 10 месяцев назад

    Nadal ? LOL Dojokovich? LMAO. THis dude was the best by far ever.

  • @blucat4
    @blucat4 9 месяцев назад

    Bit of a silly title, it wasn't just his forehand. Great video though, cheers.

  • @allboutthemojo
    @allboutthemojo 10 месяцев назад +7

    Controversial video but have you considered a video showing all the medical timeouts, oncourt medical evaluations and bathroom breaks Novak has taken and the scoreline at those times 🤔

    • @RazOls
      @RazOls  10 месяцев назад +4

      No I haven’t. Djokovic fans come here just because I post videos of Federer. It’s enough really

    • @nikosofidemporas
      @nikosofidemporas 10 месяцев назад +1

      It would also be impossible to keep it under a few hours 😅

    • @allboutthemojo
      @allboutthemojo 10 месяцев назад

      @@nikosofidemporas very good point 💯✅️

    • @allboutthemojo
      @allboutthemojo 10 месяцев назад

      @RazOls I understand. You have to stay within certain boundaries. You have a channel to run. Although both you and I know that would be a long video as Niko above mentioned 😀

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 10 месяцев назад

      Nadal was actually infamous for the worst of all MTO timings earlier in his career. Never mind Djokovic taking a toilet break like most players do at the end of a set, Nadal was infamous for calling an MTO 1. during a set, 2. nearly always on the opponent's serve and 3. often when a break down! 1) Finals at Monte-Carlo, 2008- Federer was leading 5-2 in the first set and Nadal calls for a MTO When treatment was over. Fed loses momentum and the set.
      2) Finals at Hamburg, 2008: An MTO, was called by Nadal for thigh massage, just before Federer was going to serve for the set. Federer lost his own serve and eventually the match.
      3) Wimbledon 2010: Against Philipp Petzschner, he called his trainer when 2 sets to 1 down and a break down and on opponents serve! Petzschner said he did not notice a difference in Nadal’s movements before and after the timeouts.
      4) Wimbledon 2011: Nadal calls for a timeout at 6-6 in the first set, just as the tiebreak is due to start much to the annoyance of Del Potro and goes on to win the match against Del Potro.
      I mean Fed couldn't even win a measly 1/3 of the 19 finals that he played against Djokovic - coping about MTO's when there were worse offenders is not going to change that!

  • @deanstevenson1649
    @deanstevenson1649 10 месяцев назад

    Polansky playing pusher against the most solid guy in history. there can be only one outcome.

  • @CHillTennisEntertainment
    @CHillTennisEntertainment 10 месяцев назад

    Maybe the quality of Roger's opponent had something to do with it.

  • @mattjagar6324
    @mattjagar6324 10 месяцев назад +1

    If federer had had a two hander since the beginning of his career he definitely could have been up there with Novak in the discussion for the greatest

    • @thesoccergod
      @thesoccergod 10 месяцев назад +3

      If Fed had played with a two-handed BH, he wouldn't be Fed.
      Besides, he _is_ right up there with Djoko in the discussion, _despite_ having a one-handed BH. Goes to show just *how* good Fed was. (Djoko needed to fluke two wins vs 30+ y.o Fed to even begin to approach 20 slams.) Fed is _easily_ the greatest *player* to ever play the game and one its most prolific winners.
      That's not all. In his physical prime, Fed was *_simultaneously_* the sport's aesthetic ideal, its greatest shotmaker, and its most prodigious winner. The Maestro. 🙏

    • @mattjagar6324
      @mattjagar6324 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@thesoccergod I agree she plays beautifully and is a great guy but how come u downgrade novak? He’s been persecuted his whole career and as soon as he became successful everyone started disliking him 🤷‍♂️

    • @patriciaardila5601
      @patriciaardila5601 10 месяцев назад +2

      Yours is a very good comment to make the point that what makes Federer the GOAT (without having the most titles and records) is precisely the beauty of his game, of which his one-handed backhand, his movement and footwork, and his devastating forehand are above and beyond what every other player has been able to offer. Novak will always have the most of this and that because of his superior competitive spirit, mental strength, and superb defense but his game is not "exquisite."

    • @huzcer
      @huzcer 10 месяцев назад

      @@patriciaardila5601 even Federer didn't trust his topspin backhand ruclips.net/video/qX0U57TUnqQ/видео.html

    • @imkursed7393
      @imkursed7393 10 месяцев назад

      @@patriciaardila5601 That doesn't actually make him the goat tho, it just makes him your favorite player of all time. Ultimately the most objective way to determine who's the goat is to look at raw numbers like majors won, weeks at no 1, masters 1000s won, and cross-surface titles. That last part is what gives djokovic the edge over federer and nadal; the fact that he consistently played the highest levels of tennis across all 3 surfaces. Obviously, federer and nadal were still incredibly good across the surfaces but djokovic had the slight advantage.