The greatest match ever
Yesterday at 9 a.m. I rolled out of bed and poured myself a glass of orange juice and sat down on my couch to enjoy "Breakfast at Wimbledon," as I have for the past 10 years. My hope was that Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer could somehow try and match the greatness of their five-set battle in last year's final.
Seven hours later, glued to our television set in the newsroom, I sat still holding my breath on every defensive slice, forehand down the line and backhand winner at an impossible angle.
What many of us witnessed yesterday was the greatest match in tennis history.
Don't believe a 21-year-old from Western Pennsylvania? Take the word of John McEnroe or Bud Collins. McEnroe, a three-time Wimbledon champion and now tennis commentator, and Collins, a tennis broadcaster and journalist for over 35 years, both agreed that they had watched the greatest match of their lives.
Even ESPN has decided to reshow the match in its entirety tonight on ESPN Classic, and you can watch the match anytime online.
The Federer-Nadal rivalry is the most underrated spectacle in sport today. They have now met in a Grand Slam Final six times, a record that has a great chance of growing, considering the stranglehold they hold on the sport.
When the two meet on court they are able to take their game to a level unsurpassed by men who have come before them. Shots that seem impossible quickly become reality as each player has to hit two or three should-be winners just to get a point.
While tennis doesn't get the same national attention as many other sports, it may hold some of the greatest athletes of this generation.
Federer has dominated the tennis world for the past five years, amassing 12 Grand Slam Titles, including five Wimbledon Championships. Many in the sport say he could be the greatest of all-time.
Federer has been the world's No. 1 player for over 200 straight weeks and his success is comparable to Tiger Woods, except for one major difference. Federer has a rival that can step up his game to compete with and beat him.
Nadal, who may now be the No. 1 player in the world even if the rankings don't say so, gives tennis a quality that every sport desperately needs. He brings the greatest challenge to a player some deem unbeatable.
Yesterday, Nadal dethroned the king and gave people around the world a taste of why tennis is the most fascinating sport around.
When Federer's final forehand failed to get over the net, the two men had finished in 4 hours and 48 minutes, a Championship match record. 4 hours and 48 minutes of the greatest tennis match ever played, and possibly 4 hours and 48 minutes of the greatest championship match ever, in any sport.
