Mon Nov 23, 2009 4:00 pm EST
As the decade winds down, Busted Racquet will celebrate the past 10 years of tennis with various top 10 lists. We get things started today with a look at the 10 best matches of the 2000s.
10. Andre Agassi d. Marcos Baghdatis, 6-4, 6-4, 3-6, 5-7, 7-5, second round, U.S. Open, 2006
It's the match so grippingly detailed in the opening pages of Agassi's autobiography "Open". With Agassi serving at 4-4 in the final set, the pair played an eight deuce game in which the eighth-seeded Baghdatis had four break points. Agassi held, and went on to win. Later, as they laid on the training room waiting for medical attention, Agassi and Baghdatis watched the replay on SportsCenter with their hands clasped together. It was the last match the eight-time Grand Slam champ would ever win.
9. Venus Williams d. Serena Williams, 6-2, 6-4, final, U.S. Open, 2001
The match itself was forgettable. The moment was not. In the eight years since Venus and Serena played in their first Grand Slam final together, it's become easy to take for granted how amazing it is that two sisters meet so frequently to decide major tournaments. In 2001, nobody did. The first all-Williams Grand Slam final was a major event that happened to coincide with the first time the women's final was played in prime-time. It generated huge ratings and was a seismic event for the game, even though the tennis was mediocre, at best.
8. Fabrice Santoro d. Arnaud Clement, 6-4, 6-3, 6-7 (5), 3-6, 16-14, first round, French Open, 2004
At 6 hours, 33 minutes, it's the longest match in tennis history. Play was suspended for darkness on the first day after four-and-a-half hours. Clement had two match points (one on each day), but Santoro held at 13-14 in the fifth and went on to win three straight games. For his part, Clement didn't care too much about setting a longevity record, saying, "what do I get, a medal?"
7. Goran Ivanisevic d. Patrick Rafter, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 2-6, 9-7, final, Wimbledon, 2001
In a rare Monday final, the 125th-ranked Ivanisevic bombed it out with No. 3 seed Patrick Rafter. There were big double faults, untimely unforced errors, foot faults and racquet-throwing, but the combination of the different crowd and tense action made it an unforgettable match. John McEnroe called it the greatest Wimbledon final he's ever been a part of, but I'm starting to realize he says that a lot.
6. Jennifer Capriati d. Martina Hingis, 4-6, 7-6 (7), 6-2, final, Australian Open, 2002
In her third, and final, Grand Slam victory, Capriati continued her storied comeback by besting Hingis in an epic final in Melbourne. After dropping the first set, Capriati went down 0-4 in the second and faced match points at 4-5 and in the tiebreak (four in all). Hingis never recovered from the meltdown (literally -- it was 107 degrees on the court) and lost the third set without much of a fight. Capriati became the first woman since 1962 to win a Grand Slam after facing match point in the final.
5. Roger Federer d. Andy Roddick, 5-7, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (5), 3-6, 16-14, final, Wimbledon, 2009
Lengthy? Yes. Great? Well, yes ... But not that great. In our rush to celebrate every great sporting event as the "best ever", this match took on epic proportions solely because of its epicosity. (Not a word? It should be.) Though it was close, one never got the sense that Roddick could ever actually win the thing. Federer's serve was so crisp as the match progressed that it would have felt like a miracle if he got broken. Throw in the fact that the two biggest points of the match were won because of horrid Roddick unforced errors and there's your No. 5 ranking.
4. Venus Williams d. Lindsay Davenport, 4-6, 7-6 (4), 9-7, final, Wimbledon, 2005
Bud Collins described the match thusly:
"More female bang for the bucks had never been seen in this arena. Two ladies in white were red-hot blasters. Witnesses would treasure what they'd watched during a chill, glum afternoon. Their go-for-broke shot-making illuminated the gray sky."
What he said.
3. Justin Henin-Hardenne d. Jennifer Capriati, 4-6, 7-5, 7-6 (4), semifinal, U.S. Open, 2003
Truth be told, we could have added one more Capriati match to this list too (her 2001 French Open win over Kim Clijsters), but this late-night affair earned the vote for best women's match of the decade, even though it was only a semifinal. Capriati, at the tail end of her career, battled it out with the diminutive Belgian for a record three hours and three minutes. She served for the match at 5-4 in both of the final two sets and was two points from victory a whopping 11 times. All night she yelled at umpires, demonstratively celebrated points and exchanged classic rallies with Henin-Hardenne. When it finally ended, at 12:27 a.m., the women could barely make it to the net to shake hands.
2. Pete Sampras d. Andre Agassi, 6-7 (7), 7-6 (2), 7-6 (2), 7-6 (5), quarterfinal, U.S. Open, 2001
Before the fourth set tiebreak, the crowd at Arthur Ashe Stadium gave the two American stars a standing ovation, an appreciation of both the match (nobody broke serve through 52 games) and the greatness of the champions on the court:
1. Rafael Nadal d. Roger Federer, 6-4, 6-4, 6-7, 6-7, 9-7, final, Wimbledon, 2008
It was, quite simply, the greatest match of all-time.
Busted Racquet is a tennis blog edited by Chris Chase. Email him, and follow him on Twitter.
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112 Comments
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Federer vs Nadal Rome final 2006. One of the best matches to ever be played on clay
Nadal winnin 6/7 7/6 6/4 2/6 7/6
And Safin defeating federer Aus open 2005 final. THat was so epic
and Nat O your comment on the author. Federer didnt even play in the 08 Aus open final. Youre thinking 09 Buddy
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Hope you are watching this!
How sweet it is :-)
I saw the match, you did too I'm sure, right?
This is why we are Pistol Pete fans, right!!
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I appreciate the effort you took to include women's tennis too, maybe it wouldve been better to create separate lists?
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Kick out of the list that drug junkie Agassi, he's shame for this sport (or any other)
And how can you any ladies match ever compare with mens matches? Those are two worlds.
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And the Nadal d. Federer Aussie final in '08? Maybe not a bad list overall when looking at the last ten years, but then you forgot your own ten-year time limit and ended it with the "all time" nonsense, which reflects that you're still a wet-behind-the-ears 24-year-old who doesn't know much more about tennis than you do about writing. I can't wait for your internship on Yahoo sports to end."
Nadal and Aussie final in '09, you mean. This mistake clearly reflects you know nothing....right? That's how these assumptions work, right? Did I nail it?
"Maybe not a bad list overall when looking at the last ten years" - yeah, newsflash, a decade means 10 years, so it was pretty redundant of you to say this. You're saying the list is good, but only for the last 10 years, which is THE ENTIRE POINT OF THE LIST. And because he hailed the #1 match of the decade as the greatest of all time, you assume he "forgot" the time limit? As if something that happened in the past ten years couldn't (god forbid) possibly be the greatest of all time? And you can tell his age and scope of tennis knowledge from the fact he agrees with *MANY* people that it was the greatest tennis match of all time? Wow, you must be a genius. It boggles my mind that you could have forgotten when this memorable Australian Open Rafa/Fed final happened.
Just do yourself a favor, stop acting like an elitist jackass (you're doing it wrong, anyway) and let some love and joy into your life.
Seacrest out
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How soon you forget!
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What I didn't like was this comment:
"Though it was close, one never got the sense that Roddick could ever actually win the thing. Federer's serve was so crisp as the match progressed that it would have felt like a miracle if he got broken."
Really? Were you saying that when Roddick was up 15-40 on Federer's serve late in the fifth set? And why would you say it took a miracle for Federer to get broken, when it was Roddick who went the entire match (37 straight service holds!!!!!!!) without getting broken? Maybe it was a miracle that Federer finally broke Roddick.
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What I didn't like was this comment:
"Though it was close, one never got the sense that Roddick could ever actually win the thing. Federer's serve was so crisp as the match progressed that it would have felt like a miracle if he got broken."
Really? Were you saying that when Roddick was up 15-40 on Federer's serve late in the fifth set? And why would you say it took a miracle for Federer to get broken, when it was Roddick who went the entire match (37 straight service holds!!!!!!!) without getting broken? Maybe it was a miracle that Federer finally broke Roddick.
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just want to comment as well on some other posters, suggesting matches in the 80's and the 90's. the list is for the best matches of the decade. so, from 2000 and above.
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I know you have to have some semblance of parity and political correctness but you couldn't pay me to watch Jennifer Capriatti or the Williams sisters.
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And, the quality of the play that had completely become in a slump due to the sickness and injury in 2008 fell into Federer, too.
Roger now is really the reign over the king
Roger Federer is an all-time best player
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