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Jon Wertheim: Is Nadal the favorite?
jon wertheim
June 19, 2008
Hi everyone, check back in a few days for a Wimbledon seed report.
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June 19, 2008

Is Nadal the favorite?

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Hi everyone, check back in a few days for a Wimbledon seed report.

OK, Jon, be bold and say it: Having won at Queens, Nadal is the favorite at Wimbledon.

-- Martin Burkey, Huntsville, AL

• Just. Can't. Do. It. A lot of you made similar pronouncements and I think it's a legitimate argument. Apart from winning a title on grass -- beating Dr. Ivo, Roddick and Djokovic in the process -- Nadal is obviously playing at a vertiginously high level these days. And, of course, he didn't merely beat Federer; he humiliated him in Paris. But how about a little respect for a five-time champ? Especially when he wins a tune-up without dropping serve once? We all know about Roger Federer's travails this year. But I say until he's beaten, he remains the Wimbledon favorite, albeit a slim one.

In the interest of Proposition Joe-style consensus building, can we all agree on this: it will be a colossal upset if neither RF nor RN wins.

I recently saw archived footage of Gabriela Sabatini playing Steffi Graf in the 1990 US Open Final, her only Grand Slam win. In measuring differences within the women's game over the last twenty years, how much success (if any) do you think the Sabatini of 1990/1991 would have on today's tour?

-- Stephen Males, Devonshire, Bermuda

• I always feel like it's heresy to hold this opinion, but I don't think Sabatini would be a factor at all. Watch the tapes of women's tennis from, say, the late 80s or early 90s, and it's almost comically different from the game being played today. It's like the old football clips with the players wearing leather helmets. As I think I mentioned a few weeks ago, Tracy Austin supposedly weighed 85 pounds when she won her first U.S. Open. Could you imagine that today? Jelena Jankovic always complains about how small she is and she's listed -- and we know how under-reported those figures are -- at 130 pounds. Likewise, Sabatini threw in serves that traveled at 39 miles an hour. Can you imagine what Ana Ivanovic would have done with those? Whapppp. I think Graf holds her own in any era. Sabatini? Not so much.

I reviewed the draws at the Nottingham tournament and was surprised to see Janko Tipsarevic and three other players with higher rankings in the qualifying rounds while Bobby Reynolds, ranked nearly 60 places lower, was accepted directly into the main draw. Is this a function of late applications to play landing higher ranked players in the qualifying rounds? How does that work?

-- Robert Webb, Dalton, Georgia

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