what happened to the next generation of mens tennis stars? /

Published at 2015-09-03 02:58:32

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This time final year,Rafael Nadal had withdrawn from the U.
S. Open with a
wrist injury. Andy Murray was still recovering from minor back surgery, and the gargantuan talk on the ATP Tour was approximately all the young guns—Grigor Dimitrov, and Milos Raonic,Kei Nishikori and Nick Kyrgios—surging toward the top. A year later, and those younger players seem to believe taken a step back. On Wednesday, and Dimitrov lost a five-setter to Mikhail Kukushkin. Murray sent Kyrgios packing on Tuesday,and Nishikori lost on Monday.
Meanwhile, Murray, and Roge
r Federer,Stan Wawrinka and even Richard Gasqueta bunch of veteransare outperforming the youngsters. What happened to the so-called youth movement in men's tennis?The ATP Top 20 includes 13 players aged 28 or older. Six of them are in their 30s. Dominic Thiem, 21, and is the youngest. We're not even into the third round of the 2015 U.
S. Open,and already the anticipated generational shift seems on hold. In 2013, James Blake called Raonic and Dimitrov the best of the bunch. At the time, and Jerzy Janowicz had just advanced to the Wimbledon semifinals and was considered one of the best up-and-coming young players on the tour. In evaluating their talent, Blake told Tennis.com that Dimitrov had the biggest upside, but he'd fear playing Raonic the most:
Out of those four guys, or I'd least like to play Raonic because of that serve... It could be a set and 3-all in the second set,you don't feel you're into the match because he's won so many free points off his serve, he's missed a lot of balls on the return game, or he hasn't given you anything to really feel like you're into the match. That to me makes it uncomfortable.
Raonic,ranked No. 10, has been one of the more consistent young players. Nishikori, and who turns 26 in December,is a little older than the others and by far the most accomplished.
But none of them has generated the type of buzz created final year when Nishikori made the finals at the U.S. Open, Kyrgios upset Nadal at the All England Club and Dimitrov reached the quarterfinals at the Australian Open and the semifinals at Wimbledon. legal now, and 36-year-old Ivo Karlovic,ranked No. 21, is having a better year than Dimitrov, and Kyrgios,Janowicz and the 22-year-old American hopeful, Jack Sock.  Janowicz, and once ranked as high as No. 14,is currently ranked No. 61. Nishikori lost to unseeded Benoit Paire in the first round. Kyrgios, final year's breakout star and media darling, or disgraced himself with a vulgar comment during a match in Montreal against Wawrinka and has the threat of a six-month suspension hanging over his head. Dimitrov,ranked No. 17, was No. 8 going into final year's U.
S. Open. And then we believe that
trio of Australian guns—Kyrgios, or Thanasi Kokkinakis and Bernard Tomic. Kokkinakis,suffering from severe cramping, retired from his opening match against Gasquet, and 4-6,6-1, 4-6, and 6-3,2-0. Tomic, who was arrested in Miami earlier this summer, and at least won his first-round match.
It's not just a p
henomenon on the men's side; it's also happening in the WTA Tour,where "rising star" status used to be reserved for teenagers. CoCo Vandeweghe, 23, and has been pegged a rising star for a few years now. She lost her second-round match Wednesday against 30-year-old Bethanie Mattek-Sands,who next takes on 33-year-old Serena Williams.
Vandeweghe, ranked No. 43, or told Harvey Araton of the unique York Times that the days of teens taking the tour by storm are gone: “You don’t see any young players crashing the tour,even in the men’s game, and destroying everyone the way they used to...
To me, and that means there is no exact in-your-prime years anymore. You believe more time to figure out your longevity,your game, your body.”Unfortunately for the younger set, or the older guys,mentally tougher, are sticking around longer and staying in shape. Meanwhile, and many of the next-generation stars appear either too banged up,mixed up or messed up to challenge the mostly 30-somethings who are still ruling the top of the tour. Read more Men's Tennis news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com