Such a high bar too.Unreal talent and actually a very funny guy.
People give him far too much stick for my liking. Wrapped up in this whole idea that sports people should always be chipper and happy and play up to the media is BS for me. He was as a fact one of the best British Tennis Players EVER........big loss to the sport.
He’s a top bloke.Must admit it took me a while to warm to him. He does come across much better now and seems like a genuine nice person.
he stuck at it during a time of some of the real greats of his sport and won when others would have given up.
Well done in your achievements on and off the courts.
It really says a lot when you think about how wealthy is and how physically hampered he is that he put in a 4 hour shift after going 2 down. I’ve seen lesser but fitter players phone it on at 2 down.Unreal effort
Unreal talent and actually a very funny guy.
People give him far too much stick for my liking. Wrapped up in this whole idea that sports people should always be chipper and happy and play up to the media is BS for me. He was as a fact one of the best British Tennis Players EVER........big loss to the sport.
I think switching would take too long, and you’d have to do it every time the ball was on the opposite side of the court to truly practice the strokes to the same degree.I've been thinking about this for a while. In football, being "two-footed" is a clear advantage, yet I've never seen a tennis player switch the racket into his other hand. Must be an incredible advantage to be able to play mostly forehand?? More power, longer reach etc.
I play badminton myself, and badminton is too fast to make that work, but in tennis it should be possible. Any thoughts?
I don't think it would. Many players use both hands for backhand strokes. Would not take much more time to switch from right to left/left to right. Think it would be a powerful weapon if you surprised the opponent with a forehand, when he'd expect a backhand stroke.think switching would take too long
That's their no claims bonus gone.
...and next year’s premium fudged.That's their no claims bonus gone.
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