U.S. Open Series: Is it Serious?

The Serbians. Ana Ivanovic and Novak Djokovic. This Sunday's big winners on the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour and the ATP Tour. Ivanovic finishes off with a big victory and moves to seventh on the U.S. Open Series point chase with more to come. Djokovic moves into first place on the men's side just ahead of American Andy Roddick. Fellow Serb Jelena Jankovic bows out to Ivanovic in the semis in Los Angeles. This is turning out to be the summer of Serbs.

Djokovic has been very interesting to watch. Steadily rising in the ranks since the beginning of the year, his main losses came only at the hands of current world number one Roger Federer in Australia and twice to world number two Rafael Nadal in Paris and at Wimbledon. A tall, young player with huge power, Djokovic is everyone's favorite to soon win a major tournament. He was to the semifinals at Roland Garros and at Wimbledon, proving that even at the age of 20, he can perform on the big stage.

Now with his win in Montreal against Federer, he sits at number three in the ATP rankings, just ahead of Andy Roddick in both the regular rankings and in the 2007 ATP points race. With two more tournaments to play before the U.S. Open, he appears headed for no worse then a number three seed in Flushing Meadows and looks like the player to beat.

Federer has looked out of sorts to date, even though he lost 6-7, 6-2, 6-7 to Djokovic. Federer dominated every statistical category in the match, but squandered set points in the first and could not sustain the second set romp into the third. The Serb has looked consistent, steady, and more so with each passing match. Djokovic won the Rogers Cup by defeating Andy Roddick, Nadal, and then Federer. An amazing achievement, as no one has taken out the top three men's players in the world in successive matches in a single tournament since 1994. Djokovic has two victories over Nadal this year, and the surface at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center should suit his game well.

Ivanovic has been sitting on the cusp most of the year. She probably benefited by the withdrawal of Maria Sharapova in the semis of Los Angeles, but she has also been performing well on the bigger stages. Making the final at Roland Garros and the semis at the Big W showed she is ready for the next step. Sitting at number four in the world and number three in the 2007 race just behind her Serbian sister, Jankovic, she is beginning to look like the woman to watch on the WTA Tour and is improving with each week.

Jelena Jankovic remains the most consistent player on the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour this year as she has failed to make the round of 16 or higher only once and has a win over Maria Sharapova included in her performance. More of a workhorse then a spectacular player, Jankovic continues to quietly rise in the rankings. Jelena is the first Serb to ever qualify for the year-end Tour Championships in Madrid and with Justine Henin is also the first to qualify on the tour for the season-ender.

So little Serbia has had a great run this year. I'm giddy. But where are the Americans?

Nowhere to be found. American tennis is bad. Not as bad as a Vince Spadea rap, but not far from it (when I refer to a Spadea rap, bad means bad, not bad as in tough cool). Roddick's ranking doesn't seem to reflect how one-dimensional his game is nor how inconsistent he has been. James Blake sits at number eight in the world, but that is based more on his performance of last year than his accomplishments (or lack thereof) on court this year. Twenty three in the 2007 race, Blake is all but done for the year, having to withdraw from the Rogers Cup and having little time left to make a serious run at the points standings.

The women's side is just as dismal. The announcement that Lindsay Davenport will return to the tour in a limited capacity in New Haven doesn't brighten the picture much. Serena and Venus Williams continue to be the only American women in the top 40 and their play has been very limited this year. The former "American Anna Kournikova," Ashley Harkleroad, sits in the top 100, but is no longer a serious threat. Meghann Shaughnessy and Laura Granville are the only other players of note even near an automatic seed in a major tournament.

Tennis is truly the international sport, well ahead of all the others, and I'll say even ahead of soccer or if you live outside of the U.S., football (or futbal, if you speak Spanish.) Unfortunately the biggest media market for tennis is still the U.S., and without a U.S. presence consistently in the top of the game and without a U.S. player to follow on television, there is little interest here. A check of the top news outlets in America today showed that tennis wasn't on the front page of any paper, and there was barely a mention of it even on most websites. Tiger Woods' 13th major was the main story for most of the papers. Understandable, as he is consistently on the top, is a figure of Michael Jordan proportion, and he gets a ton of media attention.

The USTA's idea to create a U.S. Open Series has been hailed as a great achievement. It was supposed to bring excitement to the U.S. Open and create a meaningful reason for media outlets and Americans to follow tennis over the summer leading to the Open in September. It was a great idea on paper, but it hasn't yielded the results they had hoped in the mainstream media and it hasn't been a factor in getting the top players to enter all the events. Since its inception, only one series champion, now officially a Jersey girl, Kim Clijsters, has claimed the top prize and the bonus money.

Tennis is a great game, and the quality of the men's and women's games have never been better. There are great stories everywhere, very positive for sports. Yes, gone are the days of Jimmy Connors, John McEnroe, Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi, Chris Evert, and Billie Jean King. It's a shame. You would think that tennis in the U.S. died with them.

The rise of the Serbians in professional tennis is a credit to the U.S. and our involvement in the civil war that tore the former Yugoslavia apart a decade ago. With the war still going on in Iraq, America could use a good news story. With the state of U.S. tennis, we could use a good news story. The media (other than me) should cover this. Instead, we get Michael Vick and Barry Bonds.

Comments and Conversation

August 14, 2007

Fotja:

“The rise of the Serbians in professional tennis is a credit to the U.S. and our involvement in the civil war that tore the former Yugoslavia apart a decade ago.”!!!!!

OHHH MYYYY GOOOODNESS!!…..no coment

August 14, 2007

k:

How allowed this idiot to write. Wrong on all acounts, that last paragraph was pathetic. And HELLO, the Williams sisters have won 2 of the 3 Major Grand Slam played this year, aren’t they American enough for you.

August 15, 2007

Brando:

The rise of the Serbians in professional tennis is a credit to the U.S. and our involvement in the civil war that tore the former Yugoslavia apart a decade ago. With the war still going on in Iraq, America could use a good news story. With the state of U.S. tennis, we could use a good news story.
This is how to spoil good article…..Ask Iraq people what they think about any good news story… Sad, sad…

August 15, 2007

VV:

“The rise of the Serbians in professional tennis is a credit to the U.S. and our involvement in the civil war that tore the former Yugoslavia apart a decade ago. With the war still going on in Iraq, America could use a good news story. With the state of U.S. tennis, we could use a good news story.”
This is a daring statement in a VERY bad way. I cannot believe this went to print. The “rise of the Serbians” is due to their very, very hard work, enthusiasm and passion for the sport! The players in question started their training at a very early age in Serbia - even though they now train abroad, it is certainly not the US who should be credited for their successes.

August 15, 2007

Tom Kosinski:

I clearly know and understand that the Serbians have worked their butts off and deserve as much credit for getting to where they are as we can give them.

However, having actually been in the former Yugoslavia during the Milosevic years, and seeing first hand children orphaned and scrambling for scraps of food and shelter, had the US and its allies not taken action the area would still be a mess. Most likely none of these young ladies, and possibly even the men would have made it out. Djokovic would probably have a uniform on and would be shooting an AK-47 instead of wielding a Wilson, and Ana and Jelena might still be huddled in a blown out building.

I appreciate the points of view here. I am always glad to see that the tennis fans are independent thinkers, read articles and provide great feedback. Thanks for reading my column. I look forward to hearing from more of you.

August 15, 2007

Tom Kosinski:

Note for the readers, especially Brando:

I just returned from a couple of months in Iraq. I have spent many nights with the Iraqis, and even got a chance to see how hard they are working to keep their tennis club active and going.

I know that the Iraqi people would agree with me on most points.

Tom Kosinski
Sports Central

August 15, 2007

Karalala:

Comments such as the US is responsible for the success of the Serbian Tennis players is perhaps correct. For Serbs will never quit, never give up, even when bombed unjustly, or in part occupied as Kosovo is today. As far as Kozinki’s comment about Serbia when Milosevic was in power, well, these poor kids were a result of US involvment being Murdered, beaten, raped and driven out from thier ancestral homes by US supported quasi states. Spare yourself the at’a’boy, for you and your kind are very guilty of mass murder and many war crimes!

August 16, 2007

VV:

In all honour Mr Kosinski but “had the US and its allies not taken action the area would still be a mess” - the US bombed us down in the first place. Yes, we had Milosevic and he certainly was not good for the country. But by no means did the country deserve to have bombs dropped on them…. The civilians suffered because of the US intervention. They did not benefit from it. But perhaps we should just congratulate the youngsters and leave the political dimension out at this moment of time.

August 16, 2007

Zeka:

What the US has taught these kids is that the the world is an unjust place and they have to work hard to get where they want to be. You can keep your bombs, they have done more harm than good. While Serbia gives you Djokovic, Ivanovic and Jankovic, you give us Barry Bonds, Michael Vick and Kobe.

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