Lucian86 wrote:beltic caldy wrote:Kudos to Rafa though - as already said, I can't think of many (any?) other players that would have kept playing in that situation.
Oh my ! Kudos for what ? Staying in court ? did you enjoy the match after he came back from the locker room ? I didn't
Whether he was injured or not, was all this necessary ?:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhTm5oCkTvE#t=0
MOANING, CRYING, TOUCHING and let the whole world know that he's injured. What's the consequence ? Wawrinka won but there will always be a "Yeah, but...."
Want to be classy and respect the crowd and the opponent ? stay quiet about it. He was doing ok in the first set...Could have continued like that. He was doing ok even before going to the locker romm. When he came back, he somehow started to feel the pain. I repeat, I don't know how injured he was but I know he made a good act in there.
Do you see the guy in my avatar ? Played last year a lot with back pains and we never found out until he told us between tournaments. That's how you respect the tennis fans and most of all, your opponent.
I don't want debating about did he respect crowd, opponent, TV networks or the Pope continuing to play yesterday instead of withdrawing.
Nonetheless, it can be said that he did not continue just to allow Wawrinka to win his first GS in a regular way instead of thanks to retirement. No, he continued because one the one side he's a big fighter, and on the other side, he knew that he was playing a guy who never had beaten him before, a guy who was only playing his first GS final at 29, and, more than everything, a guy who was known for a long time for having big difficulties to end his games. Then he certainly said to himself he had chance to win though he was hurt since 2-0 at the second set. It was near to work, as Wawrinka lost set #3, playing future tournament game level, and when Waw lost his serve at 4-2 in 4th set, making an horrible game, as he was so close to win. Fortunately, Stan overpassed all these things and finally won. But can we really say yesterday we had a brightening example of so-called Nadal "incredible" sportmanship ? I'm not so sure...