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Post Info TOPIC: Wild Cards


All-time great

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RE: Wild Cards


A131 that's a hardline to take, it's hard enough getting young people into tennis seeing some young people transition overtly as opposed to covertly is a more than acceptable use of 128th of Wimbledons resources and then only if they are good enough. If not a QW is more than enough. The nationality here isn't relevant and it's good for tennis full stop.

I am biased, very biased that's why I am on this forum but (so are the organisations running all of the slams) and would still like to see even a beaten finalist in the Wimbledon draw if they were British and good enough. Frankly the buzz as it stands is too short and not in anyway loud enough. It's all about generating an exciting tournament that people will watch.

I question your understanding of the adult ranking process which unless one translates to juniors as a 16 year old gives a male player little or no chance of making Wimbledon or any slam the year after winning the juniors unless goodness gracious that outstanding young players gets some wild cards to get them into challengers and 250s to score the points quick enough. No wild cards in reality means a year of futures. Not facilitating transition of the best young players in this way to the main tour is counterproductive, awarding a wildcard for winners is also a way of making sure all the best juniors are in the Junior slams.

More than happy to accept your stance if we can make everything else equal, the first A131 challenge would be 8hrs of sunshine for 9 months of the year in some part of The UK mainland. That would put British juniors on an equal footing.

After that please take over the LTA and the All England club, I am sure you would get unanimous support.

I don't think the present system disenfranchises anyone. The very best get to play each other in London at the end of the year, wild cards don't impact that.

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Oakland2002 wrote:

A131 that's a hardline to take, it's hard enough getting young people into tennis seeing some young people transition overtly as opposed to covertly is a more than acceptable use of 128th of Wimbledons resources and then only if they are good enough. If not a QW is more than enough. The nationality here isn't relevant and it's good for tennis full stop.

I am biased, very biased that's why I am on this forum but (so are the organisations running all of the slams) and would still like to see even a beaten finalist in the Wimbledon draw if they were British and good enough. Frankly the buzz as it stands is too short and not in anyway loud enough. It's all about generating an exciting tournament that people will watch.

I question your understanding of the adult ranking process which unless one translates to juniors as a 16 year old gives a male player little or no chance of making Wimbledon or any slam the year after winning the juniors unless goodness gracious that outstanding young players gets some wild cards to get them into challengers and 250s to score the points quick enough. No wild cards in reality means a year of futures. Not facilitating transition of the best young players in this way to the main tour is counterproductive, awarding a wildcard for winners is also a way of making sure all the best juniors are in the Junior slams.

More than happy to accept your stance if we can make everything else equal, the first A131 challenge would be 8hrs of sunshine for 9 months of the year in some part of The UK mainland. That would put British juniors on an equal footing.

After that please take over the LTA and the All England club, I am sure you would get unanimous support.

I don't think the present system disenfranchises anyone. The very best get to play each other in London at the end of the year, wild cards don't impact that.


 

Point 1) re "little or no chance of making Wimbledon or any any slam the year after winning the juniors" -  they certainly have by way of qualifying and with a Q WC if required. A131's stance and mine is about Slam MD WCs. They also can anyway have advanced up the rankings by non Slam WCS ( MD and Q ), which brings me to ... 

Point 2) "No WCs in reality means a year of futures" - No, my stance on MD WCs is specifically with regard to Slams, I believe this is the case with A131 too. Certainly, below masters level anyway, up and coming players do often need WC help to progress and I also think WCs for local players to draw more attention, crowds and income are also understandable, not really generally so for Slams so making them have the best ranked for direct entry could and in my view should prevail.

This is very much about Slam tennis being the absolute elite level of the sport as to why we think rankings should prevail for direct entry, say basically ranks 1 to 112, but that others can come through qualifying with Q WCs available to special up and coming players and indeed some for the host nation. And yes I ( and I am sure A131 ) very much know how rankings work generally, that they are not some whole truth, particularly for up and coming players, and the dificulties for such players to advance with out WCs. Hence my understanding of lower level WCs ( including MD ) and giving such players the chance to get into Slams via qualifying.

Thinking A131 and I may need to have our general thoughts, which are pretty similar, certainly with regards to Slam MD WCs,maybe differing in some other details, pinned somewhere to save us and others time with wrong assumptions from some and repetition from us. Though I am quite happy, time permitting,  to bore people into understanding, if probably not agreement 

I'm not remotely expecting Wimbledon or any other Slam to act unilaterally in dispensing with MD WCS. But I have discussed the generalities of Slam MD WCs and other WCs ) for 2 or 3 years on this forum, have understood various points, many that come up quite often, but all things considered I personally remain firm of the view that the elite Slams should not have MD WCs.



-- Edited by indiana on Wednesday 27th of May 2015 02:55:25 PM

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ATP qualifying

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One of the main gripes about WCs seems to be the unfairness for those who just get pushed out of slams by the process.  However, in the majority of cases those players have benefitted during the year from WCs in their own countries in Challengers and/or ATP events usually making their ranking rise faster during the year than might otherwise have been the case.  I don't know about the other 3 slam nations, but that's an advantage the LTAs competition schedule does not really afford to our home grown players.  If they had those WC opportunities during the year, maybe some of our own players would progress more quickly.

I don't have very strong feelings re WCs although probably like them rather than not. It's like when a LL does well, there's sort of a romance to it.

Ducking back behind the parapet now .....



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I'll join you there. I do like wild cards.

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All-time great

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Me too and I am prepared to listen reason however, you still haven't sorted out the weather! Once you have done that the LTA and all England club may begin to take you both seriously.

Allowing wild cards elsewhere is I am afraid bending the rules and weakens the meritocracy argument, because it's based around the cream rising to the top ummmm. And indeed it does which is the beauty of a slam, the truly elite if on form get to play out against each other in the second week. Roland Garos wouldn't have the atmosphere it does without the large local contingent of players and the thrills and spills they generate in the first week, I'm sorry those outside the top 32 are not elite enough to generate an audience. There is a massive skill gap between 32 and 112 much less so between 100 and 250 where now many 26-30 yr old journeyman lie, I want to see the young stars flying through, given an opportunity to test themselves against the best in qualifying and even the elite in the second round if they are good enough.

By all means if you want to see Carlos Berlocq ( 32) clash with Menendez-Maceiras (29) you settle down with A131 and enjoy very much the sediment of your so called elite.

I'd much rather be watching Andrey Rublev the guys ranked (208) and he's panned Niemenen, Carreno Busta ( twice) and Verdasco ( but not our Kyle) in the last few months, and in nowadays would be out of place in the MD here, but destined for the top.

I know you both know all this so why not get the blinkers off.

The creams already risen your system to coin a phrase I've just heard from a 9 year old and I'm sorry if it's a bit harsh she has a potty mouth "an epic fail"

Indi please post immediately under your diatribe to those new to the Wild card debate.



-- Edited by Oakland2002 on Wednesday 27th of May 2015 04:06:11 PM

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Hmm, I shall return here tomorow ...

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I'm going to be non-theoretical here and look at the RG wildcards (men only, time being limited).

Kokkinakis? Hard to argue against it. Would have been in on ranking anyway if the cutoff had been a little later - and who isn't looking forward to his next match?
Tiafoe? Didn't do so well, but in a sense this was his first shot and as per comments above, I think there were a number of people who were quite glad to get a chance to see what the fuss is about.
Halys? Good for a youngster - and he did surprisingly well against Nadal. Will have enthused the home supporters.
Hamou? A bit of a revelation, that one. Again, it enthused home supporters quite a lot.
PHM? Close to the cut-off ... didn't get such great results ... but it was a wretched draw.
Nicolas Mahut? 3rd round and ecstatic crowds for an ever-popular player who again was close to the cut-off anyway. (Smiles)
Pouille? Pushed Simon hard, and clearly has a lot of promise. Again, great for local supporters to get a good view of his progress.
ERV? Again, as with Mahut, he was so close to the cut-off point anyway ... and he did win the doubles last year.

Yes, if they hadn't been there, Mr Ward (for example) would have been a DA. And yes, as a fan of Mr Ward, I would have liked that. But I can't really find it in me to begrudge the three French youngsters, the three French veterans, and the US/Australian youngsters their day in the sun. And if I were an event organiser, I'd really favour an array like these WCs: They have great story lines. It's fun as a spectator to see crowds engaging so enthusiastically. It makes the event more lively and exciting, and builds local support.

That said, from a player's point of view - not the same as an organiser's - I can see the equity issues involved. And even from an event organiser's view, I think that the caveat has to be that WCs need to be people who will make for a competitive match. Watching players get drubbed doesn't actually do a lot to create "buzz."


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Oakland2002 wrote:

Me too and I am prepared to listen reason however, you still haven't sorted out the weather! Once you have done that the LTA and all England club may begin to take you both seriously.

Allowing wild cards elsewhere is I am afraid bending the rules and weakens the meritocracy argument, because it's based around the cream rising to the top ummmm. And indeed it does which is the beauty of a slam, the truly elite if on form get to play out against each other in the second week. Roland Garos wouldn't have the atmosphere it does without the large local contingent of players and the thrills and spills they generate in the first week, I'm sorry those outside the top 32 are not elite enough to generate an audience. There is a massive skill gap between 32 and 112 much less so between 100 and 250 where now many 26-30 yr old journeyman lie, I want to see the young stars flying through, given an opportunity to test themselves against the best in qualifying and even the elite in the second round if they are good enough.

By all means if you want to see Carlos Berlocq ( 32) clash with Menendez-Maceiras (29) you settle down with A131 and enjoy very much the sediment of your so called elite.

I'd much rather be watching Andrey Rublev the guys ranked (208) and he's panned Niemenen, Carreno Busta ( twice) and Verdasco ( but not our Kyle) in the last few months, and in nowadays would be out of place in the MD here, but destined for the top.

I know you both know all this so why not get the blinkers off.

The creams already risen your system to coin a phrase I've just heard from a 9 year old and I'm sorry if it's a bit harsh she has a potty mouth "an epic fail"

Indi please post immediately under your diatribe to those new to the Wild card debate.



-- Edited by Oakland2002 on Wednesday 27th of May 2015 04:06:11 PM


 

 A new day ...

"diatribe" ???? -  really  ??  not in my understanding of the word, just putting forward, I think quite pleasantly, a point of view.

"patronising" though is one word that sprung to my mind about parts of the above and previous.

Anyway back to the discussion / debate :

Allowing WCs in most tournaments is not "bending the rules" at all. What rules say that we must have WCs in all tournaments or not at all ?  You and others have put forward good points regarding the need for WCs for players to progress forward and also to provide local interest ( yourself initially seeming to think that I and A131 were against WCs much more generally ).  I just don't believe that that necessity really holds at Slam level, with the more local interest to me outweighed by the fact that I think Slams should be reserved for the highest ranked and qualifiers ( clearly at many tournaments the more local interest has a lot to do with just getting folk in through the gates and managing to generate some income, not an issue at Wimbledon, though I accept that many of the swarms who do fill up Wimbledon would like to see Brits ). The players have a chance to progress through other tournaments, with WCs helping speed this up for the young up and coming, and still are most certainly not denied entry to the the Slams, by way way of qualifying WCs for the brightest up and comers not yet ranked high enough for direct entry to qualifying. I simply believe that the greatest, most prestigeous tennis tournaments of all should be by ranking or qualifying and not include freebees. 

I have no "blinkers" on this. I absolutely understand that I have a minority opinion on this and that most folk would prefer to see British or better known foreign WCs compared to the general player around WR 100. Most often I find myself in the majority, here in the minority, c'est la vie. Should I thus not put forward my view that the Slams should not have MD WCs and just shut up and fall into line ? Sorry ( not really ) but that's what I believe, have believed for years and continue to believe.

I have also been involved in discussion on this over the years and certainly in this forum been accorded rather more respect than I've at times seen recently ( that's a great general thing about this forum ). Most people have disagreed and I have respected and generally understood opinions such as that they and many / most others would prefer to see MD WCs at Slams and particularly Brits at Wimbledon. Many have acknowledged that they certainly see where I and occasional folk of much the same opinion are coming from, but just have their own preference. 



-- Edited by indiana on Thursday 28th of May 2015 01:12:05 PM

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Hi Indi,

I would agree with you entirely that some of the above comments directed at you and A131, about controlling the weather and so on, are completely unnecessary and unhelpful.

Apart from that, I do understand what you're saying; I just think you're wrong, with respect.

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Tennis legend

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Thanks, wimdledont, I certainly needed to sleep on that reply.

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wimdledont wrote:

Hi Indi,

I would agree with you entirely that some of the above comments directed at you and A131, about controlling the weather and so on, are completely unnecessary and unhelpful.

Apart from that, I do understand what you're saying; I just think you're wrong, with respect.


A belated thank you from me Wimdledont - I realise we don't agree on some issues but I appreciate your comments above. Please continue to feel free and say if you think I/we are wrong.



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indiana wrote:

Thanks, wimdledont, I certainly needed to sleep on that reply.


Well done Indy - I did start a reply to Oakland but had to abandon it. I must admit I was a left a bit bemused shall we say when reading his comments last night - especially about the weather - really struggling to see what that had to do with anything. 



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Not sure I want to revive this bunfight - but I came across an excellent blogpost -

www.sportdw.com/2014/03/tennis-solving-problems-wildcards.html

- "excellent" in the sense that I agree with almost all of the writer's opinions. (Also it has some interesting, informative figures.)

Where I differ, and still differ with indy and A131, and others, is in making a special category of Grand Slams, and not of Premier events, which actually offer almost indistinguishable levels of ranking points (on the WTA side at least) to early round losers.

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All-time great

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I am sorry I didn't mean to cause offence by bringing the weather into it. The intention was humour not hubris.

There are lots of things that influence the capacity of a nation to develop an elite tennis culture, having a climate that facilitates out door activity, and in this case tennis year round is obviously a massive advantage we don't have.

The playing field is not level in many respects, we do have a couple of things in our favour and running the worlds best slam is one of them, wildcards allow us to promote the best UK tennis talent, indirectly support them financially and so grow the game. The press in the UK focus on tennis other than Andy for two weeks a year, wildcards alllow indegenous players and uk tennis exposue.

The utilization of wildcards is one thing we can control and as we saw today the vagaries of the weather are beyond the control of all. My point, though put obtusely and I did not mean to be patronising, was merely we should be selfish in the name of UK tennis and I am in favour of wildcards for many reasons but one is it gives UK tennis an advantage.

I appreciate everyone is entitled to a view and I can see the meritocrity argument. For many sports that draw big crowds at a number of levels i would conceed it is a good argument. I just think for grand slam tennis when there are 128 1st round slots it holds little weight when balanced against the advantages and added value to the first week of any slam. Before the true elite players get to slug it out in the second week.

I am presently recovering from Indy and A131 bringing down a large sheet of metal on the back of my head while innocently warching the tennis at RG earlier this week. Although very disappointed with Indi's and A131 s efforts and would question boths commitment to the forum due to their inability to control a puff of wind and a light shower thereby keeping Andy on court and an inevitable victory tonight.

 

very poor show! 



-- Edited by Oakland2002 on Saturday 6th of June 2015 12:20:21 AM

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Good, let's all be friends again, and reserve any animosity, bred from the regular under-performance of our individual faves, for the enemies of UK tennis excellence, such as the LTA.

I do think the writer of the blogpost above has some excellent suggestions about "wildcards". The quote marks because an "earned wildcard" isn't really a "wildcard", is it? More of an "automatic qualification".

Win Junior Wimbledon - get an "automatic qualification" to Wimbledon MD next year. Win Roehampton Juniors Grade 1, get an "automatic qualification" to Eastbourne, next year.

Winning Roland Garros girls '14 turns out to be entirely meaningless for Kasatkina. Whereas winning Wimbledon girls '14, if it gets Ostapenko an MD WC, is worth $50k, and a chance to break into the WTA top 100, if she wins a few matches. Chance of a lifetime. Therefore, Wimbledon is better than RG; the UK is better than France.

Similarly, on the ITF women's tour...

Win a 10k ITF, get an "AQ" to any 25k-50k ITF, of your choice. Win a 25k ITF, get an "AQ" for any $75k+, of your choice.





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