In the last few years there really has been a shear decline in the standard of Nordic tennis. I believe Nordic tennis was all about touch and grace, and since the racket technology and sweet spots, and the advent of the huge hitting baseline game in the 00s, nordic tennis players have become and endangered species. Speaking to many swedes and keeping a close eye on swedish media, the decline has baffled them. In other sporting declines, for example such as the west indies cricket team, much of this as been attributed to the uprising of football. I also do not draw any parallels to the recent Australian slump in tennis(before tomic et al), whilst they lacked the grand slam winners, such as hewitt, and laver, cash et al, they still maintained a good amount in the top 500.
Stats from 1995, players in the top 500 of the world
Denmark 3
Finland 3
Iceland 0
Norway 1
Sweden 28
Today
Denmark 1
Finland 1
Iceland 0
Norway 0
Sweden 3
-- Edited by Vandenburg on Sunday 22nd of May 2016 03:53:45 PM
By Nordic tennis you really mean Swedish tennis as the other nations have never had a significant tennis tradition. What is shocking about the decline of Swedish tennis is not the lack of top players but lack of run of the mill journeymen players ranked anywhere between 50 and 500.
Elias Ymer is of course a potential star of the future for Swedish tennis while 17 year old Casper Ruud of Norway will soon enter the top 500 and looks like a fantastic prospect.
Amongst lots of factors that played some contribution, I am informed that for Sweden it is essentially easy to understand: The massive growth and prestige of, especially, Ice Hockey, and to a much lesser degree, the same with Skiing (and other Alpine/Winter events).
Easier to get in to, less competitive and as a median, much more rewarding than tennis. Also football, but in less consistent fashion - peaks and troughs.
The massive boom in Swedish Ice Hockey fanaticism - for men, as though you don't state it explicitly, that is de facto your scope - began (I am told by a fanatical Ice Hockey Swede) after their World Championship in 1987, and has continued until the present day drawing away competitors in many other sports. With Sweden's men's team thereafter often being world #1 and rarely outside of the top 4, and adding in the two Olympic golds, numbers of Swedes have exploded in worldwide hockey leagues including the super lucrative NHL.
Thanks to my friend Thobias for this info - and a lot more on the subject besides; which I won't bore you with here
I think for Finland Ice Hockey is probably a good fit too, though not so much for Norway and Denmark. For Norway, skiing is probably a factor, as they are, by head of population, simply astoundingly successful at it.
Yes, some of the present Ice hockey gods are Swedish and indeed Finland punches well above its weight, the Cechs and Slovakians (The tennis world should.be happy that Chara picked up a stick not a racket!) make a similar arguably greater contribution to the NHL but are still knocking out some quality tennis players. The swedes had some fantastic years however their greatest player Borg wasn't the inspirational role model that Martina has been.