Last
season, it was really hard to believe and witness the rise of another Roger
Federer so soon after Federer himself. The Australian Open is the first
opportunity for Novak Djokovic to prove all the doubters wrong, who still don’t
believe in his ability after one of the best season’s we have ever seen in the
sport finishing with a 70-6 record including wins at the Australian Open,
Wimbledon, and the U.S. Open. The crazy thing is that Djokovic told the media
earlier this week that he wants to have a better
season than last year.
Djokovic
is one of the many big story lines coming into the event, but among the draw (http://www.australianopen.com/en_AU/scores/draws/ms/r1s1.html)
are other compelling story lines. Can Roger Federer rebound in 2012 and add another
title to his record-breaking 16 Grand Slam championships. Was last year a
decline for Federer? Or what condition is Rafael Nadal’s body in heading into
the first big tournament of the year? His shoulder has been bothering him the
last few weeks, but he feels it is not any problem. (http://www.sportinglife.com/story_get.cgi?STORY_NAME=tennis/12/01/12/TENNIS_Australian_Open_Nadal.html)
Another question people always ask is, where are the top four in the draw? This
year the draw is completely different from any major in recent memory. If the
draw holds form, Djokovic and Andy Murray will meet in the semis and Federer
and Nadal will meet in the other semi, which hasn’t happened at a major since
the 2005 French Open.
The Draw:
First Quarter
Djokovic
will use his first few matches to see were his game is at and test his fitness
level early in the year. He doesn’t face any sort of threat until Radek
Stepanek in the third round, Djokovic has won his last five matches against
Stepanek. Andy Roddick poses some weapons against Djokovic, but Roddick hasn’t
played a match in a couple months. As mentioned in the previous post, Milos
Raonic has the game to make a big run in the tournament and he is in this
quarter. The quarterfinal matchup will most likely be Djokvic against world
number 5, David Ferrer of Spain. Ferrer should be able to take a set in that
quarterfinal match, but Djokovic’s game will wear down the Spaniard.
Second Quarter
This
is Andy Murray’s quarter to win, but he will have an extremely tough opening
match against teen American Ryan Harrison. This quarter doesn’t have the depth
of great players compared to the other ones, but they have two of the most athletic
players in the game. Frenchman Gael Monfils is the most entertaining guy in the
sport to watch right now and he has played a lot of long matches in his career.
If Monfils can engage in long rallies with Murray in the possible round of 16
encounter, he has good chances to pull off the upset. The other guy is
Jo-Wilfried Tsgona also of France, Tsgona has had great success in Australia in
the past finishing as the runner-up in 2008. Other than Monfils and Tsonga,
there should not be any other dangerous foes for Murray besides his first round
test with the young Harrison.
Third Quarter
This
is the most talented quarter with the likes of Mardy Fish, Juan Martin Del Potro,
Alexandr Dolgopolov, Sam Querrey, Bernie Tomic, Fernando Verdasco, Jurgen
Melzer, Ivo Karlovic, and of course Roger Federer. There are two first round
matches I really like in this quarter, the hometown teen favorite Bernie Tomic
against one of the top Spanish players Fernando Verdasco and then the
aggressive playing Jurgen Melzer of Austria against the tallest player in the
game Ivo Karlovic at 6’11.
Federer
missed the warm up tournament in Doha last week but it isn’t a big issue. He
doesn’t have any challenging opponents until Verdasco in the fourth round, but
Fernando has never beaten Roger before. What might help Federer most are his
opponents. The highest ranked American Mardy Fish will have to face a dangerous
player in Juan Martin Del Potro in the fourth round with the winner to see
Federer. You can basically pencil in Federer’s name into the quarterfinals
because he has been to the quarterfinals in his last 30 Grand Slam appearances.
I wouldn’t be surprised if Fish or Del Potro made it to the semis beating
Roger.
Bottom Quarter
Rafael
Nadal, like his fellow top seeds, should be able to find his range early from
the draw he has. His first big test will come in the fourth round against
either John Isner, David Nalbandian, or Nikolay Davydenko. Rafa will probably
be rooting for someone else to get to the fourth round instead of the American
Isner, who nearly took out Nadal in the French Open last year.
Tomas
Berdych, the Czech, is on the other half of this section and I feel he has the
only shot in this draw to take out Rafa other than Isner, however, Berdych hasn’t
had much success against Nadal in majors over his career.
PREDICTIONS:
Semifinals: Djokovic over Tsonga; Federer over Nadal
Final: Federer over Djokovic

Great job going over each quarter.
ReplyDeleteWow these seem very accurate! Guess I will have to wait till the actual Open. The "superstars" are now facing newer opponents whose skills are pormising.
ReplyDeleteIt looks like the matches this year are very competitive, i can't wait to watch them.
ReplyDeleteI can tell that you've really put a lot of time and effort into this article and it turned out really good. It all seems accurate and i like the fact that you've gone over every quarter separately.
ReplyDeleteI feel as if im reading an actual sports magazine. Good work ben.
ReplyDeleteWow this article really shows that you know what you are talking about me and makes me want to watch the matches!
ReplyDeleteThis is a knowledgeable article, I learned a lot about tennis
ReplyDeleteI agree with the semifinal prediction, but not the final, I think Djokovic will win the championship.
ReplyDelete