j-far wrote:Well I disagree with the part that Hewitt peaked in an era void of competition because he came into the limelight when both Sampras and Agassi had a little bit left in them and he defeated Sampras to win a US open title. There were other noteworthy players during that time including Pat Rafter, Philippousis, Nalbandian, Ferrero, Tim Henman, who should have won a Wimbledon title for all his talent and Kuerten etc, who lived under Sampras' shadow.
Also Roddick's accomplishments do not come close to what Hewitt accomplished in his prime like being the youngest to be named world #1 and maintaining it for like 75 weeks. Also his performances for Australia in the Davis Cup are far more impressive than Roddick's.
Equating Roddick's failure to win grandslams to Federer's influence would be as misleading to say as Ivanisevic winning more than his solitary WImbeldon had it not been for Sampras' presence. Ivanisevic like Roddick and Safin was a highly talented player with a fiery attitude and lack of mental focus to make the most of his abilities, while Hewitt always channeled his intensity the right way.
You probably don't remember it, but when I say Hewitt's peak coincided with a lull in the men's game, I'm not diagnosing in retrospect. When it was happening it was frequently stated that men's tennis was in between eras, and that Hewitt was the type of talent who would undoubtedly get surpassed when others in his age bracket reached their peak.
Your statement of Hewitt's accomplishments of "youngest to #1" and "75 at #1" to me are classic misunderstanding of what makes a player great.
For the "youngest" part, if two players play 6 matches, and Player A wins the first 3, does that mean he accomplished more than Player B? No. There's no difference with youngest to #1 if the youngest to #1 can't keep it up.
For the "75 weeks", I've seen this a lot on RealGM and it always boggles my mind: Being #1 is not some additional accomplishment beyond the tournament victories that led to it. Being #1 at time A isn't necessarily more impressive than being #X at time B. Case in point: If you look at the ATP Point races, Nadal's #2 finishes slaughter Hewitt's #1. So very clearly, Hewitt only finished #1 because the competition for #1 was a hell of a lot weaker, which means that the competition for the points in tournaments at that time was weaker.
As far as Davis Cup, I won't speak to that. I don't factor that in to my evaluations, but I've got no objection to you doing so.
Your statement about "channeling intensity" is just strange. Take a look at the numbers I listed before. They are virtually identical for god's sake. If you compare those two numbers with Safin's you'll find that Safin doesn't look anything like Roddick in the patterns of his success. Roddick's not a Safin, he's a Hewitt: Often getting to the quarterfinals, rarely winning.