Mogspan wrote:Upon defeating Carlos Alcaraz in a thrilling 2-set Olympic Final, Novak Djoković secured both the gold and his status as the objective GOAT of tennis.
Record 24 Gland Slams
Only player to complete triple Career Grand Slam
Record 40 ATP Tour Masters
Only player to complete Career Golden Masters, which he has done twice
Superior Head-to-head record against every other contender
Olympic gold medal in Men’s Singles
May the doubt rest in peace.
So since we're seeing responses to this that make clear that it's basically impossible to become "Undisputed" in this day and age, I'll chime in:
I aesthetically prefer Federer to Nadal and Nadal to Djokovic, but at this point I agree Djokovic is the clear cut GOAT in my eyes.
I consider Federer:
- The best ball-striker in the history of tennis.
- The most graceful ball-striker in the history of tennis.
- The player with the game to dominate across all eras of equipment above all others.
- The greatest career grass court player in the history of tennis.
- The highest peak grass court player in the history of tennis depending on court conditions - the less court friction, the more he stands out.
- The 2nd greatest career/peak hard court player in the history of tennis.
- Quite possibly a Top 5 clay court player in the history of tennis.
- Arguably the great self-driven tennis intellects of all time.
I consider Nadal:
- The greatest career/peak on clay in the history of tennis.
- The mentally toughest player in the history of tennis (which is really tough competition).
- At least a Top 10 all-time player on grass and hard court.
But at this point, none of that gives them a serious argument for GOAT over Djokovic in my eyes.
What gives Djokovic the edge?
Well over Nadal it's pretty straight forward: He's better at everything than Nadal except playing on clay
The conversation with Federer is more interesting. I'll emphasize:
- Djokovic is a better traditional athlete than Federer.
- Djokovic is has a better body for the modern tennis era because his height, length & flexibility make him better able to handle extreme spin from his opponents.
- Djokovic is mentally tougher in-match. Federer's more likely to get tight.
Finally, relating to the "better body" thing:
One of the tragedies of the modern big-spin era is that it damages the utility of the one-handed backhand, because a one-handed backhand has a narrower wheelhouse band than a two-handed one, and this makes it so that instead of the ideal height for a one-handed backhand to be a Federer's height (6'1"), to bit taller than that. Given where the game has gone, someone with Federer's limited height should probably be focusing on a two-handed backhand.
Why do I consider it a tragedy? Because the one-handed backhand is the most aesthetic shot in the game and the two-hander is one of the ugliest. It is what it is. Competitive advantage only follows aesthetics to a point and then diverges.