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Mark Philippoussis - A Critiqueby Jim McLennan Mark
Philippoussis successfully defended his Sybase Open title on February 13,
with a three set victory over Mickael Tillstrom. Philippoussis punctuated
the match, as well as the tournament with a 137 mile ace on championship
point. He has assembled quite a game, and appears poised to crack
the top ten if not higher.
Phil
has a real chink in the armor here. He plays well behind the baseline, and
varies his play between crosscourt and down the line, without any
discernible pattern. Some of his biggest forehand drives were played 10
feet behind the baseline, when the available hitting angle was smallest.
He varied his returns between crosscourt and down the line, but I never
could tell when or why.
Taking
a page from Tom Stow (Larry Stefanki who coaches Kafelnikov was trained by
Stow, Scott McCain USTA player development was trained by Bill Crosby a
Stow protégé) the return should be driven crosscourt to get into the
point, and driven down the line when coming in behind the return. Tillstrom
has an attackable second serve (and I can readily imagine Sampras or
Agassi standing well inside the baseline, Sampras approaching, Agassi
ripping) yet Philippoussis rarely assembled an offensive shot sequence. Pressure
on the second serve places pressure on the opponents disposition when
serving. When under pressure, things crack. Presently Phil has
a long way to go here. From
where I sit, Philippoussis has a run at the absolute top of men's tennis
when he learns the nuances of playing the ball earlier, and constructing
points from inside the baseline. Presently, he gives up far too much
ground (and sacrifices hitting angle) and appears to hit the ball rather
than play the game. Summarizing his play during the week, he
acknowledged “getting through” in his first match. Absent an attacking
game, which is far different than having big shots, he will have to
rely on getting through rather than getting over. |
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