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    • Bravno novace, 6. Titula u sezoni !!! Bravo nezaustavljiv si. Preserecan sam !!!!!!!!!!!!! :d :d :d

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        Pablo Sandoval: A guy can change anything.. his face, his home, his family, his girlfriend, his religion, his God.
        But there's one thing he can't change... he can't change his passion.

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        • Bravo za fotke odlicne su !!!!!

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          • http://www.b92.net/sport/teme/ozmo.p...&nav_id=511000


            To je bio najduži meč u istoriji na dva dobijena seta (četiri sata i tri minuta), a taj poraz veoma negativno je uticao na Đokovića koji je potom ispao u trećem kolu Rolan Garosa, a nedavno je izjavio da je posle čak razmišljao i da se povuče iz tenisa.

            Ne znam za ovu izjavu Tekst je za ocjenu 4-5
            Last edited by notorious; 09-05-11, 14:38.

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            • Drago mi je sto je Novak prelomio u glavi.Nadal i Federer su ucinili da napreduje,da bude bolji.
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              • Originally posted by Vladan View Post
                Drago mi je sto je Novak prelomio u glavi.Nadal i Federer su ucinili da napreduje,da bude bolji.
                I meni je drago zbog Novaka samo neka tako nastavi..

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                • Originally posted by notorious View Post
                  http://www.b92.net/sport/teme/ozmo.p...&nav_id=511000


                  To je bio najduži meč u istoriji na dva dobijena seta (četiri sata i tri minuta), a taj poraz veoma negativno je uticao na Đokovića koji je potom ispao u trećem kolu Rolan Garosa, a nedavno je izjavio da je posle čak razmišljao i da se povuče iz tenisa.

                  Ne znam za ovu izjavu Tekst je za ocjenu 4-5
                  Taj mec je svakako lose uticao na njega i izjavljivao je da je cak i u depresiju upao,ali da je razmisljao da batali sa tenisom nikad nisam cuo...
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                  • Ustvari, rekao je da je doziveo nervni slom, kao i svi mi koji smo gledali taj mec
                    ~ Djoko ~ Fed ~ Nikolay ~ Simon ~ Dolgo ~ Soda ~


                    "Those who overlooked Djokovic don't know anything about tennis" - Fed

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                    • Ма ја га сањам по целу ноћ:
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                      • jedan od komentara na zidu Novakovog FB..

                        novak; you make me, and many others, so proud to be serbian. everyday you represent us with such class and humility and respect. entertaining us with your game and with your humour, we will laugh and cry and celebrate with you. because you have been, and continue to be, a strong, remarkable young man, bringing with you so much positivity and light - something our people have desperately needed. thank you a million times over! only the best of luck for the rest of the season and regardless of result, we will always love you! Све најбоље! Поздрав из Аустралије
                        Originally posted by gokara
                        Valjda ćemo dočekati dan da kloniraju Federera pa da možemo da ne gasimo televizore kad igraju svi koji nisu Federer i uživamo u meču Federer-Federer.

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                        • Gde je Ivanisevic sad da ponovi onu izjavu kako Nole posle Miami-a moze da okaci reket o klin jer stize sezona sljake,cccc.....Jeste da je brza,ali sljaka je sljaka

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                          • Novak je toliko puta dokazao da odlicno igra na sljaci,pa na njoj je odrastao

                            http://novakdjokovic.rs/news.php?akc...d=1136&jezik=1
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                            • What does Novak Djokovic's title mean?

                              Thinking about the way Novak Djokovic handled Rafael Nadal in the final of the Mutua Madrid Open, extending his unbeaten streak to 34 matches and halting Nadal's streak of clay-court wins at 37, I'm tempted to utter those three fateful words: This. Changes. Everything.


                              Notice I said "tempted."

                              Madrid, after all, represented Djokovic's first-ever win over Nadal on a clay court. That would be the same Nadal who ran the table of red-dirt events during the Euro-clay segment last year, the same Rafa who backed up that perfect spring by winning his fifth French Open title in six years.

                              And just how many times has Djokovic won that red-dirt Grand Slam event? None. And Nadal has won 14 Masters Series titles on clay, to Djokovic's one (Rome 2008).

                              What the win does change, though, is the feeling Nadal is well-nigh invincible on clay; that notion was beaten into us by Nadal until it became an underlying article of faith. We decided some time ago there are no answers to the questions Nadal puts to opponents. But Sunday, Djokovic was the one asking questions, and Nadal was the one groping unsuccessfully for answers.

                              Here are five reasons why Djokovic was able to throttle Nadal in straight sets (whoever heard of such a thing!) in a big final without benefit of any mitigating circumstances.

                              1. Djokovic has the momentum: Glorious as the story of Nadal's success on clay has been, let's face it, the saga was getting a little old, perhaps even in Nadal's mind. I mean, every belly eventually fills up, every engine begins to sputter.

                              By contrast, Djokovic is on the upswing. On hard courts during the first quarter of the year, he pulled off exactly what Nadal habitually does on clay in the spring. And just as Nadal's prowess on clay helped give him the confidence to master grass (and, finally, hard courts), Djokovic's winning habit gave him the confidence to look into Nadal's eyes on clay without blinking.

                              2. He's fit: Djokovic often struggled on clay and had a somewhat bizarre assortment of physical problems, including respiratory ailments and allergies. He created the impression that he was surprisingly delicate and could always be worn down. He lacked that iron-man gene that's a requisite for outlasting a player such as Nadal.

                              But Djokovic eventually recognized the importance of comprehensive fitness, and he's been in the best shape of his life this year. He's even embraced a gluten-free diet intended to keep him a lean, mean, stroking machine. It shows.

                              3. Djokovic uses all of his opponent's court: This is a little tricky, but he (along with Juan Martin del Potro) has a way of making his opponent's side of the court look twice as big as his side. That's because he gets great penetration and angles, and with plenty of pace and a fairly flat ball, he stretches the boundaries.

                              Nadal has bewitched us with that vicious top spin of his, especially on the forehand. But no matter how you cut it, radical top spin usually precludes getting great depth on your shot, and because of the exaggerated parabola and comparatively slow speed of the ball, an opponent with the skills of a Djokovic can play from further inside the court and even take the ball on the rise. In other words, he plays on a smaller court, which is by definition easier to defend.

                              4. That backhand: This ties in a little with point No. 3. Djokovic can handle Nadal's forehand with his two-handed backhand and actually push Nadal around it. To really appreciate just how big an asset that is, just think about how much trouble that Nadal forehand always caused for Roger Federer (who hits a one-handed backhand).

                              Nadal seemed bent on breaking down that Djokovic backhand Sunday. Not only did he fail in that, the backhand was Djokovic's most lethal, productive shot throughout the match.

                              5. Djokovic's patience: There were glimmers of this in all of Djokovic's matches with Nadal going back to the U.S. Open final last fall. But it still bears noting. Djokovic is in no great hurry to end the point when he's playing Nadal, yet he's willing to pull the trigger on a placement whenever the opportunity presents itself. He's hit the perfect balance between aggression and opportunism. Many of his peers, and rivals to both men, play as if they feel they have to do too much, too quickly to stand a chance against Nadal. They hear the clock ticking. Not Djokovic, not anymore.

                              Let's see what the next few weeks bring, because it's unlikely Nadal will take this incursion into his kingdom lying down.
                              http://espn.go.com/sports/tennis/blo...vic-title-mean

                              Winning With Calm
                              As he walked out to play the final of the 1980 U.S. Open, Bjorn Borg had won 13 straight five-set matches dating back over four years. By all appearances, the Angelic Assassin, His Iciness, was unbeatable in the game's paramount test of nerve. Appearances were deceiving. That day John McEnroe beat him 6-4 in the fifth. Afterward, the journalist Richard Evans wrote that he believed that Borg, “by the infinitesimal standards by which we judge great champions,” wouldn’t be quite the same again. His aura of silent intimidation had been punctured. Evans was right. McEnroe would overtake him for No. 1 the following year.

                              This spring, while watching Rafael Nadal lose a third-set tiebreaker to Novak Djokovic in Key Biscayne, Evans’ words came to my mind. The situation wasn’t as dramatic, and certainly not as permanent—Nadal isn’t going to retire in a year the way Borg did. But I felt like I had seen something analagous. At a point when I was sure Nadal would win, at the point when he always wins, he lost. He got worse as the tiebreaker went on, while Djokovic, who had succumbed in many close matches like this one to Nadal in the past, was the one who hit bigger and better. It was a hot day, one where you would have expected the old Nole, the physically fragile Nole, to wilt while the old Rafa, the mentally and physically impervious Rafa, ground him down. The opposite happened.

                              On Sunday the scene had shifted to Madrid, but the expectations were the same. It may have been hot in Miami, but this was clay, this was Spain, this was Rafa-time. Again the opposite happened. Again Djokovic won, this time in even more convincing fashion, in straight sets and no tiebreakers. What was most impressive of all, though, and one that must be worrying to Nadal—Rafa was clearly, and rightly, not pleased with the proceedings afterward—was the way in which Djokovic beat him. As usual the Serb dictated the rallies; as usual he controlled points with his backhand and used the down the line to brilliant effect; as usual he was the one playing from farther up in the court. He’s done all of those things in the past, even on clay, in Hamburg in 2008 and Madrid two years ago, and still come out the loser. What was different this time was that Djokovic also beat Nadal at his own game. He won his fair share of the long, grinding, neutral rallies that normally go to Nadal. He won without having to take big risks.

                              This match began with Djokovic knocking off seemingly effortless winners to go up 3-0. He made it look simple. Using his backhand like a normal player’s forehand, he punched the ball cleanly crosscourt into Nadal’s forehand, then took the short response up the line. But that’s exactly the way both the Hamburg and Madrid matches had begun. In those, Nadal was able to weather the early storm, hit his forehand a little more heavily, and eventually move Djokovic farther off the court on his backhand side, making that shot tougher to hit for winners. Djokovic eventually began to net them. This time, Nadal went back at the backhand time and again, but he couldn’t push Djokovic off the baseline or wide of the sideline.

                              Nadal has said that, unlike with Federer, he doesn’t have a go-to strategy. There’s no obvious weaker side, no obvious place to hit, no simple dynamic he can set up and count on. Near the end of the first, after trying to break down the Djokovic backhand, Nadal seemed to have found answer when he switched up on a couple points and sent his forehand to Djokovic’s forehand. He broke serve for the first time. But it was never going to be as simple as hitting the ball to Djokovic’s forehand. That shot is much improved, almost as much improved as his serve. It doesn’t break down the way it could in the past, and today, while his backhand did the majority of the damage, it was his high, heavy, safe crosscourt forehand that kept Nadal pinned back on his backhand side. Just as Nadal likes getting rallies going from his forehand to Federer’s backhand, Djokovic seemed happy to take up his forehand against Nadal’s backhand and wait for something short. Djokovic is consistent enough to wait Nadal out now, something that has rarely, if ever, been true for an opponent of Rafa’s on clay.

                              How to explain Djokovic’s newfound solidity? It’s not as if he’s suddenly been practicing his shots differently. It comes from two things. Being fit enough to hang in rallies and hit the ball as crisply on the 15th shot as you did on the first. More important, it’s knowing you can do that. This make you less likely to pull the trigger early in a rally instead of waiting for the right moment. It was interesting, I thought, that the one time when Djokovic really got upset with himself—and it wasn’t on a crucial point—was when he felt like he gone for an all-out forehand winner too early in a rally and missed it long. Beyond just greater patience, though, this felt like a master class in the Djokovician—he hurt Nadal with his return, he punched his forehand inside-out for winners, he went to the body effectively with his serve, and he covered the court like nobody has since . . . Rafael Nadal.

                              OK, now for the “yes, but,” “ok, sure,” “let’s not get ahead of ourselves,” “don’t overreact to one match,” "you're an idiot if you think Nadal is done," section of the article. I get it. This was Madrid, where the ball flies, the clay is hard, and Nadal has lost to Federer and nearly lost to Djokovic. This is Madrid, where matches are two-out-of-three instead of three-out-of-five, as in Paris. This is also a one-week event, not a two-weeker. Djokovic has shown a tendency in the past to burn himself out by the latter stages of Slams. Nadal knows exactly how to win in Paris, Djokovic doesn’t. And despite his 32-match win streak, there were signs of nerves from Djokovic as he tried to close out the first set.

                              As for Nadal, I thought he stuck with the high, heavy, crosscourt forehand too long and played too far behind the baseline today. (Contrary to popular opinion, though, court positioning often isn’t by choice—sometimes you just keep finding yourself pushed into worse spots. It’s not simply a matter of saying, “Now I’m going to stand closer to the baseline.”) When Nadal has beaten Djokovic, he has stretched him on his backhand side and found the corner up the line with his own forehand.

                              What Nadal also done in the past is grind a less fit and less consistent Djokovic into the dust. Rafa has won the neutral rallies and not made the unforced errors. Today, with a chance to break at 2-2, 30-30, with a hint of hope in the Madrid air, Nadal made two basic backhand errors. A few games later, at match point, the two players engaged in another long, arduous rally. Nadal tried forehands inside-out, forehands inside-in, backhand drives, and backhand slices. Djokovic got them all back, until the point and the match ended with a routine Nadal backhand floating an inch wide.

                              The standards by which we define champions are, as Richard Evans said, infinitesimal, and I’m sure Nadal will be judged a champion by those standards many more times in the future. But that point, and this match, marked the second time in two months against Nadal that Djokovic has taken a signature advantage of his opponent’s—first, the ability to up his level at the crucial moment; second, the ability to win with patience—and made it his own.
                              http://tennisworld.typepad.com/thewrap/
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