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ATP - Janko Tipsarevic

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  • Originally posted by delgado View Post
    da budemo precizniji , jos 3 finala
    Zaboravio sam Delrej Bic.

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    • Ready...;)
      sigpic

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      • Igrace on ovaj master, ubedjen sam ;)

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        • E igrace stvarno Janko u Londonu i sutra se nadam pobjedi a drugi mec u grupi protiv Noleta ce vec malo teze ici ali ko zna...

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          • Janko je konacno pobjedio Noleta ............i bilo je vrijeme, danas je stvarno bio bolji u 2 i 3 setu......Janko ne ide u polufinale ali dobija 200 poena a to ce mu biti odlican pocetak u narednoj sezoni BRAVOOOOOO IDEMOOOOO

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            • Bravo za Janka koačno se desilo ,kada je izgubio prvi set ja sam mislio da će i skorz da padne ali ne on dva odigra fino i pobjedi baš mi je drago,čestitke navijacima.
              http://a6.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot...46811721_n.jpg
              Samo je jedan čekanja vrijedan - Roger Federer!

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              • Hvala na cestitkama

                Nekako ne mogu da se radujem Jankovoj pobjedi kao kad je pobjedjivao Rodika, Monfisa Berdiha, Mareja, Bagdatisa... ne mogu da ne pomislim da mu je Nole prepustio mec ali opet Nole je igrao jos losije protiv Ferera pa je vjerovatno njegova forma na tom nivou i ispada da je Janko ipak zasluzeno pobjedio

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                • Ma naravno da ga nije Nole pustio.

                  Janko majstore,svaka cast!!!
                  Jedan je Obradovic Zarko!

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                  • Nema sanse da ga je pustio, zasluzena pobeda, BRAVO JANKO !!!!!!!!!

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                        • A na Maldivima izgleda ovako....gospođa Tipsarević



                          A sada pogledajte kroz prozor.
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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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                          • The Last Word: ATP No. 9, Janko Tipsarevic


                            Best of 2011
                            Tipsarevic won two titles in 2011, and while that first one is always tough—and special—he backed up that breakthrough win in Kuala Lumpur (d. Marcos Baghdatis in final) with a terrific performance in Moscow, where he bowled over three Russians in a row (in order, Igor Kunitsyn, Dmitry Tursunov and Nikolay Davydenko) before topping countryman Viktor Troicki for his second career title.


                            Worst of 2011
                            We know how much the Serbs care about Davis Cup, so it was a low point for Tipsarevic when he failed to win the second singles rubber in Serbia’s first-round World Group clash with India way back in March. Tipsarevic lost to Somdev Devvarman—on Serbia’s court, no less—in straight sets; it was the only rubber Serbia lost that weekend.


                            Year in Review
                            Tipsarevic will be the first one to tell you that Novak Djokovic, his countryman and good friend, more or less shamed him into finding deeper motivations and greater ambitions. The end result was an outstanding year in which he reached five finals.
                            Although he started the year with a semi at Chennai, Tipsarevic lost his way and didn’t get back on track until he made the final of Delray Beach (l. to Juan Martin del Potro). It was Tipsarevic’s third unsuccessful ATP final of his career, and soon he added a fourth at Eastbourne (retiring against Seppi). But in lock-step with Djokovic, Tipsarevic continued to pick up the pace, and in late August he became a Grand Slam quarterfinalist for the first time in his career (U.S. Open, retiring against Djokovic).
                            Tipsarevic made his big move in the fall. He was 13-4 from Kuala Lumpur through the Paris Masters, adding another runner-up finish (St. Petersburg) to his two tournament wins.


                            See For Yourself
                            Share Janko’s long-deferred moment of glory—his first ATP tournament win—and note how he likes to take the ball on the rise and hit relatively flat with a lot of pace. And check out the role the off-speed sliced backhand played in his match game.





                            The Last Word

                            It was a career-year for Tipsarevic; he even got to play two matches at the ATP World Tour Finals (as an alternate replacing Andy Murray). He has an electric game, but will need to be super-fit and injury-free to take it to the next level.

                            http://www.tennis.com/articles/templ...15351&zoneid=9

                            Ja bih rekla da mu worst of 2011 bio poraz od Huta Galunga...

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                            • Mali osvrt na Jankov napredak.


                              Most Improved: Janko Tipsarevic

                              It’s no secret how Serbia’s No. 2 feels about his country’s No. 1. Janko Tipsarevic has talked many times about how “lucky” and “honored” he is just to be able to watch his Davis Cup teammate Novak Djokovic compete on a regular basis. So it hardly seems like a coincidence that No. 2 would rise at the same time that No. 1 did. Tipsarevic wasn’t just honored to be around Djokovic in 2011, he was inspired by his example as well.
                              Tipsy has always been a talent, an athlete, a ball-striker, a dangerous opponent if his head is straight. But at 5-foot-11, he’s also never been physically imposing, and to make up for it he’s played high-risk tennis. Not surprisingly, he’s been inconsistent—one day he can stretch Roger Federer to five or beat Andy Roddick atWimbledon; another day he can cave under pressure, as he did in last year’s Davis Cup final (before No. 1 rescued him).
                              But 2011 was different. Granted, the 27-year-old Tipsarevic began the year where he seemed to belong, at No. 49, and didn’t do a whole lot over the first half of the season—he lost in the second round in Melbourne, the third in Paris, and the first at Wimbledon. But once he reached U.S. hard courts, things turned around. In August, Tipsarevic made the semis of the Montreal Masters, cracked the Top 20, and reached the quarters of the U.S Open, where he retired after a highly physical four-setter against Djokovic. There was little to separate Serbia’s No. 2 and No. 1 through the first two sets, each of which went to tiebreakers.
                              Success bred success, as Tipsarevic finished the season by winning his first two career titles, in Kuala Lumpur and Moscow. He’d come a long way, far enough to reach the Top 10 for the first time, and far enough to be named the first alternate at the World Tour Finals. When Andy Murray pulled out, Tipsarevic got his chance, and his reward. He made the most of it by entertaining a London crowd that had come to see their countryman, and by getting his first win over No. 1. Proving you belong with the best: The perfect way to finish a career year.
                              —Steve Tignor
                              http://www.tennis.com/articles/templ...15397&zoneid=9

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