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By "blood-bath" I mean a wild and woolly season, with no clearly dominant player and lots of upsets, and perhaps some surprise title winners.
I hate to say it, but I suspect that a decade from now, 2017 will be viewed as the last year of Fedal dominance - maybe even the last year that any of the Big Four are clearly dominant. I do think that Roger and Rafa could win more Slams (if I were to guess, I think they'll win 2 or 3 more between the two of them, maybe 4-5...so 3 is my best guess...but with those two, who knows?). Let me explain.
Roger and Rafa aren't getting any younger, and both show signs of injury concern. Roger was nigh unbeatable in the first half of 2017, but something seemed off come grass season. Now he cruised through Wimbledon, but I'm not sure how he would've fared against a healthy Novak or Andy. As for Rafa, he had a great year as well but wasn't unbeatable and had a fair amount of good fortune with draws.
Now consider: Novak and Andy will be back. We don't know at what level, but they'll be back.
Consider also: There will be a very strong "second tier," with not only a developing Zverev, a peaking Dimitrov and now Goffin, a hungry Thiem, a resurgent del Potro, Cilic, a healthy Raonic and Nishikori, etc.
One more: Next Gen is getting closer and closer. Kyrgios is an elite talent who is always dangerous; what happens if he finds himself a coach that can handle his tempestuous nature? Rublev, Shapo, Tiafoe, Khachanov, Medvedev, Chung, Coric, Tsitsipas, etc...all are improving. Maybe none are ready to challenge the elites in 2018, but by year's end some should be pushing for spots in the top 20, and maybe one or two the top 10 by 2019.
2017 could also be viewed as the beginning of the sea change that we've been waiting for for a few years.
Despite it being dominated by Fedal, it wasn't dominated by the Big Four, with several new big title winners. Consider that in 2016, all 15 big titles were won by players born between 1985-88 (Wawrinka, Nadal, Djokovic, Murray, and CIlic). In 2017, we had a range of 1981 to 1997 (Federer, Nadal, Dimitrov, Sock, Zverev). More importantly, it was the first year in which a player born after 1988 won a big title, and this year there were three: Dimitrov, Sock, and Zverev.
So as we end 2017 and look to 2018, there are a few overlapping questions:
*Will the Big Four Hegemony re-assert itself? How will Djokurray come back? How much more do Fedal have in them? Will Stan re-claim his spot in the expanded Big Five, or start slipping like his fellow 1985ers (Berdych, Tsonga)?
*Is late 2017 a sign that Lost Gen is now able to step up and compete for Slams?
*Will any among Next Gen join Thiem and Zverev in the (near) elite?
In other words, you have two clusters of questions: those about the older generations and those about the younger. What kind of year we'll have in 2018 will largely be determined by how these two clusters play out in relation to each other. We could see a Big Four renaissance for another year or two, or we could see their hegemony crumble quicker than we thought. Or, as I suspect, somewhere in-between: with a "Wild West" context that I've been predicting (wrongly) for a few years now. Maybe 2018 is the year...
I hate to say it, but I suspect that a decade from now, 2017 will be viewed as the last year of Fedal dominance - maybe even the last year that any of the Big Four are clearly dominant. I do think that Roger and Rafa could win more Slams (if I were to guess, I think they'll win 2 or 3 more between the two of them, maybe 4-5...so 3 is my best guess...but with those two, who knows?). Let me explain.
Roger and Rafa aren't getting any younger, and both show signs of injury concern. Roger was nigh unbeatable in the first half of 2017, but something seemed off come grass season. Now he cruised through Wimbledon, but I'm not sure how he would've fared against a healthy Novak or Andy. As for Rafa, he had a great year as well but wasn't unbeatable and had a fair amount of good fortune with draws.
Now consider: Novak and Andy will be back. We don't know at what level, but they'll be back.
Consider also: There will be a very strong "second tier," with not only a developing Zverev, a peaking Dimitrov and now Goffin, a hungry Thiem, a resurgent del Potro, Cilic, a healthy Raonic and Nishikori, etc.
One more: Next Gen is getting closer and closer. Kyrgios is an elite talent who is always dangerous; what happens if he finds himself a coach that can handle his tempestuous nature? Rublev, Shapo, Tiafoe, Khachanov, Medvedev, Chung, Coric, Tsitsipas, etc...all are improving. Maybe none are ready to challenge the elites in 2018, but by year's end some should be pushing for spots in the top 20, and maybe one or two the top 10 by 2019.
2017 could also be viewed as the beginning of the sea change that we've been waiting for for a few years.
Despite it being dominated by Fedal, it wasn't dominated by the Big Four, with several new big title winners. Consider that in 2016, all 15 big titles were won by players born between 1985-88 (Wawrinka, Nadal, Djokovic, Murray, and CIlic). In 2017, we had a range of 1981 to 1997 (Federer, Nadal, Dimitrov, Sock, Zverev). More importantly, it was the first year in which a player born after 1988 won a big title, and this year there were three: Dimitrov, Sock, and Zverev.
So as we end 2017 and look to 2018, there are a few overlapping questions:
*Will the Big Four Hegemony re-assert itself? How will Djokurray come back? How much more do Fedal have in them? Will Stan re-claim his spot in the expanded Big Five, or start slipping like his fellow 1985ers (Berdych, Tsonga)?
*Is late 2017 a sign that Lost Gen is now able to step up and compete for Slams?
*Will any among Next Gen join Thiem and Zverev in the (near) elite?
In other words, you have two clusters of questions: those about the older generations and those about the younger. What kind of year we'll have in 2018 will largely be determined by how these two clusters play out in relation to each other. We could see a Big Four renaissance for another year or two, or we could see their hegemony crumble quicker than we thought. Or, as I suspect, somewhere in-between: with a "Wild West" context that I've been predicting (wrongly) for a few years now. Maybe 2018 is the year...