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As an aside, anyone notice how talk has gradually shifted from "Big Four" to "Big Three?" Poor Andy. Anyhow, here's a chart that depicts just how good the Big Three have been, as a group, for decade and a half. These are all the big titles from the first appearance by one of the Big Three (Federer in 1999) to the present, through Roland Garros. It is color-coded by the best result by one of Federer, Nadal, or Djokovic, with wins in dark green, finalist in light green, semifinalist in orange, quarterfinalist in yellow, and pre-QF in blue.
It is rather striking just how dominant they've been. Notice that from 2004 to the present, there have only been three Slams (of 62) in which one of the Big Three was not in the finals: 2004 Roland Garros, 2005 Australian Open, and 2014 US Open. That means that since 2005 RG, one of the Big Three has been in 56 of 57 Grand Slam finals.
The other big titles are also quite dominated, but not as much - especially over the last few years.
[GALLERY=media, 70]Big Three Best Results by El Dude posted Jun 15, 2019 at 6:16 PM[/GALLERY]
OK, got it to insert.
It is rather striking just how dominant they've been. Notice that from 2004 to the present, there have only been three Slams (of 62) in which one of the Big Three was not in the finals: 2004 Roland Garros, 2005 Australian Open, and 2014 US Open. That means that since 2005 RG, one of the Big Three has been in 56 of 57 Grand Slam finals.
The other big titles are also quite dominated, but not as much - especially over the last few years.
[GALLERY=media, 70]Big Three Best Results by El Dude posted Jun 15, 2019 at 6:16 PM[/GALLERY]
OK, got it to insert.
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