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Submit ReviewEpisode 299 (almost there!) brings us to Andrey Rublev's first Masters title with his win over young menace Holger Rune. Medvedev & Zverev fire a few shots at each other, culminating in Daniil's clear 'we are not friends and keep my wife's name out of your mouth' moment. We talk about the WTA's decision to suspend their boycott and return to China, despite the Chinese government failing to meet the WTA's demands. Plus, a very depressing injury update, a few more thoughts on 'fairness' and what trans exclusion means for cis women, and celebrating the trans excellence of Sasha Colby, winner of RuPaul's Drag Race season 15.
1:15 Ruby wins his first Masters title!
10:20 The testy exchanges between that guy and Medvedev: “Look at yourself in the mirror”
17:45 Grigor and Andrey besties ❤️
22:45 Stuttgart so far: the fourth straight Krejcikova-Sabalenka match, Badosa rising, and an impromptu QUIZ!
33:00 WTA decides to return to China: they took a big swing on the boycott but didn’t get much solidarity
42:55 Blue Check Novak Djokovic playing in the Djokovic-owned Srpska Open but he is not enjoying the conditions
45:15 Quick bites: Conchita-Garbiñe split, horrible injury news followed by encouraging injury news
51:00 The Zendaya-Guadagnino tennis film is guaranteed to be wild
52:30 An addendum to last episode’s segment on trans inclusion: the trap of ‘fairness’
59:40 Sasha Colby wins Drag Race, rightfully!
Rain across the Southern US nearly derailed a few tennis tournaments this weekend, but Ons Jabeur and Frances Tiafoe held on to win Charleston and Houston, respectively. We chat about the early clay season, Naomi's post-baby goals, and some updates on Wimbledon, Carlos, and Iga. For a good chunk of the episode, we take on Martina Navratilova's escalating takes on trans athletes, and more broadly, trans women. How did this expand past trans women's participation in sport to a more generally exclusionary worldview? What will it take for the tennis establishment to say something?
0:35 Don’t count out Ons Jabeur just yet!
7:55 Frances Tiafoe makes it through the rain, wins career title #2
12:25 Other first-week clay events: Casper, Tatjana Maria, Dominic Thiem
16:20 Naomi Osaka’s recent interview on Japanese TV had everything; injury updates
21:10 Plus: updates from Wimbledon on their policy change on Russian and Belarusian players; a few huhs(?) and a surprise from Del Potro
Trigger warning: this is tough subject matter and there is some coarse language to follow
28:10 Martina’s history and evolution on the subject of trans women: the infamous 2019 op-ed, the apology, the Women’s Sports Policy Working Group, and their misleading “facts vs feelings” rhetoric
37:05 It’s become about much more than “protecting women’s sport” - what type of womanhood is authentic?
45:50 “LGB” is a lie
49:20 It’s been time for tennis to say something
Our Miami champs – Kvitova and Medvedev – underscore how tough it is to win the Sunshine Double. Petra Kvitova completes one of her most unexpected tournament runs by winning her 30th WTA title and ninth at the 1000 level. On the men’s side, Daniil Medvedev caps an astonishing run of tournaments with title #4, and Alcaraz and Sinner’s electrifying semifinal gets widespread attention. We've also got Eubanks, Gauff/Pegula, a decision from Wimbledon, and Pouille's openness about mental health.
01:35 So much rain, so much discourse
05:25 Petra wins title #30!
16:15 Barbie K says WTA Big 3 is fake news!
18:55 Yes, Sinner vs. Alcaraz is becoming a really good rivalry
27:35 Medvedev turns his whole trajectory around these past few months: 4 titles in 5 tries
30:50 Chris Eubanks makes his career-best run and enters the top 100
34:45 Between Gauff, Pegula, and Townsend (and more!), American women’s doubles is lit
38:20 Wimbledon will allow Russian & Belarusian players who sign neutrality declarations
42:20 When is Rafa returning?
44:20 Lucas Pouille opens up about depression, substance use, and learning humility
We’re coming to you mid-Sunshine Double, which at this point is more like Sunshine Month? Sunshine Quarter? Anyway, pack your SPF. We’re seeing storylines emerge for the year: is there a WTA Big 3 emerging? Who else will join that top tier? Is Carlos poised to dominate? Will the racquet talk? Beyond the tennis being played, we’re covering two continuing stories: the attempts by the WTA to protect players from abuse and exploitation, and the CVC/WTA deal and what that means for revenue. We also have a discussion on one of our favorite topics: the state of tennis journalism and its many challenges.
0:35 Hashtag tyranny
4:55 Rybakina beats Iga & Aryna to win Indian Wells - a new “big 3?”
14:20 Carlos comprehensively picks apart the draw in IW
19:00 Miami so far: is Bianca “back?” Taro Daniel bagels AZ, the world cheers
24:30 Iga debuts a new clothing sponsor
29:40 Continuing story: new developments with the WTA’s efforts to combat abuse
37:45 More on the CVC deal: finding new revenue opportunities based on the social (and real) value of equal prize money
43:50 The conundrum of tennis, or any sport, having a diligent, critical, and *paid* press corps
55:10 Listener questions: Scream 6 and Daddy Pedro Pascal
It’s a little bit of everything this week -- first, some thoughts on the first week of Indian Wells, whose courts are slower than Daniil Medvedev’s bathroom breaks (his words). We chat about Murray, Medvedev, Raducanu, Muchová, and the undeniable Ben Shelton. In business news, we talk about the WTA’s official partnership with CVC Capital Partners, a private equity firm that has just promised a $150m in new and better revenue streams for women’s tennis. Plus, Denis Shapovalov goes all in on gender pay equity, Netflix’s Break Point announces a season two, and Rafa’s all-time top 10 record is lost.
0:30 Some housekeeping and a thank you
3:10 Indian Wells week one: Daniil says it’s not a hardcourt (and is he really wrong?) plus some chatter about the women’s draw
10:00 Jonathan’s new fave Ben Shelton
12:50 Private equity firm CVC invests $150m in WTA Ventures, a new commercial subsidiary
17:50 The Tsurenko-Steve Simon story - where is the reporting?
23:00 You got nothing to say now? Holger Rune gives himself the rare Double L
26:40 Denis Shapovalov honors his mom and says equal pay for equal work NOW!
38:25 Big up Sloane Stephens Foundation!
39:40 We’re getting a Break Point season two whether we like it or not
45:10 Rafa’s record for consecutive weeks in the top 10 will end at 912
46:25 Injury updates: Kontaveit plus where is Jen Brady?
It’s been a rough week in the Body Serve household, as we said goodbye to our beautiful 16-year-old beagle Vince. He’s felt like a third co-host over the years, a presence who was always just off-mic (and sometimes on it when he snored).
In tennis, Barbora Krejcikova did the thing – taking out #1-2-3, saving match points, serving and getting served bagels, and pummeling Iga’s second serve to win Dubai. On the men’s side, Medvedev won three titles in three weeks, getting back into the top 10 and stopping Novak’s dominance of their head-to-head. Andy and Ruby have great weeks, plus Chaka comes for Mariah and Joe Biden catches strays over the literally endless Novak vaccine drama.
0:30 Vince
February in tennis: four continents, three Iga bagels, two male US Open champs winning titles, and one white woman wearing racially inappropriate hairstyles. This month is nothing if not eclectic. We also chat about Hsieh dropping in then dropping out of Dubai, what the hell is going with Schwartzman and Muguruza, and the breakout star who will change tennis in his country forever.
0:45 Iga generously doles out bagels; Sakkari Semifinal Segment
13:45 Wu Yibing becomes first Chinese man to win a title, also gets people to watch an Isner match
20:10 Carlos is back; plus a rankings factoid
22:50 Finance pro Matija Pecotić leaves work early to beat wild card king Jack Sock
25:45 What’s going on with Diego Schwartzman and Garbiñe Muguruza?
28:45 The disingenuous comparison of men’s records to women’s
31:50 Counting inches: Novak, the Sunshine Double, and the “proof” that nobody needs
36:15 Hsieh resurfaces, Ostapenko’s appropriation, and Eubanks’ near miss
44:40 Things we like/dislike: withholding stars, oats, and beans
Post-Australian Open tennis continues around the world, but this week we’re mostly talking about the seeming conclusions of the ATP’s two highest profile domestic violence cases (but not their only cases, btw). The ATP quietly dropped a new release shortly after the AO that the Zverev investigation had concluded and that the results were, well, inconclusive. Days later, Nick Kyrgios pled guilty to common assault against his ex-girlfriend but the charges were dismissed. A lot of tennis talkers and front-office folks will likely be relieved, but where does this leave us? Are we any closer to tennis organizations handling DV with care and responsibility? Also, more about the business side of tennis: the spectacular collapse of the Davis Cup-Kosmos deal, billionaire “disruptors,” and looking at PTPA financing and its latest presentation.
01:55 Results: Parks, Zhu, Stanley!
05:40 ATP quietly drops the news of the Zverev investigation
17:40 Nick Kyrgios pleads guilty to common assault, court drops the charges
23:50 Lots of concern about the consequences to the perpetrator
26:00 What will the ATP do? …. Bueller? Bueller?
30:10 US says COVID is over, we’re not paying for your shit anymore (and also Novak is coming)
32:40 ITF ends its Davis Cup contract with Kosmos a mere TWENTY years early
37:05 Money in tennis: the “disruptors”
40:30 What are the PTPA’s goals? Looking at their recent presentation
51:20 Lepchenko ban reduced … these supplements get ‘em every time
53:45 The Grammys do it again!
On the 14th day since the Australian Open started, we rested while Novak wept. The victimhood tour is complete, Jonathan is annoyed, and we pay it as much (or as little) attention as we can muster. Meanwhile, Aryna Sabalenka did THAT. Wow, what a moment. From her grit, skill, and determination on court, to her goofy glamour the following day, we put some respect on that incredible women's final! Other matters of business: lots of geopolitical tensions boil over, the Djokovic pater creates yet more headache for his son, Tursunov comes for Pam, the ballkids work for free, and Babs and Kat simply don’t lose Slam matches anymore.
3:00 Sabalenka & Rybakina give us an insta-classic
16:15 The men: so …… anyway
23:45 The bweh tragedy; and Shelton’s upside and areas for improvement
31:15 Doubles: Krejcikova/Siniakova haven’t lost a Slam match since 2021; Sania plays her final Slam
35:10 Et ceteras: so, nationalism eh?
43:05 Papa Djokovic ignites a flag scandal
52:05 Pam’s tweet brings Tursunov out of the woodwork, why?
63:55 Is it work? Pay the ballkids
67:45 Tiafoe wins best dressed by a mile
72:00 ESPN keeps its team Stateside
74:30 Punting the Kosmos mess but staying for the strawberry jam
77:15 Extras: rankings movers, TBS fantasy, and a disclaimer
Welcome to the third installment of our Australian Open series! We're at the quarterfinals, and the men's draw is giving chaos while the women's seems kind of … correct? We talk about Djokovic's mini-battle with the press and overall less than sunny mood, the state of safeguarding against abuse on the WTA, and another induction into our Hall of Fame. Finally, we offer our review of episodes 4 & 5 of Break Point (much improved!) and our favorite segment, Alison Riske-Amritraj's vociferous defense of the rules.
0:00 Don’t skip the intro this time
3:50 The women’s quarters - being able to appreciate tennis as more non-partisan than ever
15:00 Azarenka captures magic again, Sabalenka fixes her f***ing serve
20:55 The men’s draw has been a touch chaotic, no?
24:25 Novak Djokovic’s resentment tour
32:40 Korda, Shelton, Ruby, Rune
42:20 The PTPA’s nothing salads
45:40 That's Not The Rule, Kerrilyn
54:15 Sabalenka gets inducted into the TBS HOF
55:00 Recapping Break Point 4 and 5 - some depth and more real insights than the previous installments
63:50 Continuing to look at the effort to curb abuse and exploitation of women on the WTA Tour
70:35 The charges against Tsitsipas and why they don’t stick
Hey there, just popping in to offer some thoughts on the first few days of the 2023 Australian Open and the first three episodes of Netflix’s tennis docuseries Break Point! We talk about a few standouts from a pretty rocky and wet week one (don’t be offended if we missed your fave, it’s not comprehensive); we discuss the Netflix Curse chatter that seems to be dooming 8 of the 10 featured players; and we think about some fascinating press conference moments from Taylor Townsend, Rafael Nadal and, in a rather different way, Camila Giorgi.
2:50 The Netflix Curse or the Netflix picking the wrong players syndrome?
5:10 Standouts in the first few days: Parrizas Diaz, Volynets, Brooksby, Shelton
11:00 Let me complain for a minute: the AO app is not good; and the rain highlights tennis’ built-in inequities
14:20 Andrew Murray plays for 10.5 hours over two matches
17:10 TBS Hall of Fame gets two new inductees!
21:35 Rafa leaves Australia with a new injury, smashes a cliche about athlete ‘sacrifice’
32:05 Taylor Townsend shines in doubles, gets real about tennis finances
34:25 Camila Giorgi faces the music about alleged vaccine fraud and blissfully exists on her own planet
40:25 Novak: hamstring, hamstrung
42:25 Recommendation for tennis from James’ parents, only one of whom watches tennis
47:00 Discussing Break Point - who is it for, what’s it meant to accomplish, and does it do that?
51:20 The tennis brat / bad boy trying to reform -- it’s not giving us anything new
55:35 Go to the business center
The first Slam of the year doesn't give us many weeks of tennis to form opinions, but it's delivered on story lines, with one taking the cake: Naomi Osaka -- having already withdrawn from the Australian Open -- announced she's pregnant and will miss the 2023 season. This barely a week after defending champ Ash Barty announced her own pregnancy. Tournament director Craig Tiley is up to his usual hijinks, this year banning booing, rolling out NFTs in an inhospitable market, and extracting surplus labour from what used to be free (player practices). All that plus draw analysis, January standouts, PTPA news, a complete diversion on our take on Rolling Stone's greatest singers list. Ready?
2:30 Naomi Osaka is missing the Australian Open, yes … but why, pray?
10:50 What kind of mess will Craig get into this year? Well, funny you should ask
16:00 Booing Novak Djokovic is illegal. Is this a real thing?
19:50 Scamming scammers: extracting surplus value from player practices plus the AO NFT gallery
29:10 The PTPA announces an executive committee
33:50 Who’s standing out in the first two weeks of 2023? Peggy, Sabs, Linda, Novak, Taylor, Cam
44:50 Carlos Alcaraz misses the Australian Open but gets an international Calvin Klein underwear spread
49:50 Women’s draw analysis
60:55 Men’s draw analysis
71:35 Our greatest singers - fie, Rolling Stone!
Welcome to The Body Serve 9! We're recovering from our first-ever bout with COVID but tennis never stops and the show must go on. We offer some things to look out for in 2023 -- a true rival to Iga? A few more Big 4 retirements? -- and share some of our (and your) hopes and dreams for the upcoming season. We also catch up with the tennis news cycle, including the latest Camila Giorgi controversy, Simona's doping suspension, Venus' return, and the debut of United Cup.
00:28 Season NINE: Housekeeping & #NameTheTennisPlayer
07:25 Things to look out for this season (The Giorgi Syndicate)
18:53 Nepo babies & the sprawling United Cup
29:53 Queen Vee is BACK and looking evergreen
35:07 Wading into the homosexual waters
45:47 James is definitely going to reach his breaking point this season
51:52 Boris is back and updates on the Simona sitch
54:59 Breakout candidates for the 2023 season
60:35 Our hopes and wishes for the 2023 season
To cap off our 8th season and tide you over until 2023, we’re bringing you the rare TBS culture episode. No tennis talk whatsoever -- we even had a few tennis-related items on the agenda which we deleted. We’ve got: an hour of TV talk including spoilers for The White Lotus and a few lightning-round rants; thoughts on “queerbaiting” and Kit Connor’s forced coming-out; Mariah Christmas concert review; and takes on blackfishing, digital minstrelsy, T Swift, and more!
5:55 Spoilers ahead for The White Lotus, one of the few remaining watercooler shows
15:45 MVPs Aubrey Plaza & Meghann Fahy
20:50 Siamo tutti gay!
27:30 Is the Golden Age of Television over? It’s ok if it is, all things must pass
31:50 Some shows we enjoyed: Mo, Industry, Better Things, Heartstopper, Somebody Somewhere, The Bear, P-Valley, and more
53:25 Each of us do a mini-rant about TV
01:02:00 Heartstopper and the extratextual: Kit Connor comes out after the fandom accuses him of queerbaiting
01:10:20 David Archuleta from American Idol comes out
01:15:15 So what happened with Bros?
01:20:55 Recapping Mariah’s Christmas concerts in Toronto!
01:30:30 We need to talk about Taylor Swift (without losing half of our listeners)
01:40:00 Miss Patti has still got it at 78
01:44:30 Terrible news about Celine Dion’s health
01:47:00 Kardashian-Jenner hegemony: when will it end?
01:57:30 Asking each other a tough and a not-so-tough question
It’s time to wrap up the 2022 ATP season, and we’re treating the guys with a healthy (and earned!) dose of suspicion, starting with a rundown of the most badly behaved children of the year. But it’s not all bad - we also cover Rafa’s personal-best start to the season, Carlos’ rise, Novak’s disappearing and reappearing acts, Felix fixing his finals bugaboo, Holger’s Paris breakdown and later his Paris Masters title, and Roger’s retirement. And since tennis news will stop for no one, we had to recap Canada’s historic win at Davis Cup and the implosion of Team USA.
0:00 Cold Open
Men behaving badly
4:25 Starting with the worst: That Guy
9:20 The Nick Kyrgios redemption nightmare
13:50 Craig! What the hell, dude?!
18:00 Jaaa-gate, Moutet, poop shorts, and Shapo gets scolded by Daddy
25:55 Davis Cup: USA cancels themselves, does the work for us
31:20 The Verdasco ban and Reilly’s basement tweeting
Notable Moments
40:30 Djokovic removed from Australia + Rafa wins a very memorable Australian final
48:35 Carlos Alcaraz breaks out in March; Rafa’s injuries start and never end; weird Wimbledon
57:20 US Open was our first major (and Carlos’ too)!
61:30 Laver Cup, frat behavior, G***k y*g*rt, Federer retirement
65:30 Other retirements: Del Potro, Tsonga, Anderson, and many more
68:55 Three other players we need to mention: Feliz, Casper, Holger
79:25 How’d we do on our choices for breakout players of 2022?
The 2022 WTA season had everything: a 37-match win streak, the retirements of the current #1 (abrupt) and the GOAT (expected), a Wimbledon with no ranking points, and a major drug suspension. Iga Swiatek’s dominance didn’t leave much room for her competitors, but other highlights included Ons Jabeur’s steady rise to world #2 and two Slam runner-up finishes, Caroline Garcia’s singles renaissance and WTA Finals title, and utter doubles dominance from Krejcikova/Siniakova. We’ve also got some juicy listener-generated “things you loved/hated” content and the kind of typically bizarre moments that keep us coming back every year.
Plus, we’ve just launched our GoFundMe - please read a bit about we do and donate if you can!
0:30 Announcing our GoFundMe 2022 and reiterating our mission
6:05 Three key moments: Ash’s Australian win + retirement, Iga’s win streak, and Serena’s evolution
11:00 The other major stories: the instability at the top for everyone but Iga, Simona Halep’s remarkably odd year, and the total breakdown of COVID protocols
18:40 Starting the year with Barty as the undisputed #1
25:20 Ash’s retirement coincides with the start of Iga’s 37-match win streak
34:45 Grass season: Serena dominates the conversation from Eastbourne to the US Open; Rybakina wins the points-less Wimbledon
42:00 Summer hardcourt stretch: our own return to live tennis; Halep & Garcia grab titles but Swiatek restores order in New York
54:55 Discussing the WTA year-end award nominees
60:45 Our own picks for 2022 breakout players - how’d we do?
63:25 Remember when? A broken necklace, a broken doubles team, and Ostapenko's ... everything
72:45 Things you loved about WTA tennis in 2022
81:50 Things you loathed in 2022: no points at Wimbledon, no more business buns
85:55 The WTA’s finances: Hologic sponsorship and a potential deal with private equity
The WTA regular season comes to a close with comeback kid Caroline Garcia grabbing her biggest career title, dispatching Iga-vanquisher Aryna Sabalenka in a boom-boom final. We discuss the last-minute nature of the event and the tough financial and ethical positions the WTA continues to occupy in light of the China situation. On the men’s side, Holger Rune caps a momentous autumn swing that brings him from #33 to the brink of the ATP Finals, but not without a lecture from daddy. Elsewhere in bad behavior, the FFT disowns Moutet, Reilly earns lifelong haters, and Kyrgios settles a silly (disclaimer: this is James’ opinion; please don’t sue) defamation suit.
0:45 Garcia’s Finals title and Sabalenka’s upset of #1 Swiatek add unexpected layers to this WTA season
8:35 Some props for Sakkari, Kasatkina, and doubles champ and singles-almost-made-it Kudermetova
17:30 Lots of commentary about attendance and the choice of venue – what the WTA has been up against vs. what is of their own making
28:55 Holger beats Djokovic, ends Felix’s win streak, and becomes first alternate for Torino
33:30 Magic potions and goofy huddles; it’s not actually a ‘thing’ but it’s no surprise that people think it’s a thing!
39:00 WTA CEO Steve Simon’s strange and conflict-heavy statements on the ongoing Halep doping situation
41:10 James’ tormentor Gilles Simon finally retires
47:45 Et ceteras: Moutet loses the bag; WTA institutes coaching program to attract and develop female coaches; safeguarding against abuse in tennis
57:00 Reilly thinks telling people to vote is cringe and that tennis used to be free of politics … ok hun
63:50 The biggest merch sale of the year: The Body Serve’s RedBubble Store
Canadian King Félix Auger-Aliassime. As Rihanna said, let’s start there. Félix has turned around his final-round performances to the tune of three straight titles, beating world #1 Alcaraz twice in the past few weeks. Elsewhere, in Texaaaas, the world’s best women have a blast dressing up but will soon look to take on the dominant force of Iga Swiatek at the WTA Finals. We’re also covering Rune’s on-court and online hissy fits, previewing Paris and the ATP Final scenarios, and getting the Iga starfish case off the docket to make room for worse offenders.
01:45 Félix with 13 straight wins! Momentum is a hell of a drug
06:15 Holger’s temper tantrum(s)
14:00 Medvedev steadies the ship in Vienna, Shapo on a consistent run
16:00 ATP Finals qualifications: Wimbledon is the tournament that is and isn’t
23:30 The WTA women dress up and have a blast … stop with the amateur fashion critiques unless you’re being nice!
29:25 James takes a shot at WTA social media marketing and Jonathan is way more fair
35:50 Is anyone beating Iga?
41:00 United Cup, what’s it all about?
47:00 Case dismissed: Iga addressed the handwaving and yes, we must move on
49:00 Coaching carousel: Garcia’s coach splits with literary flair and Stan & Magnus are back together
52:20 What’s next for TBS
Just when we thought we could go away for a spell without anything crazy happening, the ghost of an ugly hotel carpet threw things into disarray with Simona Halep testing positive for a banned substance. We begin the episode by wading through these doping waters, before catching up on the 7,000 tournaments since we last dropped an episode. Just take a look at the timestamps for the remainder of the docket: a lot of MESS before we finish with a salute to two all-timers who left an indelible mark on this fraught world we live in
01:55 Simona Halep tests positive for a banned substance
17:44 Catching up on the results
23:36 When are the authorities going to arrest Belinda Bencic?
28:45 WTA Finals qualifiers and James’ obsession with the Napoli mess
36:40 An update on one of the handful of ATP players accused of domestic violence
38:16 Coaching carousel: Tursunov’s self-serving MESS
44:10 Does pickleball want the sloppy seconds of tennis?
52:12 TENNIS BABIES!!!
55:00 Our top three Mariah studio albums
58:24 In memoriam: Queer icons Dame Angela Lansbury & Leslie Jordan
This is a hodgepodge episode, catching up with the recent tournament results across four continents, including Tunisia’s first WTA event, Djokovic’s clearing of the Next and CurrentGen, and Tiafoe’s continuing run of good form. We spend a good amount of time on Ostrava - the destined-to-be-a-classic final, Iga’s status as an activist #1, and Krejcikova’s return as a top singles player. All that plus some news about the Kyrgios case, WTA Final qualification scenarios, and a WTA coming-out (Happy National Coming Out Day!).
1:00 So who’s been winning all these tournaments around the world?
5:45 Novak clobbers an incredibly stacked ATP 500 draw
10:35 Fritz wins Tokyo, he and Tiafoe reach career high rankings
15:45 Thanks to Ons Jabeur and IMG, WTA tennis comes to Tunisia!
19:35 Ostrava has become a real autumn highlight - Krejcikova and Swiatek deliver a classic
25:40 Why do some see Iga as the complainer-in-chief?
33:30 Kiki Mladenovic knows her brand!
35:25 Kyrgios’ lawyers will ask his case to be dismissed on mental health grounds
40:35 Et ceteras: RaducanuOUT, Podoroska *out*, tour finals qualification
Thanks to you, our listeners, we’re back with a special mailbag episode, answering your questions about any and everything. You asked about tennis, of course – lots of questions lingering from Laver Cup and Roger’s retirement, and about the states of various players’ games on the women’s tour – but you also allowed us to be self-indulgent and talk about what we’re watching and listening to, our favorite breads and cheeses (a new one!), and our nerdiest qualities.
1:40 Rapid-fire from @SamsBiceps: Federer matches, Beyonce, desserts, and Oscar best actress predix
13:50 Daria Saville’s IG post after her injury: interesting insight or just too much honesty?
18:15 What’s up with Naomi? Will she be back in form next year?
24:00 Dream WTA Team World - Team Europe lineups (and we added thoughts about what a dream Laver Cup should set out to accomplish
32:15 What are we watching/listening to/reading lately? It’s been a great year for horror fans
41:35 Pair any five tennis players with a Mariah track, which would then be their theme song (hey, Grigor)
46:25 Us as commentators: what’s our green room rider? How will you diplomatically call out your colleagues for bad takes?
53:15 What is the nerdiest non-tennis thing about each of us? Well, there’s a lot
59:10 If one of the Big 3 never played tennis, how many majors would the other two have won?
65:00 Our favorite breads and cheeses! Amazing question!
69:20 An FMK from our most reliable contributor
71:40 What is happening with Garbine? And some thoughts on a coach’s role
78:45 Our own tennis playing styles
And just like that, another GOAT says goodbye. This time, it’s Roger Federer at Laver Cup, giving tennis and his fans one last glimpse at his greatness. Confession: we haven’t always been the biggest FedFans, but we’re still paying respect to the man and his genius, offering some of our most enduring Federer memories. Along the way, we chime in on Laver Cup itself, the tender Fedal moments, where the event worked, and where it falls short for us. ‘Til next time, Roger!
0:30 Federer retires: regret over letting stan wars cloud our appreciation
14:35 Federer’s imperial period: if you know, you know
17:05 Our favorite Roger memories
21:10 A non-recap of Laver Cup
29:40 The racist abuse leveled at Frances Tiafoe; fans now trying to find their next prop to prove they’re not racist
37:40 The touching retirement punctuated by truly absurdist theatre
41:20 Rafa & Roger’s unique and genuine bond - men showing affection!
52:20 Big Three or Big Four? Yes, we want to go there, just for a minute
55:10 What exactly is Federer’s legacy? What did he bring to tennis that no one had before? (thanks @seasaltandrum for the question!)
The final Slam of the season sees Iga Swiatek troubleshoot and learn now to extend her dominance, and the coronation of the (not very) long awaited Carlos Alcaraz as a major winner and youngest male #1 in history. As always, we try to be skeptical of hype and take a fresh look at the results and what they might mean for the near future. Also at this US Open: the shambolic choice to have Supreme Court Justice Patrick McEnroe helm the women's doubles presentation, profiteering off Serena's name, and more awful revelations about sexual abuse in women’s tennis.
2:30 Iga Swiatek doesn’t always play her best but proves why she’s the dominant #1
14:40 The women’s draw gets a wonderful crop of quarterfinalists, representative of many of the year’s best
21:45 Are we in the Iga Era? How do we define a deserving number one? What do we want from women's tennis? Who cares! Sit back and watch
24:35 Men’s champ: from barely bleating to curry-ready
35:10 Frances Tiafoe! Not to say I told you so but …
42:50 Listen to Jonathan stretch a subordinate clause far past its breaking point
44:55 Women’s doubles: Krejcikova/Siniakova win the Career Slam; plus, the massive insult of Patrick McEnroe presiding over this trophy ceremony
56:10 TW: SA - Fiona Ferro’s case against her former coach puts another spotlight on abuse and exploitation in women’s tennis
60:55 Et ceteras: bootleg Serena merch, the too-late night matches, and the partisan but only partially engaged US Open crowd
69:25 WTA Finals is moving to … Texas?
73:11 Randomly, our favorite and least favorite types of pasta
Well folks, that was quite the first week of the US Open, wasn't it? Jonathan is back from his trip to Flushing Meadows, and we are back to talk about Serena's last dance (or at least our first stab at it). There's a lot to unpack from the first week of the season's last major, so grab a honey deuce and join us for the ride.
2:35 Serena d. Kontaveit
12:00 The Farewell: Serena bows out to Ajla Tomljanovic in the third round
26:10 Jonathan’s observations from the US Open: Venus, Danielle, The Penko Experience
43:00 Thoughts on Arthur Ashe Stadium
54:40 Indulge me for a moment: the sound mix and off-court coaching
64:45 Commentary, a lifetime appointment?
69:20 Quickly running through where we’re at in the draw: women’s round of 16 is stacked
81:35 Rafa’s first week: nerves and a shocking smack in the nose
We're piecing together a preview for the US Open on precarious hotel wifi, but the show must go on! After all, this is Serena's final Slam. Jonathan is in NY taking in the action, while James holds down the TBS fort (i.e. Vince) in Toronto. Hear Jonathan's initial thoughts on TBS’s first trip to a Slam, plus we're talking about Novak’s eleventh hour withdrawal, this year’s version of the bathroom break distraction, and of course the just released US Open draws, seemingly some of the most balanced draws in recent memory.
01:05 Jonathan's initial thoughts on Flushing Meadows and the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center
12:25 To no one’s surprise the entry requirements did not change and Novak Djokovic pulls out of the US Open at the last minute
20:00 Kyrgios legal update plus a perfect distraction, a ridiculous defamation suit
27:30 WTA draw: hey, it could have been a lot worse
30:30 Women’s top half: cracking first rounds, including Queenwen vs. Ostapenko and Raducanu vs. Consecutive Slam Queen Cornet
42:00 Women’s bottom half: Madison gets a tough road early on; Serena’s fourth quarter … what to make of it
48:30 Men’s draw: a historic #1 seed leads a wide open draw
Cincinnati lost its stars early but still brought us a wickedly good weekend, with comeback kids Borna Coric and Caroline Garcia taking the titles. We talk new shoulder (Borna), new confidence (Caro), new professionalism (Stef?), and the resurgent Petra and Madison. We take a stab at the ball controversy and how it speaks to a larger battle in tennis governance. The second part of this episode features an interview with author and illustrator Tom Humberstone, whose gorgeous graphic novel Suzanne hits bookstores in September. Suzanne Lenglen was one of the very first sporting superstars; Tom tells Suzanne’s story with specificity, avoiding comparisons with today’s greats, exploring what made her so compelling and how the well worn cliches about her fail to do justice to her life and accomplishments.
3:30 OG NextGen kid Borna Coric is back in the conversation, wins Cincinnati with his new serve (and new shoulder)
14:30 Iga, Ons, Serena out early? No problem - Petra, Caro, and Madison are getting butts in seats
21:20 Tennis ball controversy: Iga Swiatek vs. Wilson Regular Duty
27:00 Whom does it serve to tweet about someone skipping a press conference? (Check the replies, that’s who)
30:05 Jonathan’s preferred Serena match-up and Vika’s slightly anticlimactic announcement
35:10 Interview with Tom Humberstone, author of Suzanne and Body Serve illustrator!
47:45 Translating the unique visual spectacle of Lenglen to the page
55:15 How to balance “legacy” while honoring a person’s specific life experiences
59:20 Lenglen forced the skeptical press to respect women’s sport
We’re back after attending our first live tennis in THREE YEARS! Wow, what a moment. A moment most pleasing to us in our podcasting careers. The happy feelings didn’t last long as we had to grapple with the end of Serena’s career when she announced her imminent retirement at the US Open. We also chat about Simona and PCB’s wins in Canada before sharing a few of our observations from seeing the women in person last week. Buckle up folks, it’s going to be a hell of a ride the next few weeks
01:53 Serena rocks our world with news of her impending retirement
10:52 The relief, the joy, and the pain of grappling with this announcement
15:16 Simona Halep fightergirls herself to the Toronto title
17:33 The pusher discourse has gotten way out of control
20:32 Putting some respect on Haddad Maia and Zheng Qinwen’s names
23:45 PCB wins his biggest career title in Montreal
32:53 Observations: Watching Serena live in Toronto
36:36 Sloane’s defence, Kenin’s comeback, and endless deuces
44:32 Loving Bianca off the court and struggling with the mess on it
49:44 Why is it always MEN who are super loud and clueless at tennis?
58:19 Let serves and Giorgi/Ostapenko live lasers
The unbearable August heat and humidity means it’s time for the North American hardcourt swing, for a brief magical period known as the US Open Series. Instead of a typical recap, we decided to present a summer hardcourt preview to mark this distinct segment of the season. Who are the old reliables on this surface? Will Medvedev extend his mastery over these courts? Will Iga add some more titles to that expanding hardcourt resume? What will Venus and Serena’s matches look like? Will Djokovic become a wedge issue in the midterms? (No.) Plus a snapshot of our favorite moments from Beyonce’s stunner, Renaissance.
2:55 What are the main storylines going into the greatest rrrrroad trip in esport?
11:20 DC: Serena descends upon the capital, creates confusion
16:55 Venus’ first match since last August - what’s the takeaway?
25:35 Hardcourt preview: the comebacks, reboots, redos, and those with something to prove
35:25 The hardcourt stalwarts of the past few years, women first: Naomi, Iga, Vika, Aryna, and more
41:20 The hardcourt “kings” and we use the term loosely
45:20 Novak Djokovic and US Republican members of Congress: with their powers combined …
52:35 Medvedev and the race for the men’s #1
54:05 Raducanu’s choice of coach riles the British press
58:35 Our upcoming tennis plans
62:35 Beyonce’s Renaissance - a postmodern tour of Black dance music and reveling in the face of a plague
It’s the hottest part of the summer and the post-Wimbledon haze is the perfect time to outsource our agenda planning by asking our readers for questions. Fortunately, your questions were well in sync with important topics of the day and what we wanted to cover. We discuss the documentary/vlog featuring Dasha Kasatkina and Andrey Rublev; the intimacy of the format; and the considerable fallout caused by Dasha’s coming out and their tough words on their home country. We spend a little time chatting about recent tennis news but that’s really not the focus – look out for questions on the world track and field championships, climate change, R&B covers of songs from other genres, and our current favorite snacks and TV shows.
2:00 Etceteras: Coaching splits, Matteo’s racist IG story, and TBS pet merch!
Mailbag
7:35 The Kasatkina-Rublev doc and the immediate fallout
19:35 What to make of the ATP’s partnership with You Can Play to improve LGBTQ inclusion?
23:25 The Jamaican women continue to dominate sprinting; Shelly-Ann is the GOAT
33:45 Climate change as an existential threat to tennis
39:45 We’re not here for the scamming
42:25 Quick diversion about snacks
45:20 What are our favorite R&B covers of songs from another genre?
48:30 Why pundits are critical about Serena’s comeback(s) and fitness level
55:00 New TV we’ve been watching
61:50 To live and *let* live? To asterisk or not to asterisk?
Let's start with the good news: Elena Rybakina powered her way to a major title, and Ons Jabeur reached another career milestone while winning hearts and eyeballs around the world. The men's side was, uh, less appealing. Nick Kyrgios reached his first major final on the heels of an assault accusation (that's 4 ATP players currently accused of domestic violence if you're keeping count); a cursed bromance emerges; Rafa pulls out with an abdominal tear; and the younger generations fail again to capitalize on legends who weren't even close to their best tennis.
3:05 Elena Rybakina, another surprising but not surprising Slam winner on the WTA
14:45 Ons Jabeur, self-proclaimed Minister of Happiness – and this government ain’t falling
26:25 Tatjana Maria and reconsidering the narrative surrounding mothers in tennis
31:45 An unconventional recap of the men’s final
33:05 Nick Kyrgios is accused of assault by his ex-girlfriend, will face charges in court
38:35 Bromance from hell
49:30 The greatest fighter narrative works for Rafa but should we be celebrating the suffering?
58:50 Doubles: Krejcikova/Siniakova earn legend status
63:05 The ranking jumps are a little more dramatic than usual
65:40 The Telegraph spun the Serena Williams controversy wheel and came up with “five cars”
Wimbledon week one saw a GOAT come and go, her sister light up the doubles court, the two male legends anchor their sides of the draw, and the loquacious Cornet end Swiatek's 37-match win streak. Saturday lit up the tournament for reasons good and bad; after Anisimova notched an impressive win over Gauff, Kyrgios and Tsitsipas gave an absolute shit show of code violations, toxic behavior, and occasionally compelling tennis. All the while, COVID reared its ugly head despite the tournament's determination to ignore it.
2:05 Serena, queen of net rushing and accepting her tennis mortality
14:30 Tami Korpatsch: a social media star is born
18:35 Venus & Jamie: you bring me joy
25:15 The upsets: the surprising (Hubi) and the less so (Muguruza & Kontaveit)
34:10 Round of 16 match-ups: Cornet ends Iga’s streak
41:40 Men’s draw: Covid wreaks havoc on the bottom half
48: 50 Covid is still here, surprise! On tennis’ players’ “civic spirit”
54:05 The All England Club as an extension of the British government
56:20 Novak’s new tennys text buddy
58:55 The men get messy: ADF, Rafa, Nick & Stefanos
2022 Wimbledon prep had been dominated by the ban of Russian and Belarusian players, and then Serena Williams stopped the world by announcing her return to competitive tennis, first in Eastbourne doubles (OnsRena 4ever) and ultimately the Wimbledon singles draw. She joins a crowded field with no clear favorite, with Iga, Ons, Angie, Coco, a few Karolinas, and Petra all in with a shot. The men’s side sees Rafa and Djokovic on opposite sides, with Rafa attempting to continue his 14-match Slam win streak and Djokovic trying to upend the year’s narrative and further complicate the best-ever conversation.
1:10 Stop the world; world, stop: the birth of OnsRena and Rena’s surprising return to Wimbledon
11:55 Another unlikely return to Wimbledon: Rafa’s foot procedure allows him to play SW19
14:40 Tara Moore popped for alleged doping
19:50 Women’s draw: RG was a sure thing for Iga, but not so at Wimbledon
27:05 The Serena quarter (well, technically the Badosa quarter): LOADED
36:50 The women’s bottom half offers huge opportunity (*whispers* but it should be Ons)
46:40 Men’s draw top half: Djokovic, Alcaraz, and a few seeds who’ve never won a match here
52:05 Bottom half: Berrettini, Fritz, and Tsitsipas rounding into form at the right time
Cuthbert Collingwood "Ted" Tinling was a man whose unlikely story threads throughout the eras of twentieth century tennis like no one else's. A product of a patrician English family who moved to the French Riviera, Ted found himself umpiring for Suzanne Lenglen at 13 years old. He would grow to become a successful London couturier in the interwar period, and in the late 1940s found tennis pulling him back, this time as a designer of tennis fashion. Tinling wed ultra-feminine design with functionality, creating outfits unique to each wearer and which emphasized the need for sportswear to work and move like a tennis player. Much has been written about his rebellious nature and his banishment from Wimbledon -- and we certainly cover that -- but we're also interested in the contradictions of a man with great respect for the codes of tennis tradition but who repeatedly strained against it.
0:45 Ted Tinling: tennis’ great multihyphenate
7:20 The Tinlings move from Eastbourne to the Riviera, the hotbed of Jazz Age tennis
11:55 Suzanne Lenglen, France’s homegrown superstar
16:45 The end of his Riviera boyhood – from child umpire to Mayfair couturier
20:40 Post-war: a revolution in colour
23:45 Tinling and Dior’s New Look - a regression or a rebellion? (Or both?)
27:35 The panties that altered history
36:45 The 1960s: Tinling as the premier designer of women’s tennis
42:50 You’ve Come a Long Way, Baby
48:25 The Tinling Slam: all four plus the Battle of the Sexes
53:20 Wimbledon Act II: Back in the Club
56:20 Infinite sites of rebellion - chipping away at tennis’ strictures
63:10 A few more stories we want to tell: Elizabeth Ryan and Bill Tilden
Iga Swiatek and Rafael Nadal are joint winners at Roland Garros for the second time, with Iga extending her dominance over women’s tennis and Rafa entering truly uncharted territory as a 14-time RG winner and extending his lead in the all-time Grand Slam count. In keeping with the episode title, we’re trying to understand how Nadal did that in the face of a tough draw, poor preparation, and a career-threatening foot condition. Twenty-one-year-old Iga, on the other hand, is making it look easy. We take you through the major moments of week two, making plenty of time for the Battle of Scandinavia, Mauresmo's unfortunate comments, doubles results, and Rafole #59.
1:15 Racquet Bracket results: sometimes mediocre is all we can hope for
5:20 Unbeatable Iga
11:50 The streak: let’s let the active players live without comparing them to GOATs
20:25 The makeup question … che schifo!
27:00 The men’s quarters on: the endless Ruud-Rune dust-up, an at times imperious Cilic
37:05 Nadalovic didn’t quite live up to expectations
42:20 Nadal-Zverev, that injury, and that weird discourse that resulted
50:50 The final is what we needed – a low-stress denouement to a very tough tournament
62:30 Retirement watch was on but we fight on - more info on the foot
69:25 Men’s double makes history and the reunion of Garcia/Mladenovic
72:55 Rankings watch: lose in the first round, earn a career high ranking!
76:45 Amelie Mauresmo’s turbulent fortnight
The Roland Garros quarterfinals are set, and despite a brief scare, Iga Swiatek continues her stunning win streak as the lone remaining top 10 seed in the women’s draw. But fear not, the quarterfinal match-ups are cracker (RIP Derry Girls). On the men’s side, we still have the promised Djokovic-Nadal quarterfinal, Alcaraz is still winning, and the once-presumptive finalist Tsitsipas has crashed out. We get serious about an issu important to us: Martina’s appearance on Piers Morgan’s show, the ongoing fight against trans women in women's sport, and what we're not talking about when we talk about this issue.
01:15 Women’s quarterfinals: they may not be what you asked for, but they’re still pretty good
10:25 Simona Halep opens up about panic attacks and emotional setbacks (PMo centers himself)
13:30 Women’s first week roundup: Queenwen, Kasatkina, Kerber, Coco, Sloane, Leylah
25:25 Men’s quarters: some of the top guys were tested but they (mostly) came through
30:30 Felix takes Nadal to five sets (allez!) amidst the Toni drama (it’s not that big a deal)
37:35 What’s the deal with this night session? One match?
48:20 Et ceteras: a mini Covid scare and Begu & Rublev’s near-misses
51:15 Talking about the movement against trans women in women's sport and why they're missing the forest for the trees
68:25 Quick follow-up on the language of discrimination + the damned subjunctive tense
Not more than four short months ago, we were reveling in Rafa and Ash’s Australian Open glory. Now that we’ve been abandoned by Ash, and Rafa’s foot has set alarm bells ringing, we enter the year’s second Slam with that familiar feeling of dread. Iga has taken the baton from Ash and sped through the Spring season; who can catch her? On the men’s side, things are a bit more focused…on one very concentrated half of the draw. Join us for our 2022 Roland Garros preview where we parse through the draws, give updates on the latest Wimbledon mess, and finish with the glowing debut of Drag Race All-Stars 7!
3:20 Women’s draw: name one player who can beat Iga (well, the few who might be able to are in her section LOL)
14:25 Women’s bottom half: Is Ons the favorite to reach the final?
20:10 Babs is back but the fourth quarter is the land of opportunity
26:50 Men’s draw, first quarter: I would like a recount
41:45 Men’s bottom half: Stefanos, it’s yours, take it
48:50 Et ceteras: RG makes changes to post-match media process, GEMS Baby is dropping in October, Naomi Osaka forms her own agency
55:00 ATP, WTA, ITF will not award ranking points at Wimbledon due to the Russian/Belarusian ban
68:10 Appreciating the Drag Race All Stars All Winners season
Two drop shots to rule them all: Ons Jabeur wins her first WTA 1000 title and Carlos Alcaraz slices through two GOATs and a [redacted] to win his fourth title of the year. In a shorter episode than usual, we chat about Madrid, the ongoing comebacks and retirements, Shapo Music’s spectacular unraveling in Rome, and more.
3:50 Ons Jabeur wins Madrid!
10:00 What were we saying about the WTA top 10 a few months ago? Well …
17:10 The final weekend scheduling in Madrid makes the women an afterthought, again
22:30 Carlos’ achievements are undeniable – but some context, please!
31:00 Et ceteras: Murray, Wawrinka, Thiem; Andreescu’s break and return
35:05 Kevin Anderson & Gilles Simon retire
40:05 Denis Shapovalov’s absolute shit fit in Rome
43:45 WTA is getting a 1000 tournament in Mexico!
As we get older, we get more comfortable existing in the “I don’t know” space, which might be a strange thing to say while also producing a podcast where we share our opinions. But as the debate about Wimbledon rages on, as Boris Becker is sentenced to prison, and in light of your great but tough questions, we’re comfortable remaining equivocal on some things lately. We catch up with the tennis in Europe, check in on some woeful but on-brand missteps, and discuss the Ukrainian players’ response to the Wimbledon decision (something we missed last week). Finally, we end by answering some excellent listener questions – fun, challenging, or both.
1:00 Simona slaying in Madrid, Rafa is back with a tough draw, and catching up w/ Estoril & Munich
8:25 More on Wimbledon’s decision to ban Russian & Belarusian players
10:50 What have the Ukrainian players been saying?
21:30 Raducanu splits with coach Torben Beltz
26:35 A few of the week’s worst: the PMo self-promo machine, Cirstea, and homophobia from “allies”
35:55 Boris Becker sentenced to prison for hiding assets - another chapter in a sad post-tennis saga
48:05 Madrid asks, how do we employ a creepy private security and surveillance regime while also making it *adorable*?
50:35 What’s going on with the WTA/ATP collaboration?
59:25 Which tennis players would you recruit during a zombie apocalypse?
66:00 Our cringiest tennis moments
71:30 FMK Bridgerton Brothers
75:20 Ending on some Williams sisters questions
Thank you all for your patience while we’ve been away! We’re back to recap all the tournaments we’ve missed – almost three weeks of them. Iga Swiatek wins her 23rd straight match by beating repeat runner-up Sabalenka in Stuttgart, while Carlos Alcaraz wins his 23rd match of the year, taking the Barcelona title from PCB. The biggest off-court story has been Wimbledon’s decision to ban Russian and Belarusian players, and the fallout from players, the WTA and ATP, and the larger political stakeholders.
2:55 Wimbledon acts unilaterally (shocking, I know!) and bans players from Russia and Belarus
22:20 Pam Shriver opens up about problematic and abusive relationships on tour
25:50 Not another wild card drama. I don't have it in me
33:00 Alcaraz falls into the lap of the ATP
40:30 Putting the comparisons between Carlos & Iga into context
46:55 All she does is win: 1ga still soaring
57:10 The core of Stefanos’ problem
61:25 Results carousel: Marrakech, Houston, Charleston, Bogota
65:30 Etceteras: WTA Finals, Gail Falkenberg; Kim & Tommy retire
68:40 Serena unfollows Patrick on IG & a word on Willow Pill
It's been barely two weeks since Ash Barty's retirement and already Iga Swiatek is answering our questions about what's next for the WTA. Riding a 17-match win streak, she knocks out fellow heiress apparent Naomi Osaka to win her third straight WTA 1000 title. Carlos Alcaraz generated a truly astonishing level of buzz on the men's side with his Miami title -- and while we always caution against too much hype, tennis is truly in a fascinating spot right now.
1:15 Iga fills in the blanks after Ash’s retirement
8:35 Let’s enjoy the present: on the WTA especially, it’s not Next Gen, it’s Now Gen
20:25 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga announces his imminent retirement from tennis
23:35 Carlos Alcaraz wins Miami, generates well-earned excitement; but let’s cool it with the hype, ok?
33:40 Injuries, absences, instability among the ATP top guys have created a perfect void for a young gun to swoop in
37:00 A few more racquet throws in Miami and the ATP finally says enough! (well, we think)
41:40 Et ceteras: Clay baes Thiem & Wawrinka make their return in Andalucia; rumors swirl about a Russian ‘ban’ from Wimbledon but what’s actually going on?
45:00 IMG snags Frances Tiafoe and purchases the Mutua Madrid Open
52:10 The Oscars - and no, we’re not talking about that
Ash Barty shocked the tennis world this week by announcing her departure from the game as a 25-year-old dominant #1. After the shock wore off, though, it started to make sense based on what we know about Ash, as a player who’s planned her career intentionally and who was upfront about how she approached the sport. What were her greatest moments? What does Ash’s retirement teach us? What is her legacy?
0:40 Getting over the initial shock
8:30 Ash’s early career and first break from tennis
14:00 Ash returns to tennis in 2016 and steadily builds a world-beating resume; post-COVID dominance
27:00 Career achievements: those weeks at #1 and talking about her successor
31:20 The retirement announcement
36:25 What did we learn from Ash’s retirement? What's the precedent for this?
39:00 Rethinking work and setting boundaries after a pandemic and the myriad disruptions of millennial and Gen Z life
48:30 Reframing authenticity
54:40 Our favorite Ash Barty memories
The finals may not have lived up to their billing, but Indian Wells advanced a number of the season's major storylines: the continued growth of Iga Swiatek, the battle to stick out from the WTA pack, Rafa's hardcourt win streak, Alcaraz's series of firsts, and the Netflix effect. We cover the tennis, plus a discussion on the Nick rinse-and-repeat, the tennis world's response to Naomi Osaka's response (again, rinse, repeat), and the parallels to Jane Campion's flippant 'joke.'
0:40 Welcome to Tennis Para- well, purgatory
3:20 Swiatek wins 5th title and cements her new #2 status
17:40 Taylor Fritz d. Rafael Nadal in the battle of the walking wounded
31:15 Carlos Alcaraz tries his best to snatch that torch from Rafa
40:10 No, we are not entertained, thanks tho
53:20 Anisimova swiftly exeunts her match, leaving confusion in her wake; partnership with Darren Cahill ends abruptly as well
56:00 Heckling at Indian Wells and why it’s not the same as heckling at other places …
69:15 Jane Campion - ma’am, what?
Starting off on a difficult subject - the invasion of Ukraine and the response from tennis authorities and the players affected by it. As always, it’s fair to ask who sets the moral standards and what’s the right thing to do, even if we don't have easy answers. On to more positive news, the WTA gets a new title sponsor at a critical time, going from cigarettes to a women’s health company in 50 years. The ATP has some rhetorical fun with the Zverev non-decision and leaves umpires out to dry. Plus, did Novak attempt another stunt in this never ending saga?
1:10 Tennis’ response to the war in Ukraine - what should a sport’s leadership do in wartime?
11:40 Is there any precedent? Banning South Africa and the trouble of who sets moral standards
20:00 WTA gets a new title sponsor and … a Mary J. Blige crossover?
31:40 The Zverev decision -- a suspension and fine, just kidding lol
43:30 Novak Djokovic will sacrifice titles for his principles but would, like, prefer not to
52:10 Ash & Babs pull out of Indian Wells
59:55 Leylah Fernandez defends Monterrey amidst a lighting crisis! It’s always something
64:55 Federer return, Lepchenko’s 4-year ban, and Kristie Ahn’s retirement
It’s not exactly your average February on the ATP: we’ve got a new #1; a recent #1 and GOAT doing (dubious) damage control as he struggles to find tournaments that will have him; a different 35-year-old GOAT starting the year on a 15-match win streak; and a top player defaulted for a gross display of rage at an umpire. Acapulco said don’t let la puerta hit you on the way out, and further penalties from the ATP could be looming for Zverev. Meanwhile on the women’s side, it’s Jelena Ostapenko’s world and we’re just living in it.
2:15 Medvedev takes #1
7:45 Rafa’s blazing start to the season continues in Acapulco
19:05 Acapulco was fun. You know what’s not fun? AZ and the escalating abuse of umpires
34:00 Djokovic’s BBC interview: yes, I guess we’re still talking about this
45:10 Felix wins his first ATP title!
51:05 Sport is never safe from politics and world crises … let’s have some understanding for players dealing with the invasion of Ukraine
57:30 Ostapenko beats -- in some cases, destroys -- six Grand Slam champions over the past two weeks
62:30 Are the Doha quarterfinals a sign of *some* stability near the top of the women’s game?
Welcome back for the second part of our mailbag episode, made possible by February boredom and listeners like you. This time around we’re talking about the changes to tennis during pandemic times and whether we’d like to see them stay; our thoughts on Bravo, Drag Race, and TV in general; our Tennis Housewives dream cast; and a bunch of other thought provoking tennis questions.
02:00 Our thoughts on the changes to tennis (Covid-related or not) - electronic line calling, towels, no-ad, etc.
13:35 FMK: Tennis HABs
16:00 Has your bandwidth increased for the ATP after the Australian Open?
22:40 Thoughts on Drag Race season 14
27:40 Favorite TV of the year so far + Bravo updates
38:25 Which tennis pro’s shot would you want for yourself?
42:35 How to assess a player’s success outside of the Slams? What are the other metrics even if you’re not a Slam winner?
52:00 Real Housewives of Tennis dream cast
56:50 Janet Jackson finally gets her flowers – she is the blueprint, kids!
65:05 Reiterating The Body Serve’s mission statement, if you will
We asked for your questions, and wow, did you deliver. So much so that we’ve decided to stretch this mailbag into a two-part super episode. The post-Australian Open hangover is real, so we’ve got some light-hearted and non-tennis subject matter here, but we also tackle your tennis questions on commentators, our Grand Slam wish list, Delpo, and dream tennis apparel designers.
3:30 Which designer or brand do you want to see try tennis apparel?
5:50 If the Slams did anthems, which artist would you want to do the anthem for each Slam?
14:00 A perennial topic: What makes for a good tennis commentator?
20:50 Now let’s talk about us: how has our approach to fandom evolved over the years? Did we learn anything new with Nadal’s win in Australia?
26:45 A question on our process, how we record, the magic of editing, etc.
31:50 Favorite tennis player forays into music
34:10 Favorite comfort foods … how long do you have?
39:00 What tennis stories would we like to see as movies?
44:20 Tennis and NFTs: et tu, Stanley?
50:20 Now here’s an original one: ranking the types of tennis headwear
54:25 Honoring Juan Martin del Potro with our fave Delpo moments
Ash Barty and Rafa Nadal are your 2022 Australian Open champions -- Barty winning her third Slam and further cementing her #1 status, and Nadal notching an unlikely victory from a two-sets-to-love hole against a much younger opponent, leading the Grand Slam tally for the first time. Danielle Collins leaves Melbourne with many new fans while Daniil Medvedev leaves a bit shattered. We'll take you through the final rounds of the tournament and what it means for the players and the state of the tours, plus we chat about doubles, unruly crowds, corporate Pride celebrations, dreams deferred, and the fashions.
2:55 How did that happen? A men's final of disbelief
18:20 Medvedev's stunts catch up to him? But the crowd was bad, really bad
22:45 Tennis looks amateurish again: make a decision on coaching
32:20 The other notable men’s matches and wrapping up this men’s tournament
44:10 Women’s final: Ash Barty wins her 3rd Slam on as many surfaces
55:55 DanYell’s fanbase is growing despite some initial skepticism
63:30 Doubles: Azealia - err, Nick & Thanasi
67:10 Dylan Alcott retires as the only Golden Slam winner in his discipline
69:05 So who will become the ‘hero’ of this next generation?
75:00 AO Pride Day: great idea, so-so execution
78:00 Fave fashions and fave tweets of the tournament
84:15 Ranking updates: there’s a lot of movement and it’s not pretty
Week one of the Australian Open is in the books, with Barty carving her way through the draw, Sam Stosur retiring from singles, and most of the men's contenders surviving. Although many feared the tournament would be overshadowed by the Djokovic visa saga, once play started the tennis began to speak for itself. We've gotten blockbuster match-ups that live up to the hype (Osaka-Anisimova), veterans rediscovering their magic (Monfils, Keys), and recent Slam champs Krejcikova & Medvedev reminding us why they're great at tennis and very meme-able.
0:44 The Nole decision: Get yourself a friend like Vasek & a frenemy like Kyrgios
07:40 Adelaide 2 & Sydney winners, plus week one upsets
13:15 Notable week one matches
15:35 The Kyrgios sideshow makes another appearance
20:35 Did you get the attention you ordered, Nick?
25:40 Krejcikova’s problematic necklace plus Naomi-Amanda
31:35 Madison, Felix, Rafa
38:45 Where we’re at the in the draw
47:50 Farewell to Sam Stosur and oh hey, Craig
55:45 Et ceteras: Ash’s serve, Naomi’s IG declaration, Liam represents
61:00 Netflix said to That Guy thanks, luv, we’re good; but also, ATP - where’s the investigation, boo?
The 2022 Australian Open is around the corner and guess what is still dominating headlines: visa cancellation 2.0, appeal 2.0, and the various foibles and f- er, muck-ups of Djokovic and co. After discussing that for a moment, we focus on some of the excellent stories coming out of the Australian lead-up tourneys: Ash’s domination, Kokkinakis’ brilliant stretch, and statement wins from Andy, Madison, Amanda, Simona, and Elena R. We finish up with perhaps our most equivocal draw analysis ever, as Djokovic’s shadow looms large.
02:00 Hawke strikes upon the hour: Immigration Minister cancels Djokovic’s visa, citing the “public interest”
09:04 Djokovic’s various fumbles have made grace an impossibility here
14:56 Week 1 Winners: Vets Rafa, Simona, Gael; plus Anisimova is back and Barty steamrolls
26:17 Week 2 gives us a day to remember: Keys-Gauff, Murray lobs Opelka, and BathroomGate is decidedly not behind us
33:23 Odds and ends: Bernie wins a bet by getting Covid; Rafa & Vee step in it; Reilly, dude … let it go
43:40 Our breakout picks for 2022: no, I will not be explaining myself
46:42 Women’s draw: that first quarter is rude and it ruined James’ dream final
58:13 Men’s draw: an Australian judge will decide who fills the no. 1 slot. Could the men’s bottom half see a major breakout?
The Australia v. Djokovic saga has dominated new cycles for the past week in and outside of the tennis world; it highlighted many of the anxieties and political squabbles of the COVID-19 pandemic, spurred infighting between various levels of Australian government, and most importantly, was completely avoidable. There is plenty of blame to go around here: to Djokovic, to his family’s increasingly bizarre statements, to the Prime Minister's cynical political maneuvers, and to the head of Tennis Australia, who committed an astonishing number of unforced errors. We give you a timeline and the cast of characters as we attempt to contextualize this debacle as best we can.
00:30 Setting the scene, and why we don’t do emergency episodes
12:40 Jan 4-6: Today I’m heading Down Under with an exemption per-.... oop
22:30 Jan 8: The zero-sum game resulting from the positive PCR test
29:30 Jan 10: The hearing none of us understood
37:05 The dramatis personae: starting with Craig Tiley and Tennis Australia
40:20 The Victoria Government (and why state governments shouldn’t get immigration advice from a sporting organization)
45:00 Prime Minister Scott Morrison scoring political points, or; “rules are rules”
49:25 Learning about Australia’s refugee crisis and draconian immigration policies
58:00 Hubris, extremism, and strange bedfellows
Many of us look back at 1999 as the dawning of the modern golden age of women’s tennis, a season that saw four different Slam champs, the abrupt exit of one GOAT, and the breakthrough of a new one. Lindsay, Martina, Venus, Serena, and Steffi battled for the biggest titles and crafted historic, enduring storylines at every major event of the year. There was a changing of the guard, sure, but the shift from one era to the next is never quite as cut-and-dry as it seems. Plus, of course, the memes -- or, in this era before memes -- the off-court controversies and clownery that we still talk about: BeadGate, the formal education argument; and more darkly, the homophobic insults thrown at Amelie Mauresmo and the persistent, racialized "muscles vs. brains" narrative. Let’s take a walk down memory lane and discuss a season of women’s tennis that quite literally changed the sport forever.
03:10 Setting the scene: What is happening in women’s tennis and the culture at the fin de siècle? What does the teen pop explosion and Y2K have to do with tennis?
08:10 The WTA’s struggles with investors and why anonymous “analysts” doubted the marketability of women’s tennis
19:30 So what makes the ‘99 season so special?
22:55 Themes of the season: the Williams sisters are coming, and not everybody’s happy about it
29:55 Martina is #1, but the dominance is slipping
37:40 Australian Open: Hingis three-peats, Mauresmo comes out, and we endure BeadGate
55:25 Roland Garros: Graf wins final major in an almighty mess of a final
62:50 Wimbledon: Lindsay ain’t just a hardcourt wonder
69:45 Steffi calls time on one of the greatest careers in tennis history
72:25 US Open: Serena bags the first Williams singles Slam, beating a befuddled Hingis in the final; plus, why the ‘formal education’ dust-up is even more instructive than we remembered
83:50 The year-end rankings, some fun facts about the Slam season, and the signs of what’s to come
In our season seven finale, we’re recapping this odd and transitional year on the ATP Tour, a year in which Novak Djokovic came very close to winning the first Grand Slam since 1969 and a bunch of youngsters shook the table of Big 3 hegemony. We take an honest look at our breakout predictions – not great, Bob – and reminisce about some truly wild (and some depressing) Remember When moments. Although there’s much levity, you know us – we’re not going to recap the ATP season without talking about the dark shadow cast by the ATP’s repeated fumbling of the Zverev & Basilashvili abuse allegations.
Thanks for your support this year and every year – see you in 2022!
04:00 In Australia, Russians make history and Djokovic wins his 9th
14:00 The spring gives us a sign of what’s to come (Rublev, Karatsev, Hurkacz, Sinner) plus a quick chat on PTPA progress this year
20:55 Clay season: Tsitsipas announces himself as a favorite for Roland Garros alongside Nadal & Djokovic
22:35 Novak screams and hollers his way to the Roland Garros title, beats Tsitsipas from 2 sets down
27:20 Grass season: Djokovic’s Wimbledon win seemed kinda … easy? Golden Slam Watch is on
41:40 US Open: BathroomGate went on way too long; breakouts galore; Medvedev kills the dream
46:15 Fall season: Norrie wins IW, Frances captures our attention, Russia bookends its year with a dominant Davis Cup win
49:00 Let’s look at the receipts: titles and rankings
52:50 How’d we do on our breakout picks?
55:15 Remember When? Hecklers, innocent bathroom breaks, the code-cracking racquet launch, YawnGate, and the unfortunate trend of ATP players using homophobic slurs
65:05 The ATP’s Integrity Problem
Friends, we’re finally at the end of our WTA season. So much of what we recapped didn’t even feel like it happened in 2021. Kenin signing with Motorola but tweeting about it from her iPhone? 2021, really? Badosa and Kostyuk broadcasting from their Fox News bunker in Australia? Feels like forever ago. Nonetheless, we try to make sense of a truly unique year in tennis, in which the sport learned to live with the pandemic to varying degrees of success. We asked for help with our “Remember When” segment and boy, did y’all deliver. We finish with our mini-review of “King Richard” and then a taste test of Mariah Carey’s venture into Irish creams: her latest stone cold smash hit wonder!
Above all, we are so incredibly grateful for all your support and sticking with us through seven seasons. To the OG listeners, we can’t even know what to say. To those who just joined us, it’s a privilege we don’t take lightly.
02:10 An update on our GoFundMe: We can’t even know what to say
08:10 The princesses and the paupers: a super quarantine and one persistent mouse almost derail the Australian Open
17:20 Mugs, Sabalenka, Jabeur, Gauff, and Badosa steadily build their impressive seasons in the spring
25:55 Naomi Osaka’s withdrawal from Roland Garros, plus … you thought Barbora Krejcikova was just a great doubles player?
35:15 Grass season: vets find success but Barty cements her #1 status
46:30 Still reeling from that wild US Open
56:00 Stats in review: A not-so-clear-cut POTY and year-end rankings
66:40 Remember when: tennis players can’t control God, talk to Him
77:00 How’d we do on our breakout picks?
81:10 A dispiriting Peng Shuai update
87:55 It’s time to finally make good on the calls for #TennisUnited
89:20 Our King Richard review: It OUTSOLD!
97:35 A nutty taste test: Black Irish Mimi edition
First things first: we are officially announcing the launch of our GoFundMe campaign! Thank you to our listeners for the past 7 amazing years, and we’re looking forward to great stuff to come. Since our last episode, the Peng Shuai story has received widespread coverage in US media, with Chinese state media offering some video clips as “proof” of Peng’s well-being. The WTA has done a great job pushing the issue, but we wonder what's next if the WTA's demands are not met. We also celebrate the successful Guadalajara WTA Finals, spend a good 10 seconds on the ATP Finals, chat about WTA historiography and why they’re so good at, and cover a few odds and ends about Australia and Federer.
01:50 GoFundMe - it’s awkward to ask for money but here we go!
04:20 Peng Shuai situation -- Story blows up in US media; Chinese state media offers some seemingly orchestrated appearances. What’s next? What can we do from here?
16:35 Muguruza’s win caps off a fun and diverting WTA Finals in Guadalajara; much praise to her opponent, new #7 Anett Kontaveit
23:00 Ever notice that the legends of women’s tennis are always around to promote the sport? Here’s why (at least in our view)
32:50 ATP Finals: If a tree falls in a forest . . . anyway
38:50 Australian Open confirms vax stance and Novak demurs
42:15 Roger Federer updates his fans, and it’s tough to hear
Episode 245 features a potpourri of tennis happenings. We begin with a discussion of the harrowing Peng Shuai news and the response from tennis' governing bodies. After getting caught up on ALL the tennis since our last episode, we end with a bit of levity -- thanks to our generous listener, Kaitlyn -- our first ever live taste test on The Body Serve!
Oh, and we've also got the soft launch for our second ever GoFundMe for the podcast. Thanks to all of you for supporting us as we finish up season seven!
01:05 Launching our 2021 fundraising drive: help us fund the podcast
07:45 Peng Shuai makes a brave allegation, disappears from public view. What can (and should) tennis orgs do?
17:25 Novak shakes off his US Open vanquisher and secures year #7 as the best
21:30 BJK Cup: the perpetually aggrieved is re-aggrieved
29:50 WTA Finals - lay off the fashions, eh?
36:15 Our dream final spoiled in Stockholm
39:35 NextGen Finals - innovation for innovation's sake does actually work sometimes
52:40 We asked: What's one player tic or habit that annoys you (irrationally)? Boy, did you deliver
61:35 Taste test / ASMR session -- trying a holiday specialty from New Brunswick!
We are well and truly in the final stretch of the 2021 season, rounding third and heading for home. The field for the WTA Finals in Guadalajara is set after Anett Kontaveit blitzed through Moscow and Transylvania. We chat extensively about Frances Tiafoe's great run in Vienna, but must wade into unholy waters filled with Jannik Sinner salt. Later, we've got updates but not really on the vaccine saga for the Australian Open, before finishing with a few detours into our own personal interests.
0:55 Anett Kontaveit decides not to lose anymore, snags final qualifying spot for WTA Finals
07:30 Frances Tiafoe’s fantastic run to the Vienna final
10:00 Jannik says the show must NOT go on
24:20 Tiafoe has the x-factor and that's that on that
33:15 Andy keeps on truckin, Emma gets a few wins and more fans in Romania
37:10 It's all governmental infighting and leaked memos in Australia! And Benoit Paire says he doesn't care who misses out, it's Benoit Time
44:55 Where is Sofia Kenin?
51:15 Updates: Jared Donaldson; will Martina be on Real Housewives of Miami?!
56:35 Niche cricket and baseball content for the brave and curious
October’s Very Own Indian Wells has concluded and we’ve got a surprising men’s winner in Cam Norrie and a surprising-but-not-really-surprising women’s champ in Paula Badosa. We take a ride on Reilly and Novak’s Straight Talk Express, where truth (or some version of it) reigns. Some quick thoughts on the current role of the press, one holdover question from our mailbag, thoughts on TT’s annual Hall of Fame nominations news cycle, and finally, the brief return of our Dramatic Reading segment.
2:25 Indian Wells a kingmaker / queenmaker? Let’s look at the receipts
6:20 The men’s side finally gets a taste of WTA-style unpredictability
13:30 Vika tries for IW #3, but Badosa takes the next step in her rapidly blossoming career
27:00 More Aussie vaccine news and what it means for Novak. An “inappropriate inquiry?” Be that as it may ...
35:20 Reilly Opelka has opinions. Not sure if you heard
42:20 British journalists pen an open letter on ending the “Zoom era” of pressers -- so what should the player-press relationship look like post-pandemic?
51:40 Mailbag question about player scheduling and the decisions that go into it
57:55 Dramatic Reading: Serena Williams on her bestie-frenemy
61:45 Tennis Hall of Fame nominees: reliably making tennis fans mad year after year
Indian Wells is underway, in autumn, after a two-and-a-half-year hiatus, but the big story this week is the ATP’s revelation that they’ve begun an investigation into the abuse allegations against Alexander Zverev. It’s a year or so too late, but it’s a big step nonetheless. That’s the theme of this episode -- steps, mostly in the right direction, as small and plodding as they might be. We also talk about some recent results, persistent vaccine hesitancy among tennis players, the WTA’s race to its new Finals site in Guadalajara, and the ATP’s survey of players on their attitudes toward LGBTQ issues.
1:30 Cute results: Muguruza wins Chicago; both she and Jabeur get closer to the WTA Finals
9:25 Kim Clijsters’ comeback continues
13:10 Ruud works on his hardcourt bona fides; Sinner wins title #4 in his young career
19:30 Previewing Indian Wells: where have all the top boys gone
26:50 The ATP announces that it has begun an investigation into the Olya Sharypova accusations -- why was Laver Cup not mentioned in the press release? Oh, and that injunction doesn’t mean what AZ thinks it means
37:00 Mary Carillo’s decision to quit her Laver Cup broadcasting gig -- why we need prominent people to take a stand
44:30 Aryna Sabalenka - positive for COVID, out of Indian Wells
47:10 Will the Australian Open be off-limits for the unvaccinated?
58:30 Remember that gay survey players mentioned at the US Open? Well, it happened!
This week we outsourced the agenda-building to you, our listeners, and you provided a set of fascinating and tough questions. Come take a break from the weekly grind of current tennis events. We’ve got a modest proposal for how to choose new tennis TV commentators, plus we talk about areas of the game we might consider changing and why the age eligibility rule is important. By popular demand, we open with the momentous Williams-Sharapova reunion at the Met Gala and the photos that broke the tennis internet for a day or two.
01:35 Vee, Ree, and Masha at the Met Gala: WHAT?!
08:05 Laver Cup’s blocking spree as social media strategy
13:20 Is the game missing something without challenges? Did automated line calling sap some drama from matches?
20:30 Between Serena and Novak, whose legacy is most affected by missing out on the Grand Slam?
26:50 A question on the teen breakthroughs at the US Open and the WTA’s age eligibility rule
34:15 A memorable FMK - Met Gala Baes
44:10 You all had a lot of thoughts and questions about tennis commentators, as usual!
62:55 A perennial question: where are all the gays in men’s tennis? Do they just not exist?
69:10 A question that threatened the peace in our household: the Whitney-Mariah duet
75:00 Happy 24th anniversary to an album that sounds even better with age: Butterfly
Will history see this US Open as a watershed moment? On the women's side, is this just the most extreme example of a years-long trend of youngsters managing the moment and storming to victory? On the men's side, many felt Novak Djokovic was inevitably marching to a Calendar Year Grand Slam. But, whether it was due to fatigue from his long matches, the unfathomable weight of the moment, or Daniil Medvedev's mental and physical fortitude, the Grand Slam remains unfulfilled since 1988 (or 1969). Regardless of its place in history, this year's Open gave us storylines for the ages: the coronation of a longtime hardcourt menace and two young superstars to add to the WTA's already formidable roster.
02:15 Emma Raducanu & Leylah Fernandez stun the world
09:10 Raducanu’s win -- while unprecedented due to ranking and number of matches won -- is actually the rule rather than the exception on the WTA these past few years. Are the kids just built differently these days?
28:35 It turns out it’s really, really hard to win the Grand Slam
33:45 Daniil Medvedev has been the solid #2 hard court player for a few years, and today he came with a game plan and incredible poise
49:00 Doubles: Stosur wins 8th Slam title; Krawczyk won ¾ of a Grand Slam this year; Salisbury doubles in men’s and mixed
52:05 Other stories: Zverev story gets more mainstream media attention
58:00 Coaching during matches - it happens, so what should they do about it?
62:50 The Players Lounge: the Racquet magazine-produced roundtable on mental health
It was a first week for the US Open history books, full of entertaining matches and high-profile breakthroughs. Youngsters Fernandez, Raducanu, and Alcaraz notch huge wins, qualifier van de Zandschulp reaches the quarterfinals, and the undeniable stars Tiafoe & Auger-Aliassime face off in a blockbuster fourth round. BathroomGate threatened to overshadow the entire week, as fans and mainstream reporters became gamesmanship detectives and amateur clock-watchers. Oh yeah, and Djokovic is still on the hunt for the Grand Slam.
0:35 Week one -- well, day one even -- exceeded all expectations
9:20 #HatchingandSnatching update: Fernandez, Alcaraz, Raducanu
17:40 Women’s fourth rounds - plus a tangent on the Krejcikova-Muguruza controversy
26:40 Men’s fourth rounds: the Tiafoe-Auger-Aliassime match was a blast
32:35 Zverev finally has to answer to the Sharypova abuse allegations, he deflects to BathroomGate, and the broadcasters comply
39:30 Accusations of scammery follow Tsitsipas all week, and to be honest they have merit; or, “you can be mad about two things at the same time”
54:05 US Open Pride Day sees various players wear rainbow gear and otherwise show support
58:05 Sloane Stephens was one of the best stories of the first week
The year's final Grand Slam is upon us, and for the first time since the 90s, we won't see a Williams sister, Nadal, or Federer at the US Open. In two weeks, we'll know if Djokovic has completed the historic Calendar Year Grand Slam against a group of young challengers (Novak and the Seven Trees?). We also discuss the recent publication of part two of the Olya Sharypova story and why the ATP and tennis broadcasters will have a harder time ignoring it this time around. Plus: Barty surging in time for NY, Stef's laughably bad vaccine stance, and some lucky loser drama in Winston-Salem.
1:15 Reflections on Cincinnati FOMO
7:00 Wrapping up the Canada results: Giorgi stuns the field and Medvedev beats Opelka
10:50 Cincinnati: Barty allows no doubt about who’s #1
21:30 Also happening last week: *that* Naomi presser, Yastremska gets called something mean, Lepchenko popped for a doping violation
33:00 Cincinnati men’s draw: the less said the better
38:20 The Tsitsipas Family’s wild and reckless vaccine takes
44:35 A lucky loser fracas at Winston-Salem
47:15 Draw analysis: starting with the women. So … how about that third quarter?
70:55 Men’s draw: is there anyone here who will beat Novak in best-of-five?
85:10 Part two of Ben Rothenberg’s story on the Zverev allegations -- why he said/she said is a dog whistle and why tennis might finally be forced to reckon with this
98:30 Another historic week in women’s sprinting! From your faithful tennis / Jamaican track correspondents
Tennis’ second pandemic summer gets us a bit closer to “normal,” but the absence of many of the biggest stars leaves room for other players to create compelling narratives. Danielle Collins runs off 12 matches in a row, Reilly Opelka transcends servebotism and outfoxes Tsitsipas in Toronto, and Karolina Pliskova resuscitates a career that many (us?) were calling over the hill. We also talk about some egregious stunts (ciao, Fabio & Mo), the WTA Race to [somewhere?], and the post-Big 3 landscape.
0:35 Rafa and the glaring absence of the Old Guard this summer - what’s next? Does the Next Gen *have to* snatch the tour from the Big 3 or no?
9:10 Results in Cluj-Napoca & DC: Petkovic back in top 70, Sherif becomes first Egyptian woman in WTA final, Sinner & a few lesser known American men show out in DC
12:15 Danielle Collins wins a second title and more fans - why does Collins inspire such charged cultural conversations?
22:20 Montreal: Pliskova, Giorgi, Collins-Pegula, Jabeur
30:00 Reilly Opelka makes the case for himself
36:25 Pure stunts from the ATP’s king of stunts. Lasciami in pace, Fabio!
41:15 A brief retrospective on a Whitney & Mariah moment
45:15 Final thoughts on the blazingly fast women’s 200m and then we’ll leave you alone
Just to get it out of the way: we're not the biggest fans of Olympic tennis. Nevertheless, the Games brought up some interesting stories, old and new -- the fairy-tale endings that failed to happen for Novak and Naomi, the "mental health" conversation (or the seeing-athletes-as-human-beings conversation) that is changing sports discourse around the world, and the men's gold medal that wasn't. We've also got some thoughts on Naomi's Netflix docuseries, the extremely busy post-Wimbledon non-Olympics tennis calendar, and the blazingly fast women's 100m final.
2:15 Naomi lights the torch! There's a metaphor in there somewhere
7:10 Bencic is finally in "the talk," in her words
10:00 So, about the men's gold medalist and the allegations that are finally gaining traction outside of Tennis Twitter
17:45 Djokovic's Golden hopes end as a racquet is javelined into the stands
27:30 Final thoughts on Olympic tennis and 'prestige'
32:00 Simone Biles kicks off a conversation/uproar similar to Naomi -- the ground is shifting on how we talk about athletes, mental/physical health, and self-sacrifice
42:00 Post-Wimbledon events: Collins wins first title, Ruud vultures the entire summer clay season
47:05 Bertens & Bacsinszky bid farewell
50:00 Meet me at the altar in your Off White dress - GEMS Life is married!
54:10 Thoughts on Naomi's Netflix special
61:54 Our resident Jamaican track and field fan recaps the women's 100m race, which lived up to very high expectations
The first Wimbledon since 2019 ends with Ash Barty and Novak Djokovic leaving London victorious, both clear #1s at very different stages of their careers. Pliskova should be mighty proud of her tournament, and Berrettini reaches a new height in a very promising career. So how long will Djokovic dominate? What will the next generation have to say about it? All that plus doubles, PTPA stuff, Olympics conjecture, and how the ATP can hold onto those eyeballs Berrettini brought in.
1:25 Introducing our newest line of merch, the Bandwidth Collection
3:00 Ash Barty wins Wimbledon 50 years after her mentor, Evonne Goolagong; cements no. 1 status whether you like it or not
11:50 A great semifinal lineup: former winner Kerber, perennial top 10-er (until recently) Pliskova, and Sabalenka's big breakthrough
16:20 Djokovic has 3/4 of the Calendar Year Slam, Berrettini acquits himself well in final
28:10 Berrettini and Hurkacz bring new eyes to the sport, but the youngsters still have work to do
34:05 Doubles: Mektic/Pavic are back from Covid; Krawcyzk gets the Channel Slam; Hsieh/Mertens save match points to win
38:15 Et ceteras: Roger, Felix, Raducanu, PTPA update
47:00 So who exactly is going to the Olympics?
55:05 We finally get the trailer for Naomi Osaka's Netflix documentary
It was a wet, wild, and slipp(er)y first week at Wimbledon, which felled a 7-time champion within minutes and saw some electrifying home country heroes show out for their local fans. The faves in the men's draw have sauntered into week two, while a few top clay performers have continued their good form on the women's side. Special shout-outs to Ons Jabeur's stannable barfing moment, the more-fun-than-is-reasonable Venus Williams-Nick Kyrgios mixed doubles pairing, and great stuff from Shapo, Gauff, Samsonova, and more.
1:20 Upsets of Petra, Kenin, Andreescu, Tsitsipas (hey Frances!) -- were they *surprises* or just upsets?
9:10 Surprises: who is quietly sliding into the second week? Garin, Ivashka, Hurkacz, Khachanov
13:40 The women's round of 16 matches and how we got there; Jabeur vs Swiatek is the one we're looking forward to
25:00 Men's round of 16: the three faves -- Djokovic, Fed, and Berrettini -- are still here
33:35 So about the grass ... Mannarino and Serena slip on Centre Court and pull out within an hour of each other. How many slips are too many?
42:55 Andy Murray's electrifying Centre Court matches - it's great theatre
47:15 The critique of Coco Gauff's court assignments
52:40 Favorite moment of week one: Venus-Nick mixed doubles, it was great while it lasted
58:55 Ostapenko's very eventful second and third rounds
66:35 Et ceteras: good on Fowler & Gilbert for talking honestly about Zverev & Basilashvili; Alexandra, what are you doing?
74:45 Thanks to everyone who bought Body Serve merch!
Before we get to the Wimbledon preview, we're proud to debut our first line of Body Serve merch: t-shirts, magnets, stickers, mugs, hoodies and more, all adorned with Tom Humberstone's exclusive Body Serve artwork. Back to tennis -- Wimbledon is upon us, as we move back to the traditional two-week gap between Roland Garros and the grass major. We'll walk you through the draws and the grass results, highlighting top recent performances from Jabeur, Berrettini, and Kerber, plus Sonego's musical and athletic prowess. And to wrap, a few queer et ceteras for #PrideMonth.
0:35 Introducing The Body Serve's online store!
5:30 Grass results from this week: resurgent Ostapenko, Kerber, Giorgi, and Querrey; plus Dasha, Petra, and Daniil
18:20 Halle, Birmingham, Queen's, Berlin -- Jabeur wins first title, is the first Arab woman to do a lot of things in tennis
26:55 Men's draw: it's Novak and then a big drop-off -- who else is a contender?
41:00 Women's draw - a lot more early-round intrigue, lots of question marks in the first quarter
46:50 Women's third quarter presents a huge opportunity for somebody
51:20 Yastremska's sexcuse worked! The suspension is over
54:30 PTPA has resurfaced with an executive director, new branding, and an advisory board
65:20 #Pride et ceteras: Carl Nassib; Love, Victor; women's 100m; and a story!
Are your clay sensations nourished? Ours certainly are NOT, but we hope to summon the requisite energies to bring you this French Open recap. Barbora Krejčíková and Novak Djokovic are your 2021 Roland Garros singles champions, both surprise winners in their own rights, but also two champions that make varying degrees of sense. Krejčíková became the fourth active WTA player to win Slams in all three disciplines (Venus, Serena, and Stosur), while Djokovic captured his 19th Slam title, a stone’s throw from Nadal and Federer’s record of 20.
01:20 Krejčíková beats Pavlyuchenkova for her first Slam singles title
05:45 Questionable (line) decisions, sportsmanship, and giving the benefit of the doubt
15:00 How did we get to this women’s final?
21:15 Rafole, hyperbole, and the context of that semifinal
33:35 Novak’s gonna Novak, and that Novak is on a higher plain
42:30 The grass season started *during* Roland Garros this year
44:30 Is coaching allowed during matches? If you’re a commentator who is also related to the player, yes
49:15 Taylor Townsend writes an illuminating piece for The Players’ Tribune
Has the 2021 French Open felt a bit . . . strange? Clouded? Cursed, even? (Yes) But aside from the weirdness floating above the tennis, we've actually got a fascinating lineup of quarterfinals in both the men's and women's draws. The men have more familiar faces, but the women's side sees the success of a bunch of great performers during this clay season, including several first-time Slam quarterfinalists and the defending champion. In the interest of efficiency, in this episode we wrap week one, talk about the prevalence of betting culture on Tennis Channel, the virtue of a good apology, and how The Good Place and Roland Garros intersected in a most humorous way.
03:15 Quarters are set on both draws: how did we get here?
06:10 Men's draw: a historic Slam for Italian men, Medvedev king of trolls, plus the usual suspects
13:55 Federer's withdrawal and Musetti's retirement -- honest to a fault
25:30 Women's draw: huge upsets; great stuff from Pavlyuchenkova, Gauff, Zidansek, Sakkari, and more
39:10 Et ceteras - betting is even more entrenched at Tennis Channel, Sizikova arrested for match fixing ... any irony there or nah
46:05 Rune proves that the cover-up -- err, non-apology -- is often worse than the crime. All this during Pride Month?!
54:20 Danielle Collins' great narrative arc and Jameela's valued tennis opinions
Since our last episode, the conversation around Naomi Osaka's withdrawal from press conferences grew so loud that it led to an actual withdrawal: her decision to pull out of Roland Garros completely to preserve her mental well being. The past few days have presented so many important questions -- especially around mental health, mental strength and the "bootstraps" mentality, race, gender, and the role of the press in tennis -- that we felt it warranted another stand-alone episode. Let's leave the mess in WhatsApp and instead have a real conversation about what we can do better and why tennis' first reaction was punitive rather than empathetic.
0:30 Catching up on the events of the past few days: a media frenzy that culminated in Naomi's withdrawal from Roland Garros
12:05 Naomi's statement and the French Federation's response - how did we get here, and how can we do better?
17:30 "Press conferences are part of the job description" - well, since you mentioned tennis being a workplace ...
24:30 Should the Player's Councils and the PTPA be vocal about this?
28:45 Many reporters took Naomi's initial statement as a personal or professional attack -- where is the reflexivity?
38:40 The demand for a disclosure from Naomi - the act of "confession"
42:30 What has this situation taught us about how society and sport view mental health awareness?
50:30 The unavoidable question of race and gender, and how Black athletes are expected to entertain without complaint
Naomi Osaka is a paradigm shifter, regardless of whether you agree with her decisions. We spend a good chunk of our Roland Garros preview thinking through Naomi's decision to skip press and how it affords the sport an opportunity to rethink how it conducts journalism and creates news. Why did it inflame such impassioned responses? What does the press conference accomplish? What are the alternatives? Amidst all this, we have the year's second Grand Slam to preview, which will happen among the most "normal" conditions we've seen since the pandemic began. Rafa, Ash, and Iga are faves, but they're not the only ones with a fighting chance.
0:45 Naomi Osaka's bombshell: she won't be doing press conferences at Roland Garros
8:30 "It's part of the job" - but why? Is this an opportunity to rethink how tennis does journalism?
20:25 What we don't want to see: personal axe-grinding against "the press" in general
35:10 Some ideas on how to rethink tennis journalism
39:50 Roland Garros men's draw preview!
55:25 Women's draw: two clear favorites and a lot of great performers right behind them
64:15 Women's bottom half -- especially the fourth quarter -- is ripe for a dark horse breakthrough
Nadal logged another decima, at Rome this time, which turned out to be one of the most exciting Masters tournaments in recent memory. While Nadal-Djokovic went the distance, Iga Swiatek dropped not even a game against Karolina Pliskova, The Unbothered. We chat about questions surrounding Sabalenka's views; Roger Federer's comments on the Zverev case and why it's emblematic of a much larger problem, or the system working as intended; and the latest intrigue from the ongoing Yastremska doping circus.
0:00 I can't control God. Talk to him.
2:10 Swiatek blanks 2019 winner Pliskova; Karolina gives a master class on being unbothered
9:35 Rain and retirements; plus Coco, Martic, Simona, and Ash
20:40 "Il Next Gen siamo noi" - Nadal/Djokovic #57
32:30 Sonego; Reilly's Venus Effect; these dangerous Rome courts -- this is what labour unions are for
41:40 Williamses in Parma, Federer in Geneva, and packed draws everywhere
48:45 Addressing the murmurs about Sabalenka's political allegiances
55:20 The Yastremska story gets even weirder .. and "riskier"
60:40 About those Federer comments on Z*erev ... we can and should expect more
73:05 Shapo drops 3 new songs!
76:30 Things we like/dislike - why is Jonathan coming for me?
We're haters, fine, but Madrid is just not the tournament for us. We get an unappealing winner on the men's side but a first-time clay titlist in Aryna Sabalenka, peaking just in time for Roland Garros. Elsewhere, the ATP loosens -- nay, practically obliterates -- its bubble restrictions ahead of RG. In major coaching news, Sofia Kenin parts ways with her dad. And finally, James takes another quiz. Does he redeem his putrid performance from last week? You be the judge.
1:55 Madrid. It happens every year but we don't have to like it
4:40 The repeated failure of the ATP to say or do anything of substance on domestic violence (great at deleting Instagram comments though)
15:45 Aryna Sabalenka wins first clay title in Stuttgart rematch
21:55 And now we are in Rome: Djokovic and Serena return
32:50 The ATP bursts its bubble, vaccine or not!
38:25 American men's tennis declares its independence from the top 30; Pavs gives a revealing interview; short shorts are the moment
49:25 Kenin & Garcia split from their coach-dads
53:55 James takes another quiz!
Struggling to keep up with all the tennis? So are we. Join us on this struggle bus episode where we go over the results since our last episode, leading up to Ash Barty and Rafa Nadal's wins this past week. If you haven't seen the Kasatkina interview/doc with sports.ru, it's truly a must-see tennis event. After we flog Fabio and Benoit, James takes a quiz where we end up flogging the U.S. men too. Hurrah.
2:30 Nadal wins 12th Barcelona crown, but it was far from guaranteed
5:30 Is Tsitsipas the ‘second favorite’ after Nadal? Don’t count out Djokovic
11:25 The Djokovic -- er, Serbia Open
19:55 Ash Barty makes it hard on her detractors
24:50 Monte Carlo: Rublev slays the giant and Tsitsipas breaks through
33:10 Madrid women’s draw
36:40 Kasatkina interview: Russian TV does not play!
42:10 Fabio, the boy who cried lupo; and French Federation to Benoit: we do not require your services, thank you
46:15 Other odds and ends: Yastremska update, Rena+Zina
50:50 James takes a rankings quiz! (This is much more fun than it sounds)
This episode is really two separate shows put together, but we trust there is something in it for everyone. In the first part, we recap the results of last week, again imploring more kindness towards tennis players who are going through it, while in the next breath calling for the heads of those who act a fool. We also touch on the news coming out of Monte Carlo and again question the Covid protocols under which tennis is currently being played, and what can be done about it. The second part of the episode deals with the continued push to litigate the participation of trans women and girls in sport and the undoubted harm it will cause to trans youth if enacted. We dive deep into the legal argument, how this relates to professional sports, and why we hope this particularly awful moment for trans kids forces a reckoning for our community.
4:35 Kudermetova wins her first career title in Charleston
7:00 Sloane lets us know the full 100 of what's been going on
13:10 Cagliari, Marbella, and Bógota
16:20 Medvedev tests positive for Covid in Monte Carlo and the fallout
22:05 Is a vaccine passport feasible for tennis right now?
28:15 Cornet's hilarity ahead of French Open news
31:30 The influx of anti-trans legislation and how it relates to tennis
41:15 Let’s talk about the Civil Rights Act Title VII & IX to be specific), Bostock v. Clayton County, and how the Women’s Sport Working Group seeks to influence legislation
54:30 The hypothetical ‘menace’ of trans women participating in sports
On court, tennis welcomed its first Polish Masters 1000 champ, Hubi Hurkacz; and the reigning #1 Ash Barty knocked down a slew of hardcourt contenders to defend her Miami crown. Off court (or on court if you're Pospisil), the contentious debate on player representation and tennis governance reared its head. What does the PTPA want? How is tennis' current governance structure an impediment to real change? Plus, we were treated to something we've all been waiting for, tennis players' misinformed opinions on vaccines!
1:20 Miami Nice: Barty defends Miami title. Now why is everyone still so pressed about the #1 ranking?
14:05 Andreescu is back and all eyes are on her
20:00 Hurkacz def. Sinner, becomes first Pole to win a Masters 1000
26:05 Vasek Pospisil melts down completely on court, threatens to sue ... so what the hell happened at this infamous ATP meeting?
30:30 Players demand a #playersvoice but they have one ... what are they going to do with it; the impasse caused by tennis' governing structure
43:55 Not another vaccine debate ...
53:20 The stopped clock principle and why sometimes you can cooperate with people you don't like
55:45 Odds and ends: most importantly, GEMS Life is back and they're getting MARRIED
Mari Osaka gives us our title this week, with her wonderfully straightforward retirement post that reminds us that we're allowed to stop doing things we don't enjoy. We're covering the tennis results strewn across four continents: Muguruza capitalizing on her huge momentum in 2021, Medvedev rising to #2, Fed's return, and some great runs by players considered to be doubles specialists. The odds and ends segment lets James go on about some of his favorite topics: tennis governance, the ATP's arcane and mysteriously enforced rules, collaboration between tennis orgs, and disqualifications. We finish up with a things we like/dislike segment with no dislikes! (Some love for Below Deck, Borgen, and Grammy performances)
0:30 An exercise in making a clean break
3:00 Persona non grata wins Doha, plus a refresher on how the ATP has refused to handle domestic violence; but in better news, Fed is back!
9:40 Bubble Life is just not for everybody
16:20 Garbi's imminent breakthrough is no longer imminent as she wins the Dubai 1000
25:30 The traveling Ryan Murphy acting troupe of women's tennis
27:20 Daniil wins Marseille; Tsonga is back; Stefanos somehow makes the Petros wild card debate even worse
31:25 Guadalajara (Sorribes Tormo!) and the Santiago Dove Men+Care Ivory Palmolive Dawn Dish Soap Open (dale, Cris!)
36:35 T7 Working Group - you know we love tennis governance news
40:55 Damir Dzumhur defaulted in Acapulco and it wasn't pretty
45:25 Odds and ends: AZ kvetches about rankings, Kim delays return again, the Murray family & Tay Townsend have babies!
52:40 Things we like! (No dislikes this week)
Covid be damned, tennis has been around the world in February and March. We saw youngsters Clara Tauson and Juan Manuel Cerúndolo make unlikely title runs, Petra win her 28th, and Andrey Rublev snatch every ATP500 in sight. Come for the tennis, stay for our thoughts on rankings math, wild cards, the Kodak kit, and spitting during a pandemic.
1:45 Petra wins 28th(!) title, beating Garbiñe at Doha
7:55 Rotterdam: Ruby d. Fucsovics to win 4th consecutive 500 title; Kei (Sir Penguin) on the come-up; Meddy oh so close to #2 ranking
14:00 Andy Murray on retirement chatter: “Why would I stop?”
16:00 18-year-old Dane Clara Tauson announces herself at Lyon
21:20 Los hermanos Cerúndolo; Benoit Paire leaves his droplets and tanks
30:55 Odds and ends - starting with Djokovic’s rankings record
33:40 James tries to explain the AP Calculus-level rankings changes (ok, not really that complicated); what effects do these rankings adjustments have on players?
42:05 Wading into the wild card debate again
47:00 Kokkinakis opens up on mental health; Bernardes & Federer are back, Willis is out; Sorana Cirstea says remember the Alamo and forget your mask
The 2021 Australian Open is in the books! After months of speculation over whether the tournament would even happen, Naomi Osaka and Novak Djokovic are the last two players standing, holding old friends Daphne and Norman. We take you through the latter rounds of both singles draws before tackling a couple of the bigger issues for us this tournament: gambling taking over the tennis coverage and Hawkeye Live being force fed to us. If you’re still with us by this point, we run through a few odds and ends, from G.E.M.S. Life’s break to some of our fashion hits and misses!
2:00 Women’s final: Naomi d. Jenny(fer) Brady for Slam #4
15:00 Women’s quarters and semis: it’s a lot of commentator emotion for a perfectly legitimate medical timeout; Naomi d. Serena
27:30 Men’s final: Djokovic wins #18, beating Medvedev in a not-great final (well, great for Novak)
30:55 Men’s quarters and semis: Grigor, why??? Plus Tsitsipas gets another breakthrough, qualifier Karatsev makes the semis
36:00 The injury, the bizarre trophy presentation, the endless drama
42:45 Doubles! Mertens/Sabalenka win & take the #1 ranking; Krejcikova and Ram each make 2 finals
45:35 I got issues: Gambling and tennis media; Hawkeye Live - why are commentators 100% in the bag for it?
59:00 Odds and ends - Sofia’s appendectomy won’t get in her way
65:25 Alexis, T*riac, locals, and the S*ndgren show
74:45 Fashions: Nike finally does it! Beautiful gowns!
It's the midpoint of the 2021 Australian Open, and we're cooking with gas now. The early rounds were rough on the hard quarantiners, with Azarenka, Andreescu, Kerber, Stephens, and Sakkari all going out. Defending champ Sonia Kenin followed. But we've gotten some electrifying tennis along the way. We'll take you through the Thiem-Kyrgios classic and the nonstop Kyrgios discourse, Félix winning the battle of Canadians, Novak and Rafa's injury issues, and the boatload of riveting matchups on the women's side. No predictions here, just appreciation.
3:50 Women's top half - what the hell happened to Karolina Pliskova?
13:40 Kaia Kanepi wreaks her usual havoc, taking out defending champion Sofia Kenin
21:25 The hard quarantiners have a tough go if it
22:45 If you see Hsieh Su-Wei on the other side of the court, be afraid
31:30 The rest of the women's bottom half is on another level - fit and fighting Serena & Sabalenka, Mugu-Osaka match-up, Swiatek-Halep rematch
41:55 Djokovic d. Fritz - Taylor's carriage turns into a pumpkin, Novak's health a question
51:15 Dominic and Nick give us a classic - and the Kyrgios commentariat is back
60:40 Felix's fleet feet; welcome back, Thanasi
69:20 One bossy fan tries to give Rafa the hook
Alright, y’all ready? After so much drama leading into the 2021 Australian Open -- from questions surrounding whether it should happen in the first place to the complaints from players about the conditions under which it was happening -- we’ve finally made it to St. Melbourne’s gate, ready for play to begin on Monday. This past week saw SIX tournaments strewn across Melbourne Park as players sought to get as much preparation as possible after breaking out of quarantine. We cover what’s happened in those events as of this recording, the reactions to play being halted on Friday as the players went back into quarantine for a day, and then finish with a look at how the draws unfolded. Wow, we didn’t even get to just how much of a MESS the draw ceremony was. Whew. Ladies and gentlemen, start your engines.
02:01 Recapping this weird week in warm-up tourneys
09:17 Assessing Venus’ game and what it’s like to be a Vee-liever
17:09 Is there a player you hate when they’re playing your fav?
19:13 Rena getting in formation?
23:35 We almost got a lockdown part 2; why you mad about a super tiebreak?
32:44 Encroaching upon a stadium near you: ATP Cup
36:28 Dayanavision part 37
41:41 A bit delayed but we offer our breakout picks for 2021!
46:10 Sifting through the ATP draws
58:50 The women’s draw is locked and LOADED
The 14-day quarantine has lifted . . . tennis players in Melbourne and Adelaide are leaving their rooms and playing in maskless stadiums, thanks to months of sacrifice by Australians and much politicking by Tennis Australia. Throughout the 2-week quarantine, the tone and level of complaining softened (for the most part), but it was not without intrigue. We chat about Novak Djokovic's list of requests to TA on behalf of quarantined players and why the universal roasting he received was, well -- maybe a little much? We're also talking about Nadal's comments on quarantine; the Adelaide exhibition; (grudgingly) the Margaret Court carousel; and what's next.
1:20 Checking back in on the quarantiners: fact-checker Artem Sitak; plus Badosa, Tomic & Vanessa, RBA
13:45 So . . . about Adelaide
18:10 Craig Tiley says the quiet part out loud & Rafa offers an imperfect but impassioned forest-for-the-trees perspective
24:00 Peter Bodo blasts Tiley for his "imperial ambitions" and the clear inequalities between the top players and the Melbourne quarantiners
29:05 Looking at Novak Djokovic's requests (suggestions? asks?) on behalf of the Melbourne players
36:35 Margaret Court's honor from the Australian government is met with vocal criticism -- is the tide turning?
40:45 Yastremska's appeal to ITF is denied - but the Court of Arbitration for Sport will hear her doping appeal right away!
44:00 Team8 and Zverev part ways; AZ gets softball interview with BILD; AZ's crisis PR manager (and former employee of BILD) acts out on Twitter again
47:05 Et ceteras: Twitter MVP Chanda Rubin clears a troll
52:35 Adelaide exhibition: Novak disappears and reappears, the Serena-Naomi kiki, and Thiem & Nadal hitting but not giggling
54:40 Actual tennis is starting, like now!
It remains to be seen if Tennis Australia's logistical balancing act to host the Australian Open will be worth it, but here we are. Amidst the tightest safety protocols yet, a nation grudgingly welcomes hundreds of tennis personnel into its borders, who promptly kvetch about the (free) food, the (free) accommodations, and the quarantine rules. Not all has changed, though: top players get special treatment and American men continue to embarrass us at home and across the globe. Buckle up: pandemic tennis enters year two, with (some) lessons learned.
4:00 Tennis Australia launches vast logistical plan in action - Tennys Sandgren tries to undermine it in about five minutes
11:15 Players begin to arrive in Melbourne on chartered flights, two flights must isolate for 14 days, complaints ensue
25:35 Here is a picture of my terrible food, in my free hotel, during my free trip, during a pandemic, in which I will earn a minimum of $100,000 even if I lose
29:05 The actual legitimate complaint: the potential inequity between the elite players in Adelaide and the rest in Melbourne
34:50 Notable qualifiers
42:35 Tennis results already: Sabalenka is on 15-match win streak; Hurkacz wins Delray Beach but is overshadowed by anti-mask grandstanding
53:30 Dayana Yastremska provisionally banned for an anabolic steroid. Ma'am, give us a week off from the drama?
61:20 Sam Querrey has resurfaced!
67:15 Another person who craves attention - Ion Tiriac (and tennis' continued failure to stand up to misogyny and racism)
To open our 7th season, we dive into the career of Stefanie Maria Graf, one of the game's most decorated champions and still, somehow, one of its most elusive. Graf's staggering achievements -- beyond the iconic Golden Slam -- are in some ways poorly understood and lost to recent history, likely because she has so determinedly removed herself from the tennis world. Instead of seeing her just as Monica's rival or the goalpost to pass for Grand Slam glory, we look to understand Graf's career as it was, in its own time. What didn't we get about Steffi Graf? What about her game made her the best? Who were her important rivals outside of Monica? What was the state of women's tennis when she arrived, and how did she leave it? What's clear: Steffi was a whole lot more than just "German precision."
0:25 Intro and taking aim at the myths and misunderstandings
10:30 So, about those career stats . . .
13:00 Graf as child prodigy - staggering early seasons in 1985-87
18:15 What was the WTA like when Steffi arrived? The Chrissie-Martina duopoly, burnt out child stars, the next Czech generation
23:20 Gaby and Steffi: "glamour" vs "automation"
29:35 Steffi's peerless game: how was her dominance perceived in its day? (1988-89)
36:50 Becker, Graf, German identity, and the question of patriotism: let's talk about history for a minute
48:00 Peter Graf, a dominating and difficult father, but at times a "shield"
53:05 Monica Seles asks the question again and again, and Monica's removal from the game asks even more
65:00 The rest of the 1990s: more Slams, myriad injuries, and the humiliation of a private life becoming tabloid fodder
73:05 What is Steffi's legacy as a player, and as a member of the once highly political WTA?
79:55 Rivalries: Gaby is the dark horse
82:52 Steffi's iconic matches -- too many to mention, but here are a few
Episode 215 is our season 6 finale and the ATP companion piece to our WTA Wrap. In this episode, we spend some time discussing the on-court highlights, like Djokovic's stellar start, Nadal's 20th Slam, and Thiem's US Open crowning. But, the pandemic threw tennis for a loop; while women players went mostly quiet, several men engaged in bizarre and selfish behavior, peddling conspiracy theories, spreading pseudoscience, and flouting safety protocols and plain common sense. This year, the off-court noise demands as complete a retelling as the tennis itself. All that and James takes a quiz on the ATP season! Thanks for joining us for a sixth season of The Body Serve, and take care of yourselves.
01:30 James takes a quiz on the ATP 2020 season
12:19 The ATP Cup? Remember that? James is still not a fan
18:27 Revisiting the Djokovic default at the USO
24:47 That USO final and comparing it to Novotna’s ‘98 Wimbledon
27:41 Nadal achieves yet more history at Roland Garros
32:00 What else stood out to us inside the lines this year?
35:35 The Zverev family has A LOT of curious things to say
43:32 Djokovic kicks off the 2020 covidiocy
47:32 Thiem dodges Covid-19 while traipsing all over the globe
56:35 We’ve got to stop treating grown men as stuffed animals
65:08 An update on Bernard Tomic’s fingers
67:15 Keeping ourselves honest: revisiting our breakout picks for 2020
70:19 A reflection on what we did this year and crowdfunding the show
It's now a cliché to say that the events of 2020 are unprecedented, and that we feel unstuck from time itself, but early 2020 does seem of a different era. After a packed January and February, which saw a new Slam winner and two high-profile retirements, the COVID-19 pandemic threw our lives (and the tennis season) into disarray. How tennis responded tells us a lot about the sport: at times remarkably agile and resilient, and at other times inequitable, clunky, and slow. Some players shone on the court, others took the year off, and at the end of the year, there's merit in simply getting through.
4:30 January: Tennis' reaction to the Australian wildfires offers a glimpse at the sport's inequities and its inconsistent reactions to a crisis -- who suffers?
11:30 Also in January: Pliskova wins Brisbane, Asia Muhammad kicks off one of the few feel-good stories of 2020, Sofia Kenin stuns the Australian field
18:55 A scattered February, as usual: Kim's comeback, Rybakina's great start, Sharapova retirement
27:15 March changes everything - Indian Wells the first domino to fall
31:30 What was the WTA up to during the pandemic break?
42:40 Women's tennis returns in August: Brady and Azarenka break out
46:50 US Open goes forward in a sort-of-bubble: Osaka's win seemed fated
51:20 Roland Garros follows 3 weeks later and gets a shocking winner
57:25 October & November . . . not much happening
60:40 WTA unveils a huge rebrand, reclassifies tournaments and debuts new logo
69:10 Keeping ourselves honest: how were our predictions for 2020?
Since we last came to you, Daniil Medvedev continued his impressive end-of-season run to capture the ATP Finals in London. We take you through the paces of the final hosting of that event at the O2 Arena. After recapping the actual tennis on court, we pick up where we left off last episode with Alexander Zverev and the domestic assault allegations made against him. This time we’ve got an actual response (or lack thereof) from the ATP, a further statement from Zverev himself, and another misstep from Novak Djokovic. Have you been wondering what Bernard Tomic has been up to? Well, we’ve got answers!
01:29 Medvedev bookends Davydenko’s opening win at the O2 Arena
07:03 Dominic Thiem falls short in London, but he is all the way THERE
14:31 James’ optimism that this would have been Rafa’s year
19:05 Sabalenka, like Medvedev, doubles up to end the WTA season
21:31 The latest, ever changing developments with the 2021 Australian Open
29:44 Vasek Pospisil and Novak Djokovic resurface with the PTPA
40:00 Wading back into the Zverev waters
54:54 sTaY sTrOnG, guys
58:29 Gimelstob resurfaces with a little help from his friends
64:19 Bernard Tomic is up to what? A SCAM!
We're delving into the serious allegations of domestic abuse against Alexander Zverev. Many in tennis -- including Sascha himself -- are invested in painting this as Zverev "overcoming adversity" on his way to growing up, diminishing and erasing Olya Sharypova's story. The ATP has failed to send a clear message; indeed, they have not sent any message at all. We ask: why is tennis so inept at handling situations like this? Why hasn't the ATP followed the NFL and developed a robust domestic violence policy? What happens when we as a community treat intimate partner violence as a private matter?
01:12 Where this story begins
09:32 Why do we believe women?
16:08 Zverev's glib, narcissistic response to the allegations
21:59 The appalling social media fails from big tennis orgs
29:10 The ATP's deliberate failure to meet the moment
42:40 For example: where is your internal investigation?!
46:06 Zverev's management, Team 8, asleep at the wheel
Grab a cocktail and dive into the pop culture garbage our tattered brains have been thinking about these past few weeks. 2020 has demanded we seek out diversions when possible, and we've got you on that front: 90 Day Fiance, Mariah's memoir and her lost tracks album The Rarities, TV we've been loving, and the week-long election coverage that birthed a million crushes on the #chartthrob Steve Kornacki. Every topic is either a yes or mess - some are both!
1:30 The US election! Are you tired yet?
14:55 Thirsting for the cable news map guys -- we've got a big batch for ya
19:10 Nene Leakes' new venture
25:25 The Hocus Pocus reunion - this movie is perfectly crafted for millennial gays
28:55 2020 has been Mariah Season all year -- highlights of the memoir
42:00 The Rarities, an album of Mariah's b-sides and unreleased tracks
51:50 90 Day Fiance: The Other Way -- still exploitative but, like, exploitative lite
59:00 TikTok: minstrelsy, WAPs, and a welcome Fleetwood revival
1:09:40 There is a lot of injustice in the world, but nothing worse than Chris Pratt being selected as the least of the four Chrises
1:14:30 TV report: watch The Queen's Gambit, Grand Army, and the Dolly Parton Netflix doc!
5:10 Zverev wins Cologne eins und zwei - why are there two? (we'll tell you)
16:30 Sabalenka tears through the Ostrava singles and doubles draws
19:50 Humbert wins Antwerp, Khachanov gives Lumberjack 2.0
24:40 Ruby joins the top 10 - the Harry Styles of tennis (or at least the Niall Horan)
28:55 What's the deal with the Race to London? Do the rankings make sense?
34:20 From Russia With Haste: Sam Querrey flees the Four Seasons under cover of night
38:55 Other yeses and messes: Basilashvili's domestic abuse case becomes a cultural touchstone in Georgia; auf wiedersehen, Julia; auf wiedersehen, Boris (for a different reason)
The 2020 Fall French Open is in the history books! Iga Swiatek and Rafael Nadal swept through their respective fields on their ways to historic title runs in Paris. For Nadal, it was his 13th time lifting the Coupe des Mousquetaires, while Swiatek blitzed her way to a first Slam title, both efforts coming without the loss of a set. We go through most of the matches from week two that led to the weekend’s coronations, push back against the idea that the younger men are just “happy to be there,” and try to get to the bottom of why so many folks do not like Sofia Kenin. We finish the 2020 Grand Slam season with a dramatic reading of a captivating Danielle Collins moment.
4:00 Rafa wins his 13th at Roland Garros without losing a set
19:15 Fedal and the record books
26:00 Next Gen isn't breaking through quite yet, but not for lack of trying
37:25 Fly Like an Iga: the 19-year-old Swiatek stuns the women's draw
46:10 Flourishing without the benefit of wild cards
52:20 Why is Sonya Kenin so polarizing?
68:05 Mladenovic/Babos overcome coronadversity to win doubles; Jelena Djokovic and Neil Harman, partners in grievance; will FoxTenn Real Bounce be the solution?
81:50 Dramatic Reading: in which no grace was given
Welcome to our mid-Roland Garros 2020 dispatch. Those sounds you may have heard over the last few days were those of players often being loud and wrong. We’ve got a fairly predictable final eight on the men’s side, while the women’s draw has turned out some truly shocking yet inspiring results. We dive into the latest Zverev mess, Novak’s quip, Hawkeye misinformation, Sara’s cursing, retiring players before they’re ready, and finish with a rant on calling Naomi’s man her “rapper boyfriend.” Who’s deserving of being told to kick rocks and eat dirt?
5:00 A lot of surprises in the men's draw, but the quarterfinals are still pretty standard
10:30 Sooo many first-time third rounders on the men's side
14:40 Zverev has a fever. Oh?
27:50 Women's draw: Swiatek destroys the clear tournament favorite, among many surprises
32:30 Errani loses the match and her mind as Bertens cramps
44:00 Damn, it's tough to be an umpire these days: the HawkEye saga
56:20 Keep your saliva in your mouth; keep your dad in his seat
59:40 Et ceteras: don't retire players before they're ready
65:20 Why are we still telling players how to schedule and whom to date, during a pandemic?
Roland Garros 2020 is upon us, en automne, barely two weeks after the US Open and perhaps against better judgment. But what happen-ed happen-ed and here we are in Paris. The cool, damp conditions will likely produce grinding and unpredictable tennis, which has made predictions futile. The best predictor is how players have fared so far during the restarted season. In addition to the draw preview, we've got a few Covid updates, several messes to check in on, and a Dramatic Reading full of Canadian Content.
0:30 Against all odds, Roland Garros is happening
4:50 Men's draw preview: who will benefit from these tough conditions? Rafa gets Thiem, Djoko gets Tsitsipas/Meddy/Berrettini
19:00 We both failed probability but no, Virginia, the draw's not rigged
28:20 Women's draw preview: for the first time in a while, there's a clear favorite (but her road's not easy)
37:20 Women's bottom half - what to expect of Pliskova's health? Will someone other than Simona win her third Slam here?
42:15 Covid updates: spectator limit reduced to 1000 per day; Paire is in, but Verdasco is out
47:10 Buckle up for lots of commentator talk about weather and new balls
52:50 An enduring, recurring mess by Boris Becker
55:35 Dramatic Reading, a tribute to the trap king of Vaughan, Ontario, Canada
It wasn’t that long ago that we didn’t think we would -- or should -- have any tennis for the rest of 2020. Now, here we are recapping the final week of a fanless U.S. Open. Naomi Osaka and Dominic Thiem are your champions, a third Slam triumph for Naomi and a first at last for someone not named Federer, Djokovic, or Nadal. We cover the matches of week two leading up to the finals, as well as so much of the commentary and discourse surrounding the tournament. Sadly, and maddeningly, the commentariat simply did not meet the moment. All this and more on our Bubble Wrap!
02:02 Mariah saves the day: Jonathan has a word for the haters
10:20 The road to the women's final
20:38 Naomi Osaka wins her 3rd Slam title, against a reborn Vika
30:27 Naomi starts a conversation, the commentators have no clue how to talk about it
46:08 The sloppy path to the men's final?
52:07 The "low quality" of the men's matches doesn't exist in a vacuum
59:54 What to make of the men's final
65:18 Moments that made us cringe
78:14 Moments of levity: things we enjoyed from the fortnight
81:59 Dramatic Reading: Serena (out of nowhere) shades tf out of ______.
We knew it would be an unusual first week of the US Open. It started with Benoit Paire's positive test, and continued with the double bubble regulations and warring health departments. We got non-stop drama surrounding Kiki Mladenovic's singles loss and last-minute ejection from the doubles draw. But no one was prepared for the default of the undefeated #1 seed Novak Djokovic after hitting a line judge with a ball. Nostalgic for five-set collapses and parent-coach-player psychodramas? Oh, we still have those too.
0:30 Djokovic defaulted in the 4th round
9:15 Highlights of the men's first week: Felix grows up, Tsitsipas melts down
18:00 Three Canadian men in the second week of a Slam, a first!
26:00 Women's side: Rogers and Brady stun, Pironkova parachutes in to torture your faves, and Vika gets that Vika mojo back
41:20 Some thoughts on Sloane-Serena
49:45 Benoit and the original 10 - a double bubble and a not-quite-double bubble
53:40 Kiki does not love the US Open
59:10 Inconsistency, jurisdiction issues, and a lack of transparency
70:10 Thoughts on Djokovic's statement
This week saw many major stories come and go until one stuck: the breaking away of Novak Djokovic and others from the ATP Player Council to start a separate player association (not a union btw). Before that, we saw Naomi Osaka's solitary act of resistance stop the tennis world in its tracks; a strange and troubling end to Sakkari-Serena; the rebirth of Victoria Azarenka; and the rebranding of Milos Raonic as widely beloved. Oh yeah, and the US Open preview.
2:30 American sports react to the shooting of Jacob Blake
9:15 Naomi Osaka announces that she won't play her Cincinnati semifinal to draw attention to BLM
16:30 "Shut up and dribble" doesn't work in tennis, especially women's tennis
20:50 Meanwhile, the Western & Southern Open is happening under strange circumstances - Vika's resurgence
24:45 Milos Raonic: new hair, new thighs, new me
28:20 The bizarre end to Serena Williams-Maria Sakkari
33:50 The girl who cried wolf
39:15 Friday night news dump: Djokovic and others break away from the ATP Player Council to form the Professional Tennis Players Association (PTPA)
53:30 Federer, Nadal, et al send a letter with some ... concerns (and some very good questions)
63:20 So what about women tennis players? #TennisUnited am I right
71:00 Oh, the US Open is happening in like two days?
Tennis has resumed in the US and Europe as the pandemic rages on. We catch up on a few weeks' worth of news, including: recent title winners Brady, Ferro, and Halep; early life in the Cincy/NY "bubble"; the non-sensical ramblings of vaccine skeptics and conspiracy theorists; and that Novak interview. We close with a tribute to two titans of 20th century tennis, who contributed even more off-court than they did on: Bob Ryland and Angela Buxton.
1:40 WTA site adds pronunciation guide - let’s try again,fail again, fail better
3:40 Tennis returns in Palermo, then Prague - Ferro is your first title winner of the resumed 2020 season
7:45 Lexington’s Top Seed Open gets a field they didn’t expect; thoughts on Venus’ new game, plus Coco, Serena, Vika, Jil, Ons, and Jenn
22:30 First-time titlist Jennifer Brady sweeps her side of the draw
25:00 Welcome to the bubble
37:55 The NYT interview with Djokovic - ehrm, um, how do we put this
46:15 Virologists and physicians are great and all - but let’s listen to vaccine-skeptic conspiracy theorists instead; also known as Occam’s Checkered Head Band
56:45 US Open:who’s in, who’s out
60:45 How are the rankings going to work this year?
63:15 Tributes to the late, great Bob Ryland and Angela Buxton
We are back from hiatus to bring you an episode that we have been working on for months, one that serves as a continuation of our previous dive into Pre-Open Era tennis. With tennis players now able to earn a living while also competing against the best at all the tournaments, we follow the development of the WTA Tour after its inception, the persistent struggles for equality over the decades, and the players who played major roles in making it happen.
04:02 Why do this episode now?
07:21 Cultural context for equal prize money and conditions under which movement arose
20:25 Tennis at the onset of the Open Era & the emergence of the women’s tour
37:51 Chris Evert emerges at the exact right time for women’s tennis
43:43 The WTA takes off; the women take Wimbledon to task
57:42 What were the arguments back then surrounding equal pay?
71:08 Ebbs and flows in the 80s and 90s, but the fight continues
83:00 Wimbledon’s decades-long petty misogyny against EPM
97:20 Our cautions and takeaways from this episode
We've just had the pleasure of chatting with the legendary Zina Garrison, gold medalist in Seoul, 3-time major mixed doubles champ, and the 1990 Wimbledon runner-up. Zina chats about her origins in tennis, shares her experience as a black woman in a very white sport, and takes us through some of the highlights of a great career. As Zina herself says, "Zina doesn't say much but when she does . . . " -- well, you listen.
4:10 Our chat with Lady Z
8:50 Zina takes us through her introduction to tennis, the first all-black WTA final (with Lori McNeil), and getting a kick out of her own record against Martina Navratilova
18:00 That Monica Seles flowers incident (lol) and beating Chris Evert in her final match
22:00 Zina's 1990 Wimbledon run, 30 years later
26:00 "Now people can't say those things didn't happen" - how Black Lives Matter has shone a light on inequality in tennis
34:10 Althea Gibson as more than just an icon
38:00 So ... about the wiggle
41:00 The game since Zina retired - who's she watching now?
4:00 A brief diversion to celebrate our double century, on cricket legend Brian Lara
7:00 Adria Tour results in several players testing positive for COVID-19
19:40 Fandom has made this conversation all but impossible
30:15 Blame game between players, coaches, Djokovic's dad, heads of state
32:30 Dominic Thiem, king of obliviousness
34:45 Alexander Zverev spotted acting the fool, stans jump ship
42:25 We're in trouble because managing this pandemic requires people caring about others
48:15 A dramatic reading of The Doughnut Chronicles, starring Boris Becker and Nick Kyrgios
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