Roger Federer vs Marat Safin - Australian Open 2009 [HQ]

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  • čas přidán 1. 07. 2013
  • The final meeting between Federer and Safin. Both players played a very entertaining match with superb shotmaking. Safin upped his level of play in the third set, but it was not enough to challenge Federer, who closed out the match in a tiebreak to advance to the 4th round.
    Had a lot of issues with my video editing software in the previous months (hence the absence of new videos). I think this is probably the best quality version you can find of this match on CZcams. I will try to make a 'RF Best Points of 2013 so far' video, depending if if I can sort out any problems with copyright (Roland Garros and Wimbledon) that other CZcamsrs have had.
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Komentáře • 482

  • @stanchan6172
    @stanchan6172 Před 10 lety +306

    LOL did anyone catch at 15:22 some guy in the stands yells to Safin, "suck it up princess."

  • @Nakke144
    @Nakke144 Před 3 lety +19

    Safin was such a beast of a tennis player. This is pretty much prime Federer and Safin in a wheelchair after all his injuries, but he still was a threat and made Roger up his game.

  • @michaelwirth6843
    @michaelwirth6843 Před 5 lety +113

    Marat Safin easily was one of the most talented players ever. Always fun to watch.

    • @NaCle7
      @NaCle7 Před 3 lety +2

      @MUFC what was the point you're trying to make?

    • @michaeleckstut7470
      @michaeleckstut7470 Před 3 lety

      Yes and he is one of the candidates for having underachieved the most relative to his talent. He should have dominated and didn't.

    • @iwishiwasthomasshelby
      @iwishiwasthomasshelby Před 8 měsíci +1

      If he didn’t drink alcohol and visit the brothel every day, he easily could have won 15-20 grand slams.

    • @annewalden3795
      @annewalden3795 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@iwishiwasthomasshelby I think the alcohol and an unhealthy diet were mainly responsible for his relative under achievement .

    • @iwishiwasthomasshelby
      @iwishiwasthomasshelby Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@annewalden3795 he was one of my favorite players. I liked him for his swagger and his talent. He’s one of those guys that could beat anyone on a given day, and people hated facing him in grand slams. I am happy he was able to string together a successful two week span, twice, to win two grand slams. There really aren’t many players like him.

  • @unowen7591
    @unowen7591 Před 8 lety +455

    I miss Safin. He was such a fun player to watch. His anger is not like Kyrgios anger. It was entertaining. When his game is on....it's on. He could beat anybody.
    It's a shame he had to quit the game so early.

    • @matttennis
      @matttennis Před 8 lety +73

      +unowen7591 I definitely agree. Nowadays, tennis players do anger wrong. Kyrgios is just disrespectful and Djokovic is obnoxious in how he acts like everyone is out to get him. I feel like Federer vs Safin AO 2005 was a perfect example of how to be competitive yet still respectful in tennis. Yes, Safin was disrespectful as times, but he channeled his aggression so effectively over the years.

    • @vincenttran5920
      @vincenttran5920 Před 8 lety +10

      +Matt Clark their was a clay court match where federer vs safin and they were both fumming, i was rofl

    • @SK-qu4wo
      @SK-qu4wo Před 6 lety +15

      Does anyone remember Safin's famous Wimbledon press conference meltdown where he cracked jokes about the strawberries and cream? I believe this came after yet another dissapointing loss and he said that he won't play Wimbledon anymore. It was a hilarious segment but very sad because you could hear the vulnerability and despair in his voice.

    • @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded
      @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded Před 6 lety +2

      Yeah, he's just like you on CZcams Comments.
      You're such a fun commenter to watch coz your anger entertains.
      And when you're on, you can beat almost anybody, except me.
      It's a shame you're quitting CZcams so early; I hope you come out of retirement sometime, like Hingis.

    • @hattrickster33
      @hattrickster33 Před 6 lety +2

      Well it's good to see you don't let that cat get away with anything...even a year afterwards.

  • @yourihong1319
    @yourihong1319 Před 4 lety +8

    Miss Marat safin. Great player. Always watching his play

  • @kwikdude
    @kwikdude Před 3 lety +9

    Gotta love safins backhand. Just the way he pulls it off

  • @lightkairi096
    @lightkairi096 Před 6 lety +15

    Marat always will be in my hearts

  • @charlesmendias1062
    @charlesmendias1062 Před 4 lety +7

    Federer's game is so beautiful and intelligent, unlike anyone else. Safin was a beast, badass talent but the frustration was understandable.

  • @rog2kay
    @rog2kay Před 7 lety +121

    best shot of the match at 13:34 Laser accuracy.

  • @bdijns
    @bdijns Před 10 lety +30

    what a point to finish a match! outstanding roger!

  • @AM-xy6xk
    @AM-xy6xk Před 5 lety +7

    Just a reminder what a great player Safin was. Just wow!

  • @garymoore8711
    @garymoore8711 Před 3 lety +4

    Safin surprised me. I don't think I've seen him,play so well. A great competitor!

  • @muhammadazzam7545
    @muhammadazzam7545 Před 3 lety +10

    8:25 its quite rare to see roger smile and act like that in the middle of the match. Marat must be a great and fun person...

    • @jajasatorashi136
      @jajasatorashi136 Před 11 měsíci

      They're friends to this day

    • @soheiladam7510
      @soheiladam7510 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Yeah, Safin is one of the few tennis players that he really liked and liked playing against, fun tennis all around. he was an amazing tennis player, too bad he couldn't handle the pressure, the commitment and training that tennis required.

  • @AP-qu8sl
    @AP-qu8sl Před 3 lety +7

    Young Federer was really really tough to beat. He had a smokin forehand

  • @OneWIsh1410
    @OneWIsh1410 Před 8 lety +10

    Two of my favourite players in the men's game!

    • @Cerph
      @Cerph Před 4 lety +3

      Federer, Safin and Nalbandian are the best.

    • @soheiladam7510
      @soheiladam7510 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@Cerphdefinitely no one questions that, but we can't ignore other fun players with amazing playing style. man that era was full of them. miss that.

  • @rog2kay
    @rog2kay Před 10 lety +7

    What a match that was ,, Fed's FH is just sublime !!!

  • @erikpate8370
    @erikpate8370 Před 6 lety +49

    I loved Safin and his game, to bad this was there final meeting, he was one of the only ones who could nuetralize federer

    • @thiagofeitosa5643
      @thiagofeitosa5643 Před 4 lety +1

      You've got the point.

    • @biglebowskithedude777
      @biglebowskithedude777 Před 3 lety +1

      recently I read that Federer just lost his temper when he saw in the tournament schedule that he would play with Safin

    • @zaitsevforlife
      @zaitsevforlife Před 2 lety

      Exactly. And as i know, Roger know it and respect it all days long. Marat one of the not many that days who can beat the GODmode Roger years.

  • @Aurorabeatz
    @Aurorabeatz Před 8 lety +31

    I love both Players, Great Match, btw.

  • @youngmyth
    @youngmyth Před 9 lety +119

    not sure if people notice but safin must have either had Adidas custom make him baggy apparel or he picked XXXXXL size of their current ones. All the players these days (indeed starting from around 06/07) rock tights essentially. This is small detail, but something about the late 90s / early 2000s "looser" apparel made the sport look so much more casual. Miss that.

    • @transamination
      @transamination Před 5 lety +20

      Last 1-2 years it's getting ridiculous. We're getting back to 70s-style short shorts. When Nadal first hit the scene he was wearing shorts that went half-way down his shins, now they're half-way up his thighs.

    • @sasook
      @sasook Před 4 lety +3

      I definitely miss the baggy clothes era. Not just in tennis but just in general as well. Everything is all about hugging your skin these days

    • @jameswalker6864
      @jameswalker6864 Před 4 lety

      Safin used XXXL t-shirts here because he was fat.

    • @ViaticalTree
      @ViaticalTree Před 4 lety +2

      I do remember Safin being one of the last to hang on to the baggy clothes.

    • @markuszgraggen4831
      @markuszgraggen4831 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jameswalker6864 Fat is something else.

  • @heynow1988
    @heynow1988 Před 4 lety +4

    Que jugador safin por dios!!? De lo mejores, tenia una técnica divina. Como la de federer.

  • @LJShaun
    @LJShaun Před 8 lety +4

    The shot by Federer at 13:34 and the catch at 13:36 is insane.

  • @cro00131
    @cro00131 Před 10 lety +35

    A nicely measured highlights reel, after all, tennis is a show not just a collection of winners. And rofl at the bogan yelling out "Suck it up Princess"

  • @VilleMetsola
    @VilleMetsola Před 7 lety +36

    I love Jim Courier's commentary. :)

  • @abhishekkhandkar
    @abhishekkhandkar Před 4 lety +1

    Gosh. He is the GOAT. I mean no one today either plays like this. Just perfect. Sublime

  • @bsrussian
    @bsrussian Před 10 měsíci +2

    i mean federers level at the time was just outrageous, the insane shotmaking was routine for him

  • @chetron21
    @chetron21 Před 8 lety +69

    safin was a beautiful player dunno why he left so early

    • @seroromix
      @seroromix Před 8 lety +20

      Knee injury and wrist injuries took his ability to hit the ball consistently.

    • @MrZyphR
      @MrZyphR Před 8 lety +11

      Injuries

    • @huntersmith9375
      @huntersmith9375 Před 6 lety +3

      Bro he got mono

  • @venkatapradyumnarallapalli2336

    One of the greatest matches...I wept like a baby!

  • @RanFeiwell
    @RanFeiwell Před 9 lety +5

    I still remember their 2004 semis match. To me it was one of the greatest tennis matches ever played.

    • @aca8638
      @aca8638 Před 9 lety +16

      You mean 2005? In 2004 they played in final and Federer won in straight sets...

    • @RanFeiwell
      @RanFeiwell Před 9 lety +5

      Miladin Milicevic
      Yep, you got me. the 2005 match

    • @seleil
      @seleil Před 6 lety

      Angelica hale

  • @Irfan87
    @Irfan87 Před 7 lety +51

    Safin's backhand is really something else. Arguably one of the best modern era two handed backhands, along with Nalbandian. Anyone wanting to learn how to do a two handed backhand should watch Safin. He hits it so cleanly too.

    • @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded
      @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded Před 6 lety +7

      Agassi, Djokovic, Nishikori, and Murray are better.

    • @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded
      @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded Před 6 lety +1

      To Nalbandian, I agree--right up there with Agassi.

    • @Irfan87
      @Irfan87 Před 6 lety +9

      None of those hit backhands as powerful and as fast Safin's, Nalbandian included. Safin doesn't have their mechanical simplicity, but at it's best its the most dangerous of them.

    • @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded
      @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded Před 6 lety +6

      Irfan Khalis
      Yeah ... so when a youngster learns how to hit a backhand, they'll want to learn from the 4 dudes who can hit it _in_ the court hard 65 times out of 100, rather than the 1 dude who hit it in super-hard 30 times out of 100, and the other 70 times out.
      Consistency trumps the spectacular.

    • @Irfan87
      @Irfan87 Před 6 lety +14

      My point still stands, Safin's problem is mental, nt technical. In technical terms, Safin hits a better backhand than all those bar Nalbandian.

  • @jeoh93
    @jeoh93 Před 5 lety +1

    People always gave Safin crap about his mental game, but dealing with injuries is just about the hardest mental hurdle any player can deal with. He really deserves more credit for playing with chronic knee problems.

  • @rog2kay
    @rog2kay Před 10 lety

    Greattt Highlights btw , thanks !!

  • @zaitsevforlife
    @zaitsevforlife Před 2 lety +1

    Safin is one of the most talent player. One of the best beckhends ever, like Agassi, Nole but his was real weapon. Miss him so much. If not the mental problems i think he could be one of the GOAT. He should be…. And he was one of the not many players who know how to play Federer that days. And Roger was like godlike mode we all know. Sad….. and…… i played and train in Spain in Valencia academy by the way)), i knew Marat personally. He was really good guy in “real” life.

  • @JimS0cks
    @JimS0cks Před 5 lety +2

    safin when he came back, he calmed it down a lot. and he just had that charisma (sometimes i swear he would break his racquet on purpose just to please the fans). i remember watching this game. i was rooting for him. its too bad he didn't try harder in his career, he could have had more than just 2 slams.

  • @TennisConditioningTV
    @TennisConditioningTV Před 7 lety

    great stuff - thank you for sharing!

  • @BrotherTree1
    @BrotherTree1 Před 11 lety +3

    This match was closer than what the scoreline depicts. The only difference was that Safin couldn't take the few BP chances he had, while Fed took his opportunities without hesitation. That 3rd set featured amazing tennis.

  • @CrystalCarrington
    @CrystalCarrington Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for this, really appreciate your videos, the quality was great x

    • @Beechaii2
      @Beechaii2  Před 3 lety

      I'm glad you enjoyed it! If you go to my channel, I reuploaded highlights of this match in slightly better quality with a smoother framerate, it also has more points and replays as well!

  • @juricakrznaric5850
    @juricakrznaric5850 Před 8 lety +1

    Always when I watch this match I remebered the gold period of tennis and then I think and said to myself "like in the old days". Federer is my idol and I beliave he can do it again.

  • @mono0288
    @mono0288 Před 5 lety +2

    Federer looks like a magician on the court!

  • @korakorakot727
    @korakorakot727 Před 4 lety +2

    I love both of them. But Roger's footwork is insane!

  • @Cerph
    @Cerph Před 6 lety +3

    Beautiful tennis- excellent match point.

  • @streamingeagle1
    @streamingeagle1 Před 4 lety +2

    look at how hard these guys are hitting the ball. As good as anything we see these days, maybe better. I loved watching these two play. Too bad safin retired too early.

  • @johnlin6820
    @johnlin6820 Před 10 lety

    Wonderful match! Thanks.

  • @Kelveron
    @Kelveron Před 6 lety +43

    Safin looked like he'd been up all night partying all the way through!

    • @iwishiwasthomasshelby
      @iwishiwasthomasshelby Před 8 měsíci

      He was drinking a bottle of vodka every night and went home with 2-3 girls every night. He said he would wake up with 2 hours of sleep and alcohol still in his breath and went and won several grand slams like this. Pity the talent.

  • @streamingeagle1
    @streamingeagle1 Před 4 lety +1

    Safin's serve had the sweetest sound come out of his racket

  • @martinhall932
    @martinhall932 Před 6 lety +15

    Watching how well Roger played this match makes Nadal's victory in the final all that more remarkable... especially after Verdasco took Nadal to 5 sets in the semi the day before the final!

    • @lorenzopasquini3797
      @lorenzopasquini3797 Před 6 lety +13

      Federer played against the history that day, unfortunatly for him, was crushed by the pressure of victory at any cost, everyone thought that he had to win to reach Sampras at 14 Slam. Roger had only 52% of first serve in the entire match. The average career is 63%, to give an idea of the deficit performance on serve. Nadal obviously played very well, but Federer threw away the game literally, like the first 2 sets of Wimbledon 2008, he was probably still shocked by the bad defeat suffered at Roland Garros 1 month before.

    • @aleksamilosevic8792
      @aleksamilosevic8792 Před 4 lety +3

      @@lorenzopasquini3797 XD.he didnt throw away shit.Nadal was completly drenched in the finals and still won.

    • @sasook
      @sasook Před 4 lety +3

      Aleksa Teemo That tournament was the first time I was truly amazed at Nadal’s fitness. Just as Fed raised the bar for skill in the sport, Nadal raised the bar for fitness in the sport. Just insane being able to play those 2 classics back to back.

    • @SHVideografie
      @SHVideografie Před 2 lety

      @@aleksamilosevic8792 Yeah Nadal was playing amazing that final but Federer was struggling with the nerves and expectations like Novak was at the US Open this year. Federer couldn't find a first serve to save his life (only 50%) in that final and his bp conversion was at a low, which is also partially due to Nadal of course.

    • @aleksamilosevic8792
      @aleksamilosevic8792 Před 2 lety

      @@SHVideografie He hit 60% i think and that was his probably best backhand performance against(specifically) Peak nadal.

  • @taylorpack2839
    @taylorpack2839 Před 5 lety +3

    Safin was one of the few players that could just flip a switch and go god mode, that’s along with federer, djokovic, nadal, Del Potro, wawrinka, and soderling

  • @eduardoarredondo5282
    @eduardoarredondo5282 Před 6 lety +2

    What a beautiful game Safin use to have not enough at this match to beat Federer but so much talent in both players

  • @ForehandHotshot
    @ForehandHotshot Před 10 lety +3

    Just finished watching the 2005 AO semi highlights and moved to this video. The string technology changed the game radically in just 4 years time. The power these guys have in their rackets just doesn't allow for net play anymore. I think the court was just as fast in 2009 as it was in 2005, but the racket tech changes the tennis completely.

    • @Beechaii2
      @Beechaii2  Před 10 lety +5

      The surface was switched in 2008 from Rebound Ace to Plexicushion, so there definitely was a slight change to the court speed. Rebound Ace was definitely faster, as most the players said when they first tried the new Plexicushion courts in 2008.

    • @Oreoclan
      @Oreoclan Před 10 lety

      Beechaii2 I thought the initial impression was that the 2008+ courts played faster? I could definitely be wrong, but Rebound Ace was a fairly slow court, especially when it was hot, because it would really grab the ball. Rebound Ace also had a fairly high bounce for a hard court, hence the name.

    • @Beechaii2
      @Beechaii2  Před 10 lety +2

      Nah, even the players complained it was slower. I'm no expert, but even in the matches these days, its visible that the court slows the balls a lot. Apparently, there's some clay under the surface of Plexicushion.

    • @soheiladam7510
      @soheiladam7510 Před 9 měsíci

      the courts were differently slower and I understand why they did it that's why sluggers and pushers were able to do better at hard courts, it's all about marketing and money.

    • @markfish1113
      @markfish1113 Před 5 měsíci

      Federer's weakness is he didn't embrace this tech change which cause him to fall behind Nadal and Nole. They play with latest racquet sizes, keto diet and statistics training. He stubbornly believe in S&V and old tactics.

  • @Elektrorocker1988
    @Elektrorocker1988 Před 4 lety

    Whoa one of a kind that match point.😨🎉 Why do I haven't seen this before? best way to finish the match!! 🙆🏻‍♂️👏🏻👏🏻

  • @chaitanyamohan4164
    @chaitanyamohan4164 Před 5 lety +2

    one of Roger's best outfits

  • @sbn025
    @sbn025 Před 7 lety +6

    man i missed this kind of games! Today games are too physical!

  • @ususajitari4205
    @ususajitari4205 Před 6 lety +3

    サフィンのサーブフォームすごいかっこいい!まさにキャノン!

  • @paulkaholic1094
    @paulkaholic1094 Před měsícem

    I wish Marat stayed longer in the tennis tournaments! One of the best!

  • @filippppppos
    @filippppppos Před 8 lety +1

    my favourite match :)

  • @Muathalshareef2
    @Muathalshareef2 Před 3 lety +1

    I love tennis in 2005 when safin beat Federer, and I love him , after that he game was down gradually , but I stick to his game even he loses !

  • @luisantoniomorais6882
    @luisantoniomorais6882 Před 8 lety

    Uma aula de tênis!!!! 🎾🎾🎾🏆

  • @yELoHQ
    @yELoHQ Před 5 lety +24

    15:20 "suck it up princess" XD

  • @UMASAMA0127
    @UMASAMA0127 Před 5 lety +3

    今では、錦織圭くんや大阪なおみちゃんでテニス騒がれてるけど、この頃のテニス界は懐かしくもあるけど色褪せてなく何回観ても凄いプレーに溢れていたなぁ。サフィンは僕の憧れのプレーヤーです!プレイスタイル性格全てかっこよすぎる^_^

  • @BlizzyFoxTF
    @BlizzyFoxTF Před 5 lety

    Fours years after the best tennis match of all time. AO has a tendency for legendary storylines.

  • @artygunnar
    @artygunnar Před 9 lety +1

    this just goes to show you that Roger kept on growing as a player and working hard, Safin has spectacular talent, but he worked hard for his two slams and partied in between a lot....

  • @TheHenMen
    @TheHenMen Před 3 lety

    The ending to this match, oh my goodness!

  • @RossBayCult
    @RossBayCult Před 4 lety +3

    Such a shame to see post AO 2005 Safin play. He wasn’t the same after the knee injury.

  • @davd1986
    @davd1986 Před 11 lety +9

    Safin was also waaay past it at this point. He never really recovered from his knee injury, one of the reasons he retired early. He played ok in this match, particularly the 3rd set, but you can see how bad his movement and forehand are, nowhere near to where it was before he had his injury problems. Also remember he was 2 points away from stealing the 3rd set breaker. Federer played well in this tournament. Shame he lost in the final.

    • @matteo964
      @matteo964 Před 4 lety +1

      Nadal 100 per cent deserved the final

    • @chriswells5983
      @chriswells5983 Před 4 lety +2

      @@matteo964 Of course he deserved it, he did win it. That being said, Nadal's own Uncle Toni admitted Roger should have taken it in 4-sets and mentally wasn't tough that day. Part of the drill, have to finish the job.

    • @soheiladam7510
      @soheiladam7510 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@chriswells5983well he's right, people forget that Federer was under a lot of pressure that day and still suffered from back problems and he should have never lost that match but pressure can be crippling, which Nadal and Nole have experienced at some point too since they were always the underdogs and people think of them as more resilient than Federer and can handle pressure better which ofcourse they were proven wrong.

  • @MrPositive3D
    @MrPositive3D Před 4 lety +1

    Safin - still the reigning most talented headcase ever

  • @rafaelodossantos4210
    @rafaelodossantos4210 Před 2 měsíci

    Great match 🎉

  • @dreadpirate.roberts
    @dreadpirate.roberts Před 9 lety +36

    You can cite string technology, court progression, etc. All of those things are true in relation to how this match is different than their epic 2005 encounter down under. BUT the biggest difference in this match is that Federer's movement and court positioning were immensely improved while Safin's was diminished a considerable bit compared to 4 years previously.

    • @Beechaii2
      @Beechaii2  Před 9 lety +14

      Derrick Roberts Yeah this was Safin's last year on tour right? Body was scarred, and his old magic only sparkled occasionally.

    • @3timeMVPNash
      @3timeMVPNash Před 9 lety +14

      Derrick Roberts Federer was definitely quicker in 2005, but the difference was certainly a lot less dramatic than it was for Safin, who was never the same really after that Australian Open Slam win.

    • @bacardibum
      @bacardibum Před 8 lety +3

      ***** I would compare the Aussie 05 Safin performance to that of Del Potro Us Open 2009. Amazing ball striking, power tennis but afterwards injury and inconsistency.

    • @iamdrewstewart
      @iamdrewstewart Před 8 lety +11

      +Derrick Roberts bullshit, federer in 2005 was AT LEAST as good if not better than the 2009 federer

    • @JalipeJude
      @JalipeJude Před 8 lety +1

      +Derrick Roberts You can tell that the biggest difference is that Federer improved his backhand and his 2nd serve. And, although his first serve power and his movement diminished a bit, his smarter placement of the serve and better hitting with the backhand made him a better player. He did learn from his constituents.

  • @HopeEsleim1101
    @HopeEsleim1101 Před 10 lety +8

    I'm sorry but Roger's shot at 2:30 just absolutely blows my mind. To have such little time to react to even get a racket on that ball, much less do THAT... Just wow.
    4:24... You just kinda knew he'd do that didn't you...
    12:52 Just - somebody record that shot!!!
    15:48

    • @Beechaii2
      @Beechaii2  Před 10 lety +2

      Yeah 2:30 was a sweet shot, and single handed backhand winners are always awesome to watch. 4:24 is a vintage Fed shot, he struggles with the running forehand these days, so it's going to be very rare we see that crazy angled forehand again ;)

  • @arturovasquez9720
    @arturovasquez9720 Před 8 dny

    Qué bello tenis hacían ambos. Tan limpio, ajustado, brillante... Cada cual jugaba con su "espejo". Dos caballeros del deporte. Y... sin gemidos. [What beautiful tennis they both played. So clean, tight, shiny... Both played with the "mirror" of him. Two gentlemen of sport. And... no moaning].

  • @Monsterenergy791
    @Monsterenergy791 Před 10 lety

    Absurd tennis! Would love to play as good as them

  • @owenlewis6399
    @owenlewis6399 Před 4 lety

    Sweet shot on match point!

  • @hempcacaogoji831
    @hempcacaogoji831 Před 3 lety +1

    Federer is so damn good that if Safin played like this against anyone else, he would have destroyed them.

  • @sandipanchatterjee8494
    @sandipanchatterjee8494 Před 4 lety +1

    This safin had self doubts unlike the safin of 2005 who seemed confident that he could beat Federer even at his best.

  • @jez9999
    @jez9999 Před 6 lety +9

    Called a foot fault so he could be on TV for 1 second :-D

  • @user-ii8zs6ol4b
    @user-ii8zs6ol4b Před 5 lety +1

    oh~my dear handsome safin~~~~~~~~~><

  • @meshalsinnen5917
    @meshalsinnen5917 Před 6 lety

    Safin on crutches essentially. He was a sight to behold when he could move.

  • @TennisVideos
    @TennisVideos Před 10 lety

    I love !

  • @derLadenhueter
    @derLadenhueter Před 10 lety +4

    those challenges .... :-D

  • @danielstubbs914
    @danielstubbs914 Před 5 lety +1

    Often 06-07 was looked at as federer prime, but honestly 09 was the strongest year of his tennis I think!

    • @sain8827
      @sain8827 Před 5 lety

      He did what Nadal did in the previous year (FO+Wimbledon) and made 4 GS finals

    • @sasook
      @sasook Před 4 lety +3

      Nah 04-07 was better in terms of his form

    • @soheiladam7510
      @soheiladam7510 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@sasookyeah I tend to agree since his back problems really did affect his form and shotmaking beyond those years and his only could hold his top form for like one or two slams at the time not like his prime years.

  • @sandipanchatterjee5188
    @sandipanchatterjee5188 Před 6 lety +2

    Had injury, lack of self confidence not creeped in ,safin was the one guy who could have matched federer shot for shot on any surface . this should have been the marquee rivalry for a long time if safin stayed injury free.

    • @emptyhearted9981
      @emptyhearted9981 Před 4 lety

      Silliest thing i ever did hear. I dont think safin cared enough

  • @fan5407
    @fan5407 Před 6 měsíci

    Federer's incredulity toward Shot Spot in the early days is hilarious. Go watch Federer nearly losing his sanity during the Wimbledon 2008 final at all the close calls that went in Nadal's favor. He sounds like he's going to cry (see: "It's KILLING me". Nowadays, players don't think twice, but in 2008-2009, Federer and other players weren't quite willing to believe the tech over their own eyes. Funny how far we've come. Now, majors are getting rid of line judges, altogether.

  • @willzsportscards
    @willzsportscards Před 4 lety

    7:00. Seriously? The hands to hit that volley off that Fed FH..just wow.

  • @pacochuquiure7807
    @pacochuquiure7807 Před 9 lety +6

    Safin had the talent but lacked mentality. He also had a playing style that suited Federer. His shots weren't long enough (lacked depth). He had a great start during his early years as a pro but rapidly vanished as Hewitt and all the others of his generation. The Weak Generation.

    • @chrisheck2831
      @chrisheck2831 Před 9 lety +7

      That generation wasn't really that weak. There maybe weren't quite as many superstars, but it wasn't weak. There's a difference.

    • @chrisheck2831
      @chrisheck2831 Před 9 lety +1

      Think about it. How many really great players are there now? Four, maybe five? That's not really being fair to the last generation.

    • @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded
      @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded Před 6 lety +2

      You're right, Chris. They were a good-but-not-great generation.
      Federer's good-but-not-great (weaker) generation -
      Player: Slam titles, WTF titles, Masters titles, Olympics singles
      Fed: 19, 6, 27
      Roddick: 1, 0, 5
      Hewitt: 2, 2, 2
      Safin: 2, 0, 5
      Ferrero: 1, 0, 4
      Davydenko: 0, 1, 3
      Nalbandian: 0, 1, 2
      Ferrer: 0, 0, 1
      Nadal's great (stronger) generation -
      Nadal: 16, 0, 30, 1
      Djokovic: 12, 5, 30
      Murray: 3, 1, 14, 2
      Stan: 3, 0, 1
      Del Po: 1, 0, 0
      Tsonga: 0, 0, 2
      Cilic: 1, 0, 1
      Berdych: 0, 0, 1
      Good-but-not-great Generation: 25, 10, 49, 1
      Great Generation: 36, 6, 79, 2

  • @GLOKD
    @GLOKD Před 5 lety

    That foot fault call was outrageous.

  • @vitek3760
    @vitek3760 Před 4 lety +2

    Марат красавчик!!!

  • @mashood86
    @mashood86 Před 4 lety

    Hi could you plz tell me How to get these videos for youtube channel

  • @myself-ow7ji
    @myself-ow7ji Před 8 lety +1

    nice match

  • @sam-yau
    @sam-yau Před 10 lety +4

    It's hard to admit Federer is in decline, but it's so much more evident after watching this. He's just so confident, his shot selection so stable and solid, and he moves with such sureness in his stride.

  • @Oreoclan
    @Oreoclan Před 10 lety +23

    Honestly, I feel like foot faults caused by starting past the center line should warrant a let instead of a foot fault. Realistically, players are not intentionally trying to touch or cross the line, they are just trying to serve the ball. I mean, the center line rule is the worst, because players are not being notified pre-service that they are committing a fault before they even start their motion. If you are doomed to fault before you even swing at the ball, is that really fair when a linesman could respectively warn you that you are crossing the line?
    I feel like players should at least be allowed to know when they are committing foot faults before they even start their motion. Walking onto the line while serving is a different thing entirely (though they also sometimes come up at the worst moments). And the foot fault calls can't always be taken to be 100% accurate because linesmen often mistake calls. They can obviously choose to avoid making calls on the closer foot faults and only call the obvious ones, but then are they truly doing their job? The fairest way to do this is to simply make foot faults be considered lets unless the serve is considered out. In this case, the returner really loses nothing, because an out serve is still a fault, and a good serve is considered a let, meaning they would get about a 30% chance of the opponent missing the serve and giving them a second serve (assuming a good first serve percentage). Though, players who repeatedly foot fault should be given a penalty, say anything past 2 or 3 foot faults receives a point penalty (or a fault). This way, players don't abuse the system and merely have it as a fallback in case they accidentally make a foot fault, which is usually the case.

    • @NoelAndres17
      @NoelAndres17 Před 9 lety

      Oreoclan At the very least players should be able to challenge a foot fault. I remember back in the day the had cameras right at the baseline to show if a ball landed on the line or not. It wasn't used by the umpire to change a bad call, I think it was only for TV. But that same technology could be added in the Grand Slams. In the case of Safin, he would had challenged the call, and if the replay showed his foot past the line, then he would know for sure he did a foot fault, and not lose his concentration any further.
      I think that the way Safin foot faulted shouldn't be a fault. In my opinion, a player should be on the correct side of the centerline just as he goes up for the serve, NOT when he sets his stance. Safin's serve motion makes him first go back with his right leg, but then he moves it forward. And as he goes for the serve swing, that's when the feet position should be considered for a foot fault. But umpiring it this way is a bit more complex. It is simpler just to make sure the player doesn't cross the other side at any point of the serve motion. So this rule is here to stay. Thus, at the very least, extend the challenge system to foot faults (which irk players big time), and double bounces. Just put a small screen TV with the chair umpire with live action feed so he can overrule himself according to a "second opinion". Players would be able to challenge more things than just in/out calls. It's good for the game, good for the players.

    • @fendergrassmount3926
      @fendergrassmount3926 Před 6 lety

      Yeah it was a classless call by 'number one son. FFS two sets down in a breaker.

    • @keshavchaudhary547
      @keshavchaudhary547 Před 6 lety +1

      What the fuck are you people saying. Telling that they are crossing the centre line before committing the foot fault? What logic is that? It's just the same as removing the foot faults entirely from the game. What is that other guy talking about? It was a bad timmed foot fault? What the hell is that supposed to mean? He is trying to say if you are 2 sets to love down then be lenient on player. People talking utter rubbish here.

    • @wava2187
      @wava2187 Před 4 lety +1

      For two millions dollars wouldn't you would make sure your feet were in the right position for EVERY shot?!

    • @goxaviergo11
      @goxaviergo11 Před 4 lety

      Oreoclan you have to be kidding. Notifying them they’re committing a foot fault before they hit it? Are you nuts?

  • @AndreyMihaylov81
    @AndreyMihaylov81 Před 6 lety +6

    БАТЯ! Но Сафин тоже красавчик.

  • @Polarcupcheck
    @Polarcupcheck Před 10 lety +17

    Sometimes I think Safin had too much pride, and wanted the game to be pretty. Meaning he went for an aesthetic course of a point versus a way to win anyway possible. Good for pretty, bad for winning. Someone talked about Sofia Polgar playing chess like that.

    • @vladm7246
      @vladm7246 Před 7 lety +3

      Polarcupcheck Safin had little belief in himself for a while so I believe he over acts with anger to make up for it. He just needed more confidence in himself and he could have won this match. Federer has the perfect balance of everything and that is why he wins. As the spectator said 'suck it up princess' although probably a shitty thing to hear when you struggle with self confidence as it is.

    • @stritlit
      @stritlit Před 6 lety +7

      That 'pretty' tennis you're talking about is just shot making aggressive tennis.
      Roddick, Blake, Federer, Safin, Gonzalez were part of the 2000-2007 era of shot Making tennis, fast courts and fast balls and players won by hitting winners and not Defensive play.
      It isn't a high percentage game and that's why most of these players were never consistent enough to win slams.
      To Safin's credit he won AO 2005

    • @mwmk4764
      @mwmk4764 Před 5 lety

      agree

    • @jonmcmillan9426
      @jonmcmillan9426 Před 5 lety +1

      Nice observation. Despite his woebegone affect, I appreciated Safin. He was a supremely talented athlete but maybe less of a tennis competitor. Federer is both, I guess.

    • @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded
      @CalebPereiraTheUnheralded Před 5 lety +1

      No, no.
      His game was too low margin and he paid for it by not developing the higher margin component. He knew he wasn't good enough by himself.
      It's like Kyrgios now.
      They pretend they don't care, but in truth they know they aren't good enough for the top.
      Playing low margin tennis is not a viable long term strategy. You need high margin shots and defence. You need to balance fight and flight.
      Most of Fed's generation didn't have this which is why most people call them a relatively weaker generation.

  • @IGOR591
    @IGOR591 Před 5 lety +1

    Великолепная игра!
    Все же-
    Жаль что Сафин проиграл.

  • @kingzcounty
    @kingzcounty Před 5 lety

    Goat

  • @640A
    @640A Před 9 lety +13

    10:28 12:53
    Thats called talent only a few have it!

  • @josephli4244
    @josephli4244 Před 11 lety

    I beg your pardon, I forgot about the back foot

  • @Beechaii2
    @Beechaii2  Před 11 lety

    Yeah, he was very inconsistent after '05 unfortunately due to the injury. At least there were still some 'prime' Safin points in this match.

  • @g2tennis
    @g2tennis Před 10 lety

    If Federer was a god, he would be the "Tennis God". That's amazing.

  • @paomaling
    @paomaling Před 10 lety +3

    federer looks like he's not even breaking a sweat...

  • @zakiaaa30
    @zakiaaa30 Před 3 lety

    Second time im watching this one!

  • @UserUser-nk3xh
    @UserUser-nk3xh Před 2 lety

    Фамилия Сафин была у меня на слуху Но я не знала,что это такой талантливый, изобретательный игрок

  • @rohitraju7331
    @rohitraju7331 Před 10 lety +15

    13:33

    • @Beechaii2
      @Beechaii2  Před 10 lety +6

      Remember the video where Roger hit numerous tennis balls through an open rooftop of a Mercedes from a long distance? This trick he did here proves it wasn't fake ;)

    • @kaylun80
      @kaylun80 Před 10 lety +2

      Roger is not human