How Good Was Michael Chang Actually?

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  • čas přidán 19. 09. 2022
  • How Good Was Michael Chang Actually?
    Michael Chang was a great fascinating player of the modern era. One of the most remarkable achievements in tennis history was his victory at the French Open as a seventeen-year-old.
    At times, he went toe-to-toe with one of the world's best. Let's see how good Michael Chang truly was.
    Channel inspired by Channel inspired by TennisTV, TENNIS TALK with Cam Williams, WTA, Tennistic Productions, CULT TENNIS
    Inspired by How Good Was Andre Agassi Actually?
    Inspired by How Good Was Pete Sampras Actually?
    Inspired by How Good Was Boris Becker Actually?
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    In this video we go over tennis,tennis plus,roland garros,wimbledon,us open,australian open,chang,michael chang,michael chang tennis classic,michael chang tennis,how good was michael chang actually,michael chang us open,michael chang highlights,pete sampras michael chang,michael chang best moments,michael chang life after tennis,michael chang vs pete sampras,united states tennis association,atp tour,michael chang early life,michael chang career,michael chang winner
    #michaelchang #chang #tennis
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Komentáře • 134

  • @albertyu750
    @albertyu750 Před rokem +219

    Chang was one of the reasons I got into tennis. My parents saw a young Chinese/Taiwanese player win the French Open and decided to see if I could do the same. Sadly for them, I'm nowhere near as skilled as Chang. But I still love tennis and will continue to play until I'm old and confined to a wheelchair.

    • @dichtran8337
      @dichtran8337 Před rokem +7

      Albert Yu / me too, inspired by Micheal , I was 30 years old in 1989 French open the year Micheal Chang won his grand slam championship, I picked up tennis game, still playing tennis since then.

    • @harrison3910
      @harrison3910 Před rokem +4

      Taiwanese American, he isn’t Chinese

    • @socalstr
      @socalstr Před rokem +1

      Why can’t people just get inspired by a great player and not make up some racial reason to like something. The whole concept it so exhausting.

    • @iagreewithyou112
      @iagreewithyou112 Před rokem

      @@socalstr your name sounds white so you wouldn't know.

    • @superstudlyhunk
      @superstudlyhunk Před rokem +9

      @@harrison3910 which is just Chinese-American at the end of the day

  • @areezzy
    @areezzy Před rokem +63

    It's incredible how much Chang got given his lack of a big weapon - but his speed was breathtaking. I watched him live a few times and often his opponent dropshots or killer shots that looks impossible to retrieve, but then he retrieved it and counterpunched to a winner. When I met him in person, I saw his thighs were otherworldly huge and muscular, that gave him that speed.

  • @sh0ck815
    @sh0ck815 Před rokem +43

    Michael Chang was an inspiration for generations of Asian Americans and continues to be even today! I never really enjoyed his grind it out style when compared to beautiful strikers like Pistol Pete or Andre, but his grit, determination, and chess skills on the court always garnered a ton of respect. An absolute legend and unique players to come out of the greatest era of American tennis players in the sport's history.

    • @haisay8674
      @haisay8674 Před 2 měsíci

      God loves you, seek him and if you want forgiven of your sins and want to be certain that your sins are forgiven believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved

  • @kennguyen2994
    @kennguyen2994 Před rokem +58

    Chang absolutely maximize his talent and imo was an overachiever. There were so many great players in his era he had to do battle with. Unfortunately, he was just an undersized player going against all the heavyweights. He had that mentality of never giving up on a ball similar to that of Nadal and Joker.

  • @theprogressivemichigander6588

    To me, Chang's 1989 French Open run and Ivanisevic's 2001 Wimbledon run are the two best runs to a grand slam title in the modern history of men's tennis.

  • @juandixonformvp
    @juandixonformvp Před rokem +28

    There were two phases to Chang's career, first was the 17 year old who won the French Open by running everything down, surprising his opponents with his incredible acceleration and change of direction. In the second phase of Chang's career, he was no longer a baseline grinder, but an attacking all court player. Chang was a fixture in the top-10 in an extremely tough era of tennis, and made it to 3 other Grand Slam finals, against Sampras, Becker, and Muster, who are also all-time greats.

    • @haisay8674
      @haisay8674 Před 2 měsíci

      God loves you, seek him and if you want forgiven of your sins and want to be certain that your sins are forgiven believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved

  • @captainspirou
    @captainspirou Před rokem +13

    Chang was basically the first significant Asian athlete I remember seeing in any sport, not just tennis. He led the way for a lot of people outside of tennis too

    • @haisay8674
      @haisay8674 Před 2 měsíci

      God loves you, seek him and if you want forgiven of your sins and want to be certain that your sins are forgiven believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved

  • @paulc7804
    @paulc7804 Před rokem +28

    Chang was the first one to break through in winning a major title during the early Sampras, Agassi, Courier, Chang generation of tennis. I think his early achievement was a major push for the other Americans to believe they could do the same or better.

    • @chengyman
      @chengyman Před rokem +4

      Sampras credits Chang for giving him confidence to win the 91 US Open

  • @BurnsTennis
    @BurnsTennis Před rokem +16

    The Chang v Edberg 1992 US Open semifinal is still the longest match in US Open history, at 5 hrs and 26 minutes. I think that is important info to mention.

  • @chengyman
    @chengyman Před rokem +21

    Pound for pound the best tennis player ever :) Gilbert said there will never be another champion under 6ft tall again. If you grew up playing tennis, you know it's difficult being short in this game. He was able to compete at a huge disadvantage of being only 5'8. Thanks for all the memories Chang.

    • @minavamp2811
      @minavamp2811 Před rokem +1

      he is 5'8" on a good day. he's more 5'7" to be honest. he and Diego Schwartzman are about the same height.

    • @TheJhtlag
      @TheJhtlag Před rokem +1

      I understand Gilbert's comment, back in the 70's when i was growing up there was an interesting dynamic there: big games versus grinders, the Cliff Richeys, Harold Soloman etc. Going for it shots/mistakes versus getting the ball back/not making mistakes. Now, not so much technology has eliminated that sort of specialization. There does seem to be a sweet spot though if Federer and Djokovic and Nadal are examples right around 6' 1".

    • @jahlu90
      @jahlu90 Před rokem +3

      Hewitt won 2 slams and was the youngest no 1 (until alcaraz recently) and was only 5'9

    • @sharifs649
      @sharifs649 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@jahlu90nishoki got close at the same height someone in the 5'9 to 5'10 range could win a major but he would have to have extreme athleticism think nfl wr genetics

  • @m3tek44
    @m3tek44 Před rokem +2

    Another legend... miss seeing Chang on TV.

  • @miketokles9451
    @miketokles9451 Před rokem +2

    He was my favorite player, he would run everything down and I loved that about him and tried to do the same when I played.

  • @wsurfer2147
    @wsurfer2147 Před rokem +16

    Considered his small size, he has accomplished a lot in tennis.

  • @dkruljac
    @dkruljac Před rokem +6

    Oh I loved watching Chang play. He was my favourite male player.

  • @lucu01
    @lucu01 Před rokem +4

    i watched him play in London, as short as me around 1.7m but super fast, could generate good power and really good hands. His mentality was second to none, doggedly dogged and a very quick thinker

  • @christophercasey7388
    @christophercasey7388 Před rokem +7

    He ran everything down; he was a counter puncher. That was his game; no more, no less. Often good enough, but sometimes not enough.

  • @davidcook680
    @davidcook680 Před rokem +5

    He was the first tennis player. I was a fan of.

  • @7.5Mviews
    @7.5Mviews Před rokem +12

    Chang needs more credit for inspiring so many Asian kids (and likely other kids as well) to play tennis. There were so few POCs tennis pros during the 90s.

    • @HeangKoing
      @HeangKoing Před rokem

      Breaking the mould. Love it. A real trailblazer. Credit to him, his family and all of the people that believed where others didn't.

  • @silvere36
    @silvere36 Před 11 měsíci +2

    He's one of the hardest working tennis professionals. He never left anything on the court. It eventually to a toll on his body. He was never the same after his injury. He lost his speed and power but was ever bit as cerebral as before. I often wondered how he'd be if he didn't get injured.

    • @hangarby10
      @hangarby10 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Agreed. That’s why the serve is such a valued weapon in men’s tennis. You need to be able to win a percentage of quick points without having to grind through a best of five set match over a two week tournament.

  • @mrbenjinow
    @mrbenjinow Před rokem +6

    Every child picking up tennis MUST watch Chang. Period. Otherwise, they're missing out on some extremely key lessons in sports, and worse yet, in life.

  • @LMays-cu2hp
    @LMays-cu2hp Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for sharing. A great guy!!😊😊

  • @Holy_Moley
    @Holy_Moley Před rokem +3

    Michael Chang was to tennis, what Ayrton Senna was to F1. Senna went after every opportunity, after every gap, fighting tooth and nail for every corner. Likewise, Chang never gave up a point, chasing every ball until it was impossible to get to. Their belief in God, drove them both to do their absolute best. It was said of Senna, that he was a danger to the other drivers, because he drove like death didn't matter. Michael Chang was a joy to watch on court. God bless him and his family.

  • @jasonhorita5912
    @jasonhorita5912 Před rokem +1

    Albert Yu, Michael Chang is one my inspirations too!!!

  • @MuvoTX
    @MuvoTX Před rokem +1

    Golden era of tennis... chang, agassi, sampras, courier, edberg... prince graphite versus wilson pro staff.

  • @nodrama490
    @nodrama490 Před rokem

    Will always be my hero!

  • @balbin0329
    @balbin0329 Před 11 měsíci

    My favorite player of all-time❤ Greatest footwork tennis has ever seen💯

  • @michaellee888
    @michaellee888 Před rokem +3

    The accomplishment of Michael Chang was huge! 15th seed and defeated legendary players, Lendl and Edberg. And they were on form and were not hampered with any injury, etc. Chang's use of stamina, speed and strategy gave inspiration to future players like Hingis, Hewitt, Nadal, David Goffin, Olivier Rochus, etc. And the wave of female East Asian players, maybe even Western Asian players like Russia and Ukraine. Hingis definitely known for her strategic play and overall court smarts. Coincidentally, Hingis enjoyed success early on much like Chang. Players who are not athletically gifted like Nadal, but gifted in other areas are more likely than not to enjoy success early on as teenagers as opposed to their mid twenties. But, if you take the gifts of Chang and put in the body of an athletically gifted player like Nadal...14 grand slam singles titles at the French Open and counting! If I'm not mistaken, players like Nadal and Hewitt have credited Chang as their inspiration as speed is one of their core weapons. Hingis used her smarts and anticipation to mimic a speedy tennis player like a Chang. What hurt Chang was the hip injury that he never really rebounded from. Chang has some very close matches with top contenders, but unforced errors at crucial moments which Chang did not make when he was 17 years old without the hip injury, had lead Chang not to win more grand slam singles titles. I wonder because Chang has to use so much energy to win matches in his 20s, that Chang was not able to play doubles and win grand slam doubles and/or mixed titles? Hmmm...and Hingis never really rebounded from her ligament injury. Hingis should have won 1997, 1999 French Open Finals, and especially, 2002 Australian Open Final.

    • @ex0duzz
      @ex0duzz Před rokem

      Nadals not athletically gifted? Lol.

  • @pfv1247
    @pfv1247 Před rokem +4

    Michael Chang is world class good.

  • @gavlatennis2824
    @gavlatennis2824 Před 3 měsíci

    All of those guys from that era could still be Top 10 today.

  • @raywill8638
    @raywill8638 Před rokem +15

    How do you play each other 31 times but hold a 12-8 lead ??

    • @michailchytiroglou287
      @michailchytiroglou287 Před rokem +12

      Hahaha just looked on the comments to see if anyone noticed. He meant to say 12-9 for Edberg, for a total of 21 matches

    • @areezzy
      @areezzy Před rokem +5

      They draw 11 times
      Reference: I'm a chess player

  • @bousemaster3989
    @bousemaster3989 Před rokem +5

    Underrated player

    • @hussTennis
      @hussTennis Před rokem

      ahahah great name "bouse master" 😁

  • @str33tspirit
    @str33tspirit Před rokem

    People say Chang was a pusher but 1996 till the end of his career, his game consisted more of all out attack with his forehand. He was doing very well on slower hard court like Indian Wells where he had time to run around his backhand to hit inside out forehands. It was actually sometimes frustrating to see him commit way more unforced errors during that time of his career especially after he missed out on the number 1 ranking for a passing shot he missed during match point.

  • @caroleastmond9064
    @caroleastmond9064 Před 9 měsíci

    Wonderful Tennis
    Player!!!💐💐💐💐💫

  • @codyross1000
    @codyross1000 Před rokem +3

    Michael Chan was a great player like the way he played because he gave you 100%. Just like Connor's they gave you 100% on every shot

  • @Phat-rj3jo
    @Phat-rj3jo Před rokem +1

    Wow, 8-12 vs Sampras head to head, that’s pretty impressive.

  • @jasonleetaiwan
    @jasonleetaiwan Před rokem +1

    Chang had a good backhand and was very good at rallying. If he was better at anything over others, it was his speed. You don’t get to his level on will alone though. He was still very talented. Just never got to number one.

  • @mecontadmanboy7959
    @mecontadmanboy7959 Před rokem

    He was not only very good but excellent....one of best of the great era of the late 80's to the 90's. If court was as slow like they are today, he would have won 3 or 4 more Grand Slam...at least! I was a big fan !

  • @rajagopalanprash
    @rajagopalanprash Před rokem

    As a kid growing up Chang was the real deal. He did not have a big serve, was not tall but his counterpunching game appealed to me. Similar was the case of Lleyton Hewitt. Chang gave us a tutorial on how to maximize your potential. If not for Sampras would have added to his Grand Slam tally.

  • @pauldj6
    @pauldj6 Před rokem +4

    "they would go on to play 31 times", "with Edberg leading 12-8", ...

  • @Cletus_the_Elder
    @Cletus_the_Elder Před rokem +1

    He was a scrappy player. Hustled for every ball. Played well enough to knock off a high-seeded player on that player's way to the semi-finals. Shorter players have to play that much harder and their bodies wear out earlier in their careers. Still, a formidable opponent. I watched him play tough matches where he prevailed, but it still amazes me that he had such stats against the greats.

  • @toastedcupcake1052
    @toastedcupcake1052 Před rokem +1

    Please do McEnroe next

  • @Mikacool
    @Mikacool Před rokem

    Will you do a video covering Andy Murray when he has retired going through his career?

  • @invictuz4803
    @invictuz4803 Před rokem

    3:58 now we know who Carlos learned that trick from.

  • @wongjefx980
    @wongjefx980 Před rokem +1

    Totally inspirational to people, especially Asians, b\c tennis you think is dominated by really tall Europeans (and Americans). Mike Chang, Li Na, (Bruce Lee, ...maybe Jeremy Lin.. he he). Back in the day I kicked an oversized Prince racket, an aluminum one, b\c Michael Chang used Prince. A group of kids in my neighborhood got into tennis around this same time, played until the sun went down or they turn the lights out.

  • @edgarross9955
    @edgarross9955 Před rokem +1

    People dont appreciate how hard it is to compete at that level being only 5ft 8.

  • @frankojudoka
    @frankojudoka Před 7 měsíci

    Unfortunately, After Chang, Sampras, Agassi, Courier, the US would see no dominant men players yet.

  • @minavamp2811
    @minavamp2811 Před rokem +1

    the only thing that limits Michael Chang is his height. has he been 15 cm (6 inches taller), he would have won more grand slams for sure.

  • @wanderingsoul2909
    @wanderingsoul2909 Před rokem

    Anyone know how fast Michael was in the 100 yard / meter dash ? It appears he had world class speed !

  • @batmangsxr300
    @batmangsxr300 Před rokem +2

    My math is bad. How did he face edberg 30 times and be down 12-8?

  • @harrison3910
    @harrison3910 Před rokem

    Wasn’t that Lendl quote said to Agassi? Maybe I’m remembering wrong

  • @running2standstill685

    i wish i had half the competitiveness of mcenroe and the graciousness of chang.

  • @blakegracia5892
    @blakegracia5892 Před 13 dny

    OG Pusher

  • @hussTennis
    @hussTennis Před rokem +2

    Wasn't he among the first to use extended racket ? Thanks for the great job you have done here. Really good to find this interesting topic here

    • @areezzy
      @areezzy Před rokem +2

      That's right! I remember how the extended racket really helped his serve.

  • @roylee8114
    @roylee8114 Před rokem

    Wow...I'm today years old when I learned his name is Michael Chang and not Chan. My parents would pronounce his name with an accent so I legit thought it was Chan lol.

  • @manoharman4425
    @manoharman4425 Před rokem

    Generally Asians are small ,but they ASIANS HAVE GREAT REFLEXES AND SPEED and that why they dominate badminton ,table tennis , kabaddi sports

  • @carseye1219
    @carseye1219 Před rokem +1

    Amazing what he accomplished. I think he gave away some productive career time at the end by trying too hard to make his serve a weapon. His first serve % cratered and he became a victim to his second serve. But remarkable career nonetheless.

  • @omniexistus
    @omniexistus Před rokem

    Rod Laver 5'7" and Ashleigh Barty 5'5" both legendary players.

  • @soonaikyap4395
    @soonaikyap4395 Před rokem +9

    How I wish he could win more than one grand slam .

    • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
      @user-jv9qz2bu1r Před rokem +3

      yeah well Marcelos Rios, Nalbandian, and Mark Philippousis Zero

  • @Stiffjab71
    @Stiffjab71 Před 5 měsíci

    During his 1989 Roland Garros winning run he left just 3 games to Sampras in the second round. All commentators stated that "this american (Sampras) plays a far too beautiful Tennis to win anything in his career" 😂😂😂😂

  • @user-jv9qz2bu1r
    @user-jv9qz2bu1r Před rokem +1

    he was fast, had a great lob, fun to watch played Lendl and Edberg tough - Chang was down 12- 8 to Sampras and 12 - 9 to Edberg that's pretty good

  • @Flippyfloppy007
    @Flippyfloppy007 Před rokem

    Edberg and Chang played 31 times and the head to head was 12-8? How does that work

  • @eastcoastsailingcenter7768

    Does he still hood the record? Youngest winner in a grab slam event?

  • @MyChevySonic
    @MyChevySonic Před rokem +2

    Diego Schwartzmann still one of the best players in the game. Ash Barty retired at number one with one of the best serves on WTA's tour. Size isn't completely irrelevant, but if you can't move well on the court, size and serve doesn't matter.

  • @captainspirou
    @captainspirou Před rokem +1

    Nadal is basically the 2.0 version of Michael Chang.

  • @guyredares
    @guyredares Před rokem

    there are very few short players these days, Schwarzman is the only one in the top 20

    • @alemagjoh
      @alemagjoh Před 11 dny

      He played atp tour finals so must have been in top 10 at least…

  • @ericy3918
    @ericy3918 Před rokem +2

    Chang faced Edberg 31 times and Edberg led the head to head 12-8. I feel like you’re trolling Asian watchers with your math!

  • @jjmah7
    @jjmah7 Před rokem +1

    Chang and Edberg okayed 31 times, with Edberg leading 12-8? I’m no mathematician, but that doesn’t sound right lol

  • @BurnsTennis
    @BurnsTennis Před rokem +4

    Eh? Does 12+8 = 31??

  • @islandcactus1508
    @islandcactus1508 Před rokem +1

    He’s got his own YT channel: czcams.com/users/TennisSpin

  • @donkeykong516
    @donkeykong516 Před rokem +1

    Good enough to be no 2 ranking and has one grand slam

  • @Dreamdancer11
    @Dreamdancer11 Před rokem

    Well he played at the highest level and won titles and a slam....is that really a question?

  • @tonyrollman3991
    @tonyrollman3991 Před rokem

    He won one major.....

  • @khmak9387
    @khmak9387 Před rokem

    The next generation of tennis players has not arrived yet?

  • @crsantin
    @crsantin Před rokem +1

    Chang was fast but I never enjoyed watching him play. He was a pusher. He returned everything to his opponent but had no weapons other than his legs.

    • @jchan810
      @jchan810 Před rokem +3

      Chang had great return of serve. One of the best according to ATP statistics. The return of serve is the second most important shot in the game.

    • @gaara8217
      @gaara8217 Před 3 měsíci

      Wat u expect when he's undersized

  • @JH-bb8in
    @JH-bb8in Před 2 měsíci

    Chang was about a modern day USTA 5.5

  • @FluxMD
    @FluxMD Před rokem

    Can't be a top player with that size anymore.

  • @leecherlarry
    @leecherlarry Před rokem +2

    chang nishioka same same

    • @mwu365
      @mwu365 Před rokem +3

      huh

    • @lotus630
      @lotus630 Před rokem

      different era though
      their speed and power may be similar
      but Chang in the 90s was exceptional
      Nishioka in the modern era not so much
      tennis has evolved

  • @joeadamides3433
    @joeadamides3433 Před rokem

    Beautiful dim sim eater

  • @jw999
    @jw999 Před rokem +1

    He was a one-hit wonder... After the French Open, he never won another Grand Slam, despite getting into several finals and trying out giant rackets.

    • @kweizi5712
      @kweizi5712 Před rokem +3

      That is actually better than most of the tour. How many well known tennis players have never won one? He may not be a great but he is an overachiever given his disadvantage in height and reach.

    • @jw999
      @jw999 Před rokem

      @@kweizi5712 Those "well-known but slamless players" will soon be forgotten. Chang is only remembered because of his lucky slam at the French.

    • @kweizi5712
      @kweizi5712 Před rokem

      @@jw999 Better lucky than never.

  • @anthonytran8569
    @anthonytran8569 Před rokem

    Is the voice over done by AI?

  • @diegoacevedo1478
    @diegoacevedo1478 Před rokem +1

    He was the Bruce Lee of tennis! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Roadrunner65553
    @Roadrunner65553 Před rokem

    Super fast but cheap AF. Paid for stringing with a Big Bag of change

  • @FirstLast-cd6vv
    @FirstLast-cd6vv Před rokem +2

    Not that good compared to the greats of that time period.

  • @bluestar2253
    @bluestar2253 Před rokem +1

    MC = way over-rated

  • @michaeljantz8029
    @michaeljantz8029 Před rokem

    Sorry guys, but chang is overrated…

    • @vu7419
      @vu7419 Před rokem +2

      to be overrated, is to be rated overly high. He was never overrated, because of the shear fact that he was never rated too high to begin with.