John McEnroe vs Michael Chang Extended Highlights | 1991 US Open Round 3

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  • čas přidán 2. 05. 2022
  • Watch the extended highlights between John McEnroe and Michael Chang in Round 3 of the 1991 US Open.
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Komentáře • 368

  • @user-gj5ws2yy4i
    @user-gj5ws2yy4i Před 2 měsíci +12

    Tennis is a completely different game today, the power, the speed and the size of the athletes

    • @raymondutuk111
      @raymondutuk111 Před 2 měsíci +1

      McEnroe would be cooked in any club tennis!

  • @albertleung5449
    @albertleung5449 Před 2 lety +53

    I think that match deserves a full length version posting!

  • @mclements
    @mclements Před rokem +29

    These guys served and volleyed more in one game than most pros do today in an entire season Well good, respect!

    • @erasmal7179
      @erasmal7179 Před 2 měsíci

      Only McEnroe, with that continental grip he could almost only serve, smash and volley

  • @sandeepsep19
    @sandeepsep19 Před 2 lety +45

    Chang's lob winners are incredible. Simply outstanding.

    • @mirrama9866
      @mirrama9866 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @sandeepsep19 and McEnroe was too lazy to go toward that lob balls. 😅

  • @huugoigo4421
    @huugoigo4421 Před rokem +12

    Awesome tennis ... the 80s and 90s were a battle between baseline and net attack ... way better than the boring repetitive baseline slugfests of today. Thanks Mac

  • @user-kp7ls7ml1h
    @user-kp7ls7ml1h Před 5 měsíci +12

    cant believe after 30 years , this is still so good to watch!

  • @th8257
    @th8257 Před 2 lety +48

    McEnroe said in his autobiography that Chang must have watched McEnroe's 1987 loss to Lendl at the US Open, where Lendl lobbed McEnroe to death.

    • @luyin1961
      @luyin1961 Před rokem +5

      Pretty sure Chang did, as he was always thorough prepared.

  • @rrfamig
    @rrfamig Před 10 měsíci +7

    I remember going to the us open and seeing chang when he was 16
    I couldn’t believe how quick he was covering the court

  • @tonynguyen501
    @tonynguyen501 Před 2 lety +17

    So excited to watch Chang and McEnroe play in NY. Every point of both players were amazing with paced, depth, and precisely accurate. Add to the drama of Mac plus NY crowds are the toughest to win on any given day. These are the legend of our times.

  • @romania4712
    @romania4712 Před 2 lety +17

    I remember watching this match live. Beautiful play with contrasting styles. You don't see this kind of matchup anymore. 1985 Hana Mandlikova vs Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova???

  • @joemarshall4226
    @joemarshall4226 Před rokem +19

    This was the only time Chang beat Mac. They had met 4 times before, twice when Michael was 16, and twice when he was 17, and Mac had one them all, dropping a set in the last match only. this was a five set match. Mac later complained, jokingly, about Michael's topspin lobs, and the fact that "he ran down every stinking ball!"

  • @CoachAdrian
    @CoachAdrian Před 2 lety +39

    Chang's topspin lob was lethal in this match!

  • @wreckanchor
    @wreckanchor Před 2 lety +15

    One of these guys is a great tennis payer and the other is a friggin artist.

    • @binkyxz3
      @binkyxz3 Před 2 lety

      One is a consummate gentleman and the other is a flippin' a-hole.

  • @R4lee444
    @R4lee444 Před 2 lety +40

    I love McEnroe the more I watch the replays on CZcams... and Chang deserves more accolades for his consistency as a top player.

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo Před rokem +1

      On the contrary, consistency was what he lacked. 1 major, right?

    • @KingCast65
      @KingCast65 Před rokem +2

      @@beorlingo IDK if that is a lack of consistency or the relative lack of top 4 ability. He was just slightly below upper-echolon in general.

    • @andreasmissiroli6915
      @andreasmissiroli6915 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@beorlingo cm 174 - they were playing early mid '90s and not in the 70s or in the 80s-Please check height and weight of the palyers who won GS slam tournaments from 1990 until now

    • @andreasmissiroli6915
      @andreasmissiroli6915 Před 10 měsíci +1

      courier bruguera kuerten nadal sampras becker edberg stich federer djokovic murray wawrinka cilic

    • @KingCast65
      @KingCast65 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@andreasmissiroli6915 Exactly. And Stefan had height and weight over Mac. Like 3". It's a Big Deal at that level.

  • @leebr2010
    @leebr2010 Před 2 lety +60

    Some of these line calls were so bad. I'm glad we have hawkeye these days to prevent these kinds of situations. But Chang did a fantastic job of not letting it get to him.

    • @abradfordajb
      @abradfordajb Před rokem +3

      I've often imagined if today's imaging tech was available back in the day. Of all the things one could say, it definitely would've taken alot of drama out of the game☺ For one thing, we never would have experienced our infamous McEnroe rank at Wimbledon -- " .... that ball was clearly on the line .... chalk flew up ... " Chalk vs. hawkeye ... hmmm ...

    • @oldfrend
      @oldfrend Před 8 měsíci +3

      on the ace overrule i was saying 'no way!' before the ump even spoke up. even in this low res video i could tell it was clearly in. so of course johnny mac loses his shit over an overrule of an obvious error. the linesmen were really bad this match.

  • @leotrevino5158
    @leotrevino5158 Před 2 lety +65

    The athletes, the great clothes, the cool shoes and the atmosphere. the 90s were a great time!

    • @coryCuc
      @coryCuc Před 2 lety +4

      Hell yeah lol. Brings back many good memories.

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před 2 lety +13

      Now it's just a bunch of robots with little to no personalities slugging the ball back & forth as hard as they can until someone makes an error. Tennis is actually getting kind of boring compared to how exciting it used to be...

    • @leotrevino5158
      @leotrevino5158 Před 2 lety +2

      @@toddlesiak3837 Agreed 1000%

    • @gertriedel9391
      @gertriedel9391 Před 2 lety +2

      @@leotrevino5158 absolutely right!

    • @John-gf8pr
      @John-gf8pr Před rokem +1

      The clothes were definitely a lot more cool

  • @dks13827
    @dks13827 Před rokem +2

    Remember when tennis was awesome great ? 32 years ago.

  • @TheMrBennito
    @TheMrBennito Před 9 měsíci +6

    Mac quite generously congratulated Chang at the net. He had played real good and acknowledged that Chang that day was even better. The last game with those Chang aces, I think Mac just felt he had done nothing wrong so imho he felt great respect for Michael's resilience.

  • @miguelbiava9483
    @miguelbiava9483 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Aquí Jonh ya empezaba a jugar con tenistas de laboratorio y lo hacía muy bien.

  • @PANJANG-sn3th
    @PANJANG-sn3th Před 5 měsíci +2

    Now im understand why mc enroe is a legendary player...❤❤

  • @chadgable984
    @chadgable984 Před rokem +8

    It's interesting that McEnroe lost his 3 last match at the US Open to Sampras, Chang and Courier while he lost his last match in WImbledon to Agassi, so basically all the best american players then

  • @ericfreeman5795
    @ericfreeman5795 Před rokem +5

    Great match by Chang. McEnroe is easily 6 years past his peak tennis years, but 14:00 is in my opinion, quintessential McEnroe.
    McEnroe at the net was deadly. For those to young to know, McEnroe is the only male player to be ranked N°1 in singles and doubles simultaneously. Edberg was also, but not simultaneously.
    And Chang....Goran Ivanisevic (Djokovic's current coach), once said that against Chang, you have to win the point three times just to win it once.

  • @fabiopomponi7740
    @fabiopomponi7740 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Having to describe modern tennis compared to that played by John Mc Enroe, an elegant classic with a brilliant and effective touch, we can say that it was like a steamroller and a press that destroyed the sport of tennis where now everything takes place with technical violence, speed control and precision in shots and this is due to the fact that the change in the materials used for rackets and tennis balls has revolutionized the way of playing tennis but every time I see John Mc Enroe on the court I am convinced that he is tennis itself and he has no equals in the history of this sport for his classy poise, elegance in the setting of shots and touch as demonstrated by the match reproduced here on CZcams, thanks for uploading it online.

  • @davidchang4559
    @davidchang4559 Před rokem +1

    So incredible!!

  • @a.k.4486
    @a.k.4486 Před rokem +2

    Ce match fut un régal : John McEnore... Le tennis d'attaque à son meilleur... Extraordinaire joueur... contre chang, le super grand défenseur !!!

  • @Tom-xk5jb
    @Tom-xk5jb Před 2 měsíci

    This match was on until after midnight i remember watching it. Great match so close.

  • @georgeleinberger8670
    @georgeleinberger8670 Před měsícem

    Thank you for posting this. I forgot how much I used to love tennis. Damn that Chang had some wheels on him! Like a human backboard. And Mac, constantly attacking. You know he’s coming, they know he’s coming, everybody knows he’s coming. What are you going to do about it? This is classic puncher vs counter puncher. Amazing!

  • @DJTomOke
    @DJTomOke Před rokem +1

    Love Chang's Reebok Pumps! I bought the exact same pair :)

  • @Gl3nd0n
    @Gl3nd0n Před 2 lety +9

    Would have been nice to know the score throughout this video

  • @michaelpowell9152
    @michaelpowell9152 Před měsícem +1

    I enjoy watching Johnny Mac playing in those Nike Xtrainers 💯

  • @kewsiyehboah6058
    @kewsiyehboah6058 Před rokem +2

    Love The Generational Match Ups..

  • @getsmartpaul
    @getsmartpaul Před 2 lety +11

    I would have appreciated a Score Box at the bottom which is normal for matches. What happened to it ? Otherwise, it was impossible to determine the game score.

  • @cygnustsp
    @cygnustsp Před měsícem +1

    This is the tennis i wanted to play when i was a kid, i couldn't recognize tennis after Sampras started winning everything

  • @abnashibanga2806
    @abnashibanga2806 Před rokem +3

    Johns serve is very side on and the ball toss is a disguise I noticed when he played Pete Sampras that is back swing is inline with is ankle and powerful swing. Johns serve is really good I have learned a lot Thanks for the upload.

  • @Avalokitasimha
    @Avalokitasimha Před 2 lety +83

    Michael Chang had three opponents to defeat here: the unfair NY crowd, blind and deaf line and net judges (net touch not heard) and an extremely unsportsmanlike John McEnroe! Bravo Chang!

    • @sevaraalimova4706
      @sevaraalimova4706 Před 2 lety +10

      I don’t understand why the crowd was so unfair, Chang is just a tennis player who is trying to play tennis. He isn’t hurt the NY crowd at all.

    • @Buddhism4Happiness
      @Buddhism4Happiness Před 2 lety +4

      Such high level of shotmaking. I appreciate both players more than ever.

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před 2 lety +13

      @@sevaraalimova4706 Because McEnroe is from NYC & was an aging legend in 1991. It wasn't really that the crowd was against Chang... it was much more about them rooting hard for their idol that they grew up watching

    • @altruismfirst6489
      @altruismfirst6489 Před 2 lety +5

      ​@@roberto4288 Brilliance is subjective, Macca did more than Kyrgios but similar attitude. That die hard attitude of Chang is what Nadal has but with more height and reach which makes the difference in the modern game. Chang was a perfect all round player but shorter legs and arms could only do so much like Diego Schwartzman, Rochus and Ferrer have shown. Funny to see Chang's lawnmower celebrations which Rafael incorporated into his celebrations. Federer is like Macca but a little better work ethic, fairness towards opponents, patience and superior physical specimen with foot speed, jumping power and anticipation almost on par with Nadal.

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před 2 lety +1

      @@roberto4288 McEnroe is from NYC & was a huge crowd favorite & aging legend in 1991. Chang was the new kid just starting to make a name for himself while trying to take Mac out, At least 90% of the crowd was pulling hard for Mac, which is what happens when a hometown legend plays in front of fans that grew up watching them since they were kids...

  • @bentruongdds
    @bentruongdds Před 2 lety +7

    Not too many people can outplay McEnroe on the net, but Chang was on fire, today, with his offensive lops, both wings, amazing...

  • @Kassiusday
    @Kassiusday Před 2 lety +7

    A true champion Chang !!congratulations 👏🏾! Although I was John fan …

  • @BTURNER1961
    @BTURNER1961 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Offensive lobs are rarely a decisive most impactful shot in matches like this, but this is one of those matches where they were a huge factor. Chang really knew how to impart serious topspin, and his footwork was so exceptional he was always in perfect position and balance so disguise was easy.

    • @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar
      @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar Před 8 měsíci

      Can you cite a source for your claim "Offensive lobs are rarely a decisive most impactful shot"?
      OR is this your opinion based on scant evidence?

    • @BTURNER1961
      @BTURNER1961 Před 8 měsíci

      @@MyOneFiftiethOfADollar It's my opinion, but I have to clarify exactly what I mean. Lobs as outright winners, definitely can win some crucial points, but normally don't win enough points outright because its hard to execute them once an opponent starts to defend by not closing in quite as far. If he is anticipating lobs, then the overhead gets grooved and the direct effectiveness is dramatically reduced . But the real value of the lob is indirect. If they are nervous about closing, then the passing shots get a lot easier. If its windy then that overhead may never get grooved and you end up inducing errors. Cumulatively the lob's impact can be huge even if the lob winner stat that they are mentioning here, is not so impressive as in this match. I am pro lob, but at this level it sets up points, more often than it soars out of reach.

    • @orthopraxis235
      @orthopraxis235 Před měsícem

      @@MyOneFiftiethOfADollar its his opinion based on scant evidence and poor tennis training. he went to school with the dude above that claims Michael Chang didn't have top 4 ability, when in fact he was ranked #2. Don't get upset, there are so many bad tennis players with poor tennis knowledge. Very few make it at any pro level and very few have accurate things to say about tennis players or tennis in general. They come from basketball or some other sport and think tennis is easy, and their opinions come from the books they read, but certainly not from playing at any of the 3 levels of professional tennis that exist in reality.

  • @petergoldstein7694
    @petergoldstein7694 Před rokem +2

    Best net player in history

  • @vitolamonica6573
    @vitolamonica6573 Před 2 lety +1

    Great 👍

  • @guntodd
    @guntodd Před 2 lety +4

    Chang's biggest weakness. Serves, consistent short returns and volley. He definitely has tenacity and never quit attitude.

  • @leotrevino5158
    @leotrevino5158 Před 2 lety +6

    Chang wearing the Reebok Pumps and McEnroe wearing the Nike Air Trainer 1s

  • @tyrellcorp2118
    @tyrellcorp2118 Před 2 měsíci

    Omg how does CZcams know? I was there. This was so much fun.

  • @skyjuke2006
    @skyjuke2006 Před 2 lety +3

    Gianni Clerici a great italian journalist, hall of fame, called McEnroe McJesus...
    He was so talented!🤗

  • @MrPauliez67
    @MrPauliez67 Před 8 měsíci +2

    So that's what serve and volley looks like. Would be nice to see a little of that today.

    • @patoconnor9600
      @patoconnor9600 Před 3 měsíci

      You missed out, a serve & volleyer against a baseliner was absolutely beautiful tennis to watch

  • @maks8891
    @maks8891 Před 10 měsíci

    Both are great👍

  • @jeromelevillain9301
    @jeromelevillain9301 Před 2 lety +4

    Great match. Why only summary and not complete ?

  • @exar8355
    @exar8355 Před 2 dny

    Love this match

  • @3883melange
    @3883melange Před 2 lety +2

    So good!!

  • @danielhkhk7283
    @danielhkhk7283 Před 2 lety +14

    You cannot play tennis like McEnroe. But he could.

  • @alexandergoldman
    @alexandergoldman Před 2 lety +5

    At the end, McEnroe didn't shake the hand of the chair ump, but he did give a warm handshake and a pat on the back to Chang, so kudos to John for that..

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před 2 lety

      That's cause did a poor job, & Chang was a likable fellow American that Mac respected

    • @heinebohmann1566
      @heinebohmann1566 Před rokem +1

      @@toddlesiak3837 It seems like they always did a poor job when umpiring McEnroe, right?

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před rokem

      @@heinebohmann1566 Not always. They made lots of bad calls, but Mac was in the wrong sometimes too

    • @philgarrett5498
      @philgarrett5498 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@heinebohmann1566😂 too right

  • @hussTennis
    @hussTennis Před 2 lety +4

    3:55 I can watch this again and again 👏

  • @fabiopomponi7740
    @fabiopomponi7740 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Dovendo descrivere il tennis moderno rispetto a quello giocato da John Mc Enroe classico elegante di tocco geniale ed efficace potremo dire che è stato come un rullo compressore ed una pressa che ha distrutto lo sport del tennis dove adesso tutto si svolge con violenza tecnica controllo velocità e precisione nei colpi e questo è dovuto al fatto che il cambiamento dei materiali utilizzati per le racchette e le palline di tennis ha rivoluzionato il modo di fare tennis ma ogni volta che vedo John Mc Enroe in campo mi convinco che lui è il tennis in persona e non ha eguali nella storia di questo sport per portamento classe eleganza nel impostazione dei colpi e tocco come dimostra anche l'incontro qui riproposto su youtube grazie per averlo caricato in rete.

  • @user-kp7ls7ml1h
    @user-kp7ls7ml1h Před 5 měsíci

    these 2 are good !

  • @jmiller05
    @jmiller05 Před 2 lety +15

    Chang was definitely one of the quickest players of all time. His footspeed and anticipation were uncanny

    • @riverwalker2173
      @riverwalker2173 Před 2 lety

      Wonder what ever happened to Chang? He was a bright light that seems to have vanished

    • @jmiller05
      @jmiller05 Před 2 lety +2

      @@riverwalker2173 He retired in 2003. He started to decline in the late 90s due to injuries and probably because of how physical his game was. Also I think Chang's tennis became a little lightweight at the start of the 2000s with players like Safin, Roddick, Federer etc breaking through

    • @riverwalker2173
      @riverwalker2173 Před 2 lety

      @@jmiller05 Ah well, nevertheless he made his mark in a Euro dominated sport. He played with a thunderheart in his prime . A great warrior on the court ⚡️❤️

    • @oldfrend
      @oldfrend Před rokem

      @@jmiller05 the game evolved beyond him. he was the first to really bring that superhuman foot speed and defense to pro tennis, but he still hit like an 80s player - lots of spin off both wings. never learned to really flatten out his ground strokes and blast clean winners like agassi and sampras brought to the top of the men's game.

    • @terancetheindomitable9701
      @terancetheindomitable9701 Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@riverwalker2173Euro dominated? You never heard of Sampras, Agassi or Courier? That was the greatest era ever for American men's tennis.

  • @davidchodds
    @davidchodds Před 7 měsíci +1

    Loved this match. High quality video too for 1991. Wish you would've overlaid the score every once in awhile though, perhaps even just once a set would've been nice.

  • @kevinpowers9024
    @kevinpowers9024 Před rokem +4

    I always liked Michael Chang. I hope he is doing well all these years later. The 1970's, 80's and early 90's were the best years for tennis. Racket technology hadnt taken over and ruined the game yet. There were no 140 MPH serves and no 40 ace matches back then. Longer points meant using strategy, angles and the entire court to earn points. Nowadays it's mostly about blazing serves, rocket forehands and backhands. Some guy at Wimbledon yesterday had a 137 MPH serve. Thats crazy. And there were many superstars in tennis back then. Legendary names and matches. I couldnt name 5 tennis players now. I will admit that I dont watch much anymore. The tennis isn't that good like it was back in the day. Borg, McEnroe, Chang, Connors, Edberg, Becker, Agassi, Sampras, Nastase, Lendl and thats just some of the men off the top of my head. The womens side had big stars also. Fun times back then.

    • @hehehehehahahaha2025
      @hehehehehahahaha2025 Před rokem

      "There were no 140 MPH serves"
      pretty sure Becker, Ivanisevic and Krajicek etc. were hitting huge serves in the early 90s (and Tanner before them). The radars were different and a 120mph serve back then probably equals a 130mph today.

    • @kevinpowers9024
      @kevinpowers9024 Před rokem

      @@hehehehehahahaha2025 I would agree with you. The early and mid 90's saw racket and string technology leap into a different realm. I dont know anything about radar but like everything else, Its probably better now also. Tanner hit a 150 MPH serve in 1978. Wonder what he could have hit today? 180 lol?

    • @TheTopspin77
      @TheTopspin77 Před rokem

      I think you are mistaken if you don't think there were huge serves in the 90's. As a matter of fact they began to slow the courts down in response to the huge serves. In the 80's and 90's you could still serve and volley and win but it's almost impossible to play that way now so you have to bash from the baseline because of not just the string and racket technology but because of the slower courts, even at Wimbledon!

    • @orthopraxis235
      @orthopraxis235 Před měsícem

      Roscoe tanner hit into the 140s wayyyy back in the 70s. Rackets don't make the serve, the strings help with spin. Rackets help the return and groundstrokes in terms of larger center of percussion (sweet spot) for returning serves, groundstrokes and hitting passing shots. That's why volleying/ serve volleying has died. Returns are so accurate and have so much spin. Also they have slowed down most all hardcourts and grass, and that too has killed to volleying for most singles players.
      Radar tech isn't better than it was before, it's just in a smaller package today, maybe even on your phone. Blows me away the people who think radar in the 70s wasn't accurate. We broke the sound barrier and apparently went to the moon before the 70s. Stuff had to be pretty accurate to do that. Radar 'guns' are simple devices that are tested to be very accurate.
      It would take me a least a year to correct all the misunderstanding and outright errors in the comments expressed here.

  • @maks8891
    @maks8891 Před rokem

    both were very good

  • @MarcoSpeaksNadsat
    @MarcoSpeaksNadsat Před 2 lety +32

    McEnroe's net play was just on another level. Only the persistent lobbing could beat him.

  • @juanjosesantosreyes9894

    Excéntrico si pero un verdadero artista con la raqueta jonh

  • @karlsuer2749
    @karlsuer2749 Před 2 lety +2

    M. Chang ein großer Kämpfer. John McEnroe ein Ball Künstler. 🇩🇪👍👍👍👍🇩🇪

  • @alcamerc9923
    @alcamerc9923 Před 2 lety +3

    Seems tennis hasn’t changed much over the years, but today tennis is a new game. The strength of these athletes if phenomenal, the shots are unbelievable.

    • @thomasbrentana6916
      @thomasbrentana6916 Před 2 lety +1

      Todays tennis is painfully boring and unwatchable. LOL

    • @bellazoe1
      @bellazoe1 Před 2 lety +3

      It’s also the racquets. It’s totally unfair to compare eras it’s so so much easier now

    • @thomasbrentana6916
      @thomasbrentana6916 Před 2 lety +2

      @@bellazoe1 Completely agree. I would love to see current players play with the Yonex R-22 that I played with. LOL.

  • @rtreadwell7887
    @rtreadwell7887 Před 2 lety +11

    Enthralling; on an altogether higher plain to the present day monotony of two base-liners slugging it out, each trying to hit the ball harder than the other. A dedicated and highly skilled net player against an equally capable base-liner in the days before technology tipped the scales against the former.

  • @eridan7790
    @eridan7790 Před 2 lety +3

    The whole chinese diaspora was cheering for Michael Chang.

  • @bcuser2
    @bcuser2 Před 2 lety

    Ti voglio bene Mac sei un maledetto genio!!

  • @DavidClark-vu3dw
    @DavidClark-vu3dw Před 4 měsíci

    I love how Mac showed the chair what he thought about him at the end. 😅

  • @user-vg7jc7hy6z
    @user-vg7jc7hy6z Před 2 lety +1

    Chang make mc almost cry
    I should played on 90s
    But now high definition so much more camera work looks amazing in 2020

  • @rg2613
    @rg2613 Před 2 měsíci

    Man, the lobs are deadly accurate

  • @rockerobertson4002
    @rockerobertson4002 Před rokem +1

    Not only a dynamite tennis player, Chang is a kickass PB player now too. :)

  • @restlessforacurevids
    @restlessforacurevids Před 2 lety +3

    Kinda hard to follow this without the score line at any given point

  • @alexandergoldman
    @alexandergoldman Před 2 lety +6

    At 23:50, that serve was almost INSIDE the line...not sure how that could have been called out. Some awful line judges...so much better for the players having Hawkeye now..

  • @partybhoy1967
    @partybhoy1967 Před měsícem

    Mac not shaking the chair umpires hand at the end

  • @jasoncowell5133
    @jasoncowell5133 Před 2 lety +18

    1991 John was 10% the player he was in 1984. Still made 2 GS semis with that sub par version in 1992

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před 2 lety +2

      Besides this match, McEnroe always destroyed Chang. Mac's 1984 season might be the best season any player has ever had in tennis history!! His heart is still broken over blowing a 2-set lead against Lendl at the French

    • @shapursasan9019
      @shapursasan9019 Před 2 lety

      That's what you get for marrying a junkie!

    • @fearsomebunny
      @fearsomebunny Před 2 lety +1

      Tennis players back in the day just didn't take care of their bodies like tennis players do now. John was 32 at the time. 32 year old players now are in much better shape.

    • @shapursasan9019
      @shapursasan9019 Před 2 lety +2

      @@fearsomebunny From the moment he married his 1st wife (Tatum O'Neal) in 1984 who was a junkie -- he never won another Grand Slam. He just went downhill from that point on... Basically, she destroyed his career and what it could've been.

    • @shapursasan9019
      @shapursasan9019 Před 2 lety +1

      @@toddlesiak3837 That's true -- 1984 was the greatest year any player in open era has ever had. I think he only lost two matches the entire year -- one of them was to Lendl at the FO. But then he got married to the wrong woman at the end of the year -- and never won another GS for the rest of his career.

  • @rg2613
    @rg2613 Před 2 měsíci

    Technology made such an improvement in line calling

  • @hunkgolden5726
    @hunkgolden5726 Před 6 měsíci

    McEnroe really had to earn his points later in his career. The prime reason was his serve. In 83, 84, Macs first serve was hitting lines or just inside. By watching this video, his 1st serves are landing 12 inches from the lines. That enabled guys like Chang and Lendl to swing with intention. Just my observation.

  • @d0min0danc1ng
    @d0min0danc1ng Před měsícem

    Dear USTA..
    Please enlighten us is it a taboo to show the scores on these highlights or something?

  • @theoriginalthinker9199
    @theoriginalthinker9199 Před 2 lety +9

    I just wanted to know the score.

  • @haroldlipschitz9301
    @haroldlipschitz9301 Před rokem +1

    Chang didn't have a blazing serve, but he could really get one up the T when he needed a quick point

  • @KingCast65
    @KingCast65 Před 2 lety +19

    Still just so exciting to watch McEnroe play. It's Other-Worldly. I went to law school with Todd Martin's sister A___. All of us were up late AF that night watching this match we were 1L or 2L's and we all wanted Mac to win that so bad, no offense to Michael whatsoever. 18:26 Michael's approach clearly in.

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před 2 lety +4

      Best hands at the net ever!!!

    • @KingCast65
      @KingCast65 Před 2 lety +3

      @@toddlesiak3837 It was just incredible. And people underestimate his ground game too. He loved to hit that FH DTL not quite inside out :)

    • @SpiderMan-qh6vz
      @SpiderMan-qh6vz Před 2 lety +1

      McEnroe groundstrokes and passing shots suck. They only worked against generations of wooden or primitive metal racquets. Once new technology came into play passing shots and returns were too much for him to handle and he lost a lot more.

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před 2 lety +9

      @@SpiderMan-qh6vz McEnroe actually started using a Dunlop graphite racquet in 1983. Mac had a record of 82-3 in 1984, which is a win percentage of 96.5%, which happens to be the greatest year ever for a tennis player. He also had a 42-match win streak in 1984, & won a record 75 straight matches on carpet between 1983 & 1985... you don't accomplish these great feats with poor groundstrokes & passing shots. No one can accomplish this with passing shots & groundstrokes that suck, because you don't just get to serve the entire match, you also have to return serve. If his passing shots & groundstrokes really sucked so bad, then how did he break his opponent's serve enough to have a record of 82-3??? You don't make much sense. Mac was already pretty old once your so-called "new technology" came into play. All new technology really is are giant oversized racquets with wide frames which allows players to just sit back at the baseline & crush the ball. Being able to play with a wooden racquet shows just how skilled & how much touch a player really has. Pete Sampras won 13 grand slams using a tiny 85sq inch Wison Pro staff racquet, & he blew his opponents right off the court that were mainly using wide-body racquets. That's how skilled he was. Stephan Edberg also used this same racquet & won 6 grand slams, while Jim Courier won 4 grand slams using the tiny original Pro Staff. The players now might hit the ball harder with their huge racquets, but they sure don't possess more overall skill, touch, & craftiness as the top players of the 80s & 90s. The top players of the 80s & 90s also had much more dominating serves than most of today's players who just mostly serve the ball in & then just have a slugfest of back & forth groundstrokes. Sampras, Becker, Ivanisevic, Krajicek, Forget, Stich, Rafter, & Martin would all serve most of today's players right off the court, while McEnroe & Edberg would beat today's players with placement & high kick. Different eras are always hard to compare, but besides for the "big three" of Federer, Nadal, & Djokovic, the top players of the 80s & 90s are much more skilled in just about every facet of the game than the players of today that mainly just slug the ball back & forth until their opponent eventually makes an unforced error...

    • @KingCast65
      @KingCast65 Před 2 lety

      @@SpiderMan-qh6vz You just proved my point fool. They worked in his generation because they were good. AGAINST HIS PEERS. Did Jimmy's ground game suck too?
      czcams.com/video/Y9LEoui1xJ4/video.html
      Borg's strokes weren't shit when he tried to come back on the tour because GUESS WHAT? THE FUCKING GAME HAD CHANGED. Duh.
      I have some nice door prizes for you on the left LOL Dude.

  • @Doty6String
    @Doty6String Před rokem +2

    Cheng had legs of STEEL. Looks like Rafa’s legs wow

  • @drago7840
    @drago7840 Před 8 měsíci

    Chang was supremely underated.

  • @rtortima
    @rtortima Před 8 měsíci

    Good to watch Chang with the solid baseline shots. No comments to McEnroe, who is better commenting than playing tennis...

  • @massimopescatori6514
    @massimopescatori6514 Před 2 lety

    La voleè ... il colpo più bello di questo sport : oggi nel baseball attuale non si vede più ...

  • @ciarankelly4338
    @ciarankelly4338 Před rokem +1

    What a pain in the ass was McEnroe - met him once in Seoul where he was playing a challenge game and he was moaning about not having enough security to keep a few people who wanted autograph!

  • @chrismanteris9093
    @chrismanteris9093 Před 2 měsíci

    What racquet was Mac using?

  • @minavamp2811
    @minavamp2811 Před 2 lety +4

    chang definitely an overachiever. he maximized his potential with the limited height that he has at 5'7" (170cm). he was a 4 time grand slam finalist, and won 1 grand slam. had he played in this era, he would stand no chance of achieving what he did in the 1990's.

    • @orthopraxis235
      @orthopraxis235 Před měsícem

      limited height...you never heard of Marcelo Rios....he was ranked one higher than chang...at #1 in the world. check the box for another that doesn't know tennis very well.

  • @oliverjuria993
    @oliverjuria993 Před 3 měsíci

    Chang made John look like a fool with all those LOBS. RIP serve and volley.

  • @marcink5
    @marcink5 Před 8 měsíci

    where is a score line?

  • @rinohunter6190
    @rinohunter6190 Před 2 lety

    I don’t like how high McEnroe returns and high he hits in general. Love macs overall game though especially strategy wise………..

  • @dannywhite9975
    @dannywhite9975 Před 2 lety

    D golden era of American tennis: MC v JM. Fastest champ ever against gr8est serve'n'volley champ ever ☆☆☆☆☆

  • @stevephlyer
    @stevephlyer Před 2 lety +8

    When tennis was still great! A great match between the two fastest men on the tour in ‘91, albeit from different generations and completely different playing styles, which made matches between Mac and Chang were always exciting. This one was the only match Mac lost against the always relentless Chang. Mac should’ve won though as he was the favorite to do so. He did what he had to do playing his style of game, but Chang finally found an answer to the aggressive attacking style…. the devastating lob!

    • @dongmingzhu666
      @dongmingzhu666 Před 2 lety

      But Chang’s serve is not even as fast as Serena Williams

    • @toddlesiak3837
      @toddlesiak3837 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dongmingzhu666 Chang was not a big server... he won with great groundstrokes & electric footspeed. Serena Williams is bigger than many men on the pro tour!

    • @sayresrudy2644
      @sayresrudy2644 Před 2 lety

      insipid comment throughout. but esp: the age of federer, nadal, & djokovic isn’t great. uh-huh. 😂.

  • @_johnnys_life
    @_johnnys_life Před rokem +3

    John McEnroe was incredibly childish throughout this career, I'd be embarrassed. Michael Chang showed incredible resilience and thats the sign of a champion!

  • @orthopraxis235
    @orthopraxis235 Před měsícem

    Prior to this, few had the footspeed of Chang and the quick directional changes, and also not many challenged Mac's tight closing net position with the topspin lob. Macs volley advantage, on of them, was that he was very tight to the net. Here, that positioning lost the match for him.

  • @hander205
    @hander205 Před 2 lety +3

    killer lob from MC

  • @mathiasforslund1496
    @mathiasforslund1496 Před 10 dny +1

    McEnroe and Edberg, true artist of Serve and Volley, not the Power of Sampras, but just ball control

  • @juancristobalguzman2200
    @juancristobalguzman2200 Před 3 měsíci

    Vitas calling the action. Awesome

  • @mikebikekite1
    @mikebikekite1 Před 6 měsíci

    It's a half hour video showing 5 mins of highlights then repeating them endlessly in slow motion. It's not necessary.

  • @rolfbernserke4735
    @rolfbernserke4735 Před 2 lety

    I’d give anything now for Americans battling it out in the Open like in 1991

  • @williammolina9792
    @williammolina9792 Před 2 lety +10

    John was a horrible bassline player, but at the same time an amazing
    net player.

    • @morrismarshall1575
      @morrismarshall1575 Před rokem

      Plus he had fast hands at the net and was explosive. You never knew what he would do. I'm a lefty and Big Mac is still my fave all time player. Saw him play Courier at Casino Rama when he was 50 years old. Mac was still in great shape

    • @bcuser2
      @bcuser2 Před rokem

      i don't think , he decided to play within the line anticipating as much as he can, of course that made bassline game very difficoult for him . Ironically in mid 80's more the power begun important in the game , and more he decided to renunce to stay back, that was the main error in my opinion , about the second part of his career.

  • @montemccarty6512
    @montemccarty6512 Před 2 lety +4

    Mac was incredible. No coach. John knew the game.....but the game didn't know him.