Contast todays final with 1930 Wimbledon final

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • gzhpcu
    Senior Member
    • Jun 2005
    • 3211

    #1

    Contast todays final with 1930 Wimbledon final

    Last edited by gzhpcu; 07-15-2018, 09:25 AM.
    Regards, Phil
  • stotty
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2009
    • 6634

    #2
    1930....now 88 years ago. I doubt there is a living witness to that final still around. I wonder what tennis will look like 88 years from now or even if there will be a world left by then.
    Stotty

    Comment

    • don_budge
      Senior Member
      • Dec 2009
      • 6996

      #3
      Originally posted by stotty
      1930....now 88 years ago. I doubt there is a living witness to that final still around. I wonder what tennis will look like 88 years from now or even if there will be a world left by then.
      When you look at U. S. Open when it was broadcast in 1984 on CBS the commercials were mostly about computers. Those computers were like "dinosaurs" compared to the mobile phone that you or I carry in our pocket. My iPhone is probably six years old. I believe it is a 4s. People laugh at my phone. I think it is amazing.

      But since 1984 there has been more "change" in the world and in tennis for that matter, than there ever has in the 34 year span since. If you can imagine how much change there will be in the next 34 years you will be doing just fantastic. 88 years will seem like a light year.

      As Winston Churchill said some 75 years ago..."It's not given to us to peer into the mysteries of the future."

      Most have a great deal of difficulty understanding the past or what has already happened.
      don_budge
      Performance Analysthttps://forum.tennisplayer.net/images/smilies/cool.png

      Comment

      • stotty
        Senior Member
        • Jan 2009
        • 6634

        #4
        I traced my family tree back to the early 1400's. It's amazing how long time stood still, more or less, from the 1400's until, say, 1850. Life for the average person changed surprisingly little over that period going by the family records I have. Much of that time was a life without medicine for a start, and technical innovations were few and far between. It's since the second world war that everything has gone berserk and forward at warp speed. One wonders where it will end and if they will come up with a get-younger tablet before my number is up.
        Stotty

        Comment

        • don_budge
          Senior Member
          • Dec 2009
          • 6996

          #5
          Originally posted by stotty
          I traced my family tree back to the early 1400's. It's amazing how long time stood still, more or less, from the 1400's until, say, 1850. Life for the average person changed surprisingly little over that period going by the family records I have. Much of that time was a life without medicine for a start, and technical innovations were few and far between. It's since the second world war that everything has gone berserk and forward at warp speed. One wonders where it will end and if they will come up with a get-younger tablet before my number is up.
          I have time standing still here. As nearly as possible. Based on as little contact with the outside world as possible. Save for the excursions on tennisplayer.net.
          don_budge
          Performance Analysthttps://forum.tennisplayer.net/images/smilies/cool.png

          Comment

          • gzhpcu
            Senior Member
            • Jun 2005
            • 3211

            #6
            Wholw match, 70 minutes. No sitting down on changeover, certainly no endless bounding before serving. Djokovic bounces over 20 times...
            Regards, Phil

            Comment

            • don_budge
              Senior Member
              • Dec 2009
              • 6996

              #7
              Originally posted by gzhpcu
              Wholw match, 70 minutes. No sitting down on changeover, certainly no endless bounding before serving. Djokovic bounces over 20 times...
              No energy snacks. No potty breaks. No trainer time-outs. No towering off over every single freaking point. But todays game is so much more physical...not. It is by definition a charade. But let's not beat a dead horse. And don't tell my horses I said that.
              don_budge
              Performance Analysthttps://forum.tennisplayer.net/images/smilies/cool.png

              Comment

              Who's Online

              Collapse

              Working...