Roddick & Petkovic Put Delusional Fans In Place | Tennis Channel Live

2023 ж. 11 Там.
56 657 Рет қаралды

Tennis Channel Live chats about the ludicrous fans that believe they can win a game against a professional tennis player.

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  • Roddick beating someone with a frying pan is hilarious.

    @enigma629@enigma6299 ай бұрын
  • Andy “I was on tour, like the real tour!” Lol he busts me up! 😂

    @AshleyKarys@AshleyKarys9 ай бұрын
  • I have absolutely zero difficulty believing a large percentage of people is that delusional.

    @robertsterner2145@robertsterner21459 ай бұрын
    • Especially among tennis fans. There are a lot of cocky dummies in this sport.

      @antjobert@antjobert9 ай бұрын
  • Shocker. This was a survey done in the US. Lmao we are so beyond arrogant it’s inconceivable at times.

    @Wes1128@Wes11289 ай бұрын
    • Same people that think they can beat a grizzly bear in a fight

      @andrewbowden6982@andrewbowden69829 ай бұрын
    • I'm a tennis player in US . I'm disappointed in Us. I'd guess 20% but 70% in a Survey is unreal.

      @CalebPratt2@CalebPratt29 ай бұрын
    • That’s why we think Taylor think is a top player lol

      @TanNguyen510@TanNguyen5109 ай бұрын
    • In 2021, a survey conducted here in the US, 40% of the people surveyed believe they could be an Olympian. It must be the group of people. They have NO clue about the level of skill required for either of these endeavors.

      @surfjunkie7925@surfjunkie79259 ай бұрын
    • Arrogance and delusion everywhere. There was a fun (but comprehensive) survey asking American adult men how they would fare against certain animals in the wild and 6% of respondents claimed they could win against a grizzly bear without weapons.

      @Boollish@Boollish9 ай бұрын
  • This goes back to something David Foster Wallace said about watching tennis on TV versus sitting at the court side to watch two pros go at it. The TV really does no justice and I am willing to bet that it is mostly casual fans whose exposure to the game is purely through the TV that would be delusional enough to even think this. I asked a tennis coach at a hotel once to go full tilt on me. Remember this isn't a man who was even close to the professional ranks but had played up to university level and got a few certifications after that to be employed as a coach. He asked if I was sure and I, idiot that I am, nodded. That serve was so fast that my eyes didn't even catch it, the ball hit my racket (instead of me hitting the ball with the racket), my wrist felt like it had briefly detached itself from the rest of my arm. Again, semi-professional at best. And I am in decent shape. Basketball fans made fun of this player named Brian Scalabrine because, on the face of it, he was statitically one of the worst players of his generation. He still played over 10 years in the NBA, but street hoopers - really good hoopers from the colleges, high school and street level - publically challenged this pasty, out-of-shape white man in his 40s, saying they could beat him. He chose 4 of the most talented challengers - dudes in their 20s and teenage, really good future NBA prospects some of them too - had TV station cover the event, and then proceeded to completely and utterly destroy these dudes. On TV. By this point, Scalabrine was 45, about 10 years since retiring from the NBA, and none of these talented but over confident challengers scored a single point on Scal. When he was done, Scal looked at the camera and goes 'I am closer to LeBron and MJ than you will ever be to me.' You couch potatoes who think you can win a point against Novak or any pro? There's delusional and there is whatever you lot are.

    @theena@theena9 ай бұрын
    • I am nearly 6 years nofap- I believe my consistency will enable me to get a few rally points off Novak, not a game, although the underarm serve I will be willing to try if I got a 40-15 lead, could seal the deal for me!

      @pauljohnson6019@pauljohnson60199 ай бұрын
    • @@pauljohnson6019_His_ consistency will prevent you winning a single point. He will just rally you to death. You will be gasping for air after one point.

      @EJP286CRSKW@EJP286CRSKW9 ай бұрын
    • Not if I hit a winner or do a drop shot- remember I am a good tennis play probably county level, I did play very intense points with my coach who is very good, a few points may be difficult but when I get back in the tennis competition doubles I think I'd give it a shot.@@EJP286CRSKW

      @pauljohnson6019@pauljohnson60199 ай бұрын
    • ​@@pauljohnson6019 you will not get any rally points off of Novak. Zero. You are delusional to think otherwise. Go see them playing in person and then you'll understand.

      @antjobert@antjobert9 ай бұрын
    • @@antjobert I've never seen them playing in person- hey, you never know though, a lucky net chord may get the job done! At least I'll try and be consistent for as long as possible!

      @pauljohnson6019@pauljohnson60199 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely hysterical segment! I used to think I might amount to something as a junior player, and then I challenged my coach to go all out against me, but he could only hop on one leg. He still beat me, and he was only ~5.5 USTA. The difference between tennis levels-beginner, club, open, high-level juniors, college, challengers, futures, and THEN top pros-is huge. 95% players live in the first 3 categories and would get bageled by the last 4.

    @sablefang4330@sablefang43309 ай бұрын
  • Great segment! Andy x Petko awesome TC combo 💪

    @thetennistalk@thetennistalk9 ай бұрын
    • Roddick and Petkovic should commentate a grand slam final for the world feed.

      @J_NoNamesLeft73@J_NoNamesLeft739 ай бұрын
  • These delusional fans could not even get a single point unless there was a double fault.

    @kylecurryyt@kylecurryyt9 ай бұрын
    • To be fair, Andy did say that an amateur who served at 110 could get a point.

      @bigrobsydney@bigrobsydney9 ай бұрын
    • lol! so mean. but hilarious.

      @angel91485@angel914859 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@bigrobsydney"could" but mostly like would not. If you watch the matches, pros absolutely do not miss returns on serves that are 110mph, it's the accurate 120+mph that forces the error.

      @loganthewolverine2030@loganthewolverine20309 ай бұрын
    • I'm just going to go ahead and assume that you'd don't play tennis. Or you play awful and because it seems super difficult to you, then it must be super difficult for everyone.

      @justdev8965@justdev89659 ай бұрын
    • @@justdev8965 I have hit with a pro when I was in High School. No amateur would win a single point of a pro unless the pro had a double fault or just a brain fart.

      @kylecurryyt@kylecurryyt9 ай бұрын
  • "I'm way closer to Novak than you are to me" Andy "Mamba" Roddick or something like that

    @enamuossuo@enamuossuo9 ай бұрын
  • Andy is too funny! 700 spots away from playing a major!

    @lalitharavindran@lalitharavindran9 ай бұрын
  • Petkovic - “I need to put people in their place” - spoken like a German.

    @tennissir1986@tennissir19869 ай бұрын
    • Germans and American are alike, both arrogant, what are you talking about. But at least Americans are funnier. 🤣

      @angel91485@angel914859 ай бұрын
    • ​@@angel91485Americans are far less arrogant and they are very respectful and greet strangers as well

      @VARMOT123@VARMOT1239 ай бұрын
    • ​@@VARMOT123🧢

      @AquarianAngel@AquarianAngel9 ай бұрын
    • She is Slavic

      @HIMYMTR@HIMYMTR9 ай бұрын
    • @@HIMYMTR Lived in Germany for many years.

      @tennissir1986@tennissir19869 ай бұрын
  • I used to think like that until I went to an actual Tennis tournament. I went to Indian Wells in 2019 and was literally on the first row of bleachers watching Lucas Rosol vs Bernard Tomic and I went home and sawed my racquet in two and took up basket weaving. Ok, not really, I'm still playing Tennis. But with a lot more humility. Lucas Rosol, who I had seen beat Nadal (big upset) at Wimbledon (watched on tv) in 2012, was hitting the ball so hard it shook the ground. Tomic was good too. Rosol won. I can't imagine watching like an Alcaraz vs Djokovic match at that level or Fed vs Nadal or something. Holy smokes. I did get to see Federer and Nadal hitting at that time though, which was a dream come true.

    @ARKenMan@ARKenMan9 ай бұрын
  • Wow!!! That's why my number one motto is always: "competence, NOT confidence!!!"

    @yinhoukhor7109@yinhoukhor71099 ай бұрын
  • I’m a 4.5 player and I hired a coach who used to be #1 at UCLA. He kept getting on me to get my racket back faster and I was feeling like I was doing it just fine so he shrugged his shoulders and started hitting HIS normal pace and I couldn’t even get my racket back fast enough to make contact with the ball most of the time. I asked him why he didn’t go pro and he said he wasn’t good enough. It was then I truly realized the difference between pros and non pros. And it’s true for all sports.

    @adamcravets5408@adamcravets54089 ай бұрын
  • I am an Open level player, basically the top of club/rec level tennis. I get smashed by futures players, lucky if I can get a few games. I was lucky enough to be a hitting partner for a guy who got to 104 in the world, I was absolutely humbled. I didn't know tennis could be played that fast, at that level. It's one thing to see it as a spectator, but to feel the ball they hit, its a entirely different thing. That guy btw, told me he couldn't change direction against Nadal when he was training with him. There are levels to this, and they are hard to see.

    @Raven05R6@Raven05R69 ай бұрын
    • Levels in tennis is scary

      @pepelipeau9628@pepelipeau96289 ай бұрын
    • Nadal is done now, why do you think he's called Claydal?

      @pauljohnson6019@pauljohnson60199 ай бұрын
    • @@pauljohnson6019ok Djokovic-sexual

      @shadowarcher3966@shadowarcher39669 ай бұрын
    • @@pauljohnson6019 You have nothing to contribute to this discussion as you don't have anything to contribute to life. Please just go away somewhere and stop wasting resources for others, like oxygen and water.

      @peace4myheart@peace4myheart9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@pauljohnson6019claydal on crutches would still be competitive against an amateur

      @samster978@samster9789 ай бұрын
  • If you’re a UTR 5 which is someone that can play basic competitive tennis, you’re barely winning a game against a UTR 7. The top men’s pros are UTR 15-16. People have no idea how much the level increases for each increment.

    @c3vzn@c3vzn9 ай бұрын
    • naw you can easily win over 1 game vs a 7 utr

      @stevenjm12@stevenjm129 ай бұрын
    • I hover around UTR 10, I get bageled by UTR 12.5+

      @Raven05R6@Raven05R69 ай бұрын
    • Arthur Fery is UTR 14.63, but he got a lot of games against World #3 Daniil Medvedev who has UTR 16.22. First set was competitive.

      @KH28m@KH28m8 ай бұрын
    • The ratings compress a bit towards the top. Once you go about ~12UTR your game is so solid that anyone off their game at that level will be punished. I have won games against players 2+ UTR levels above me, its just uncommon.

      @Raven05R6@Raven05R67 ай бұрын
  • Always loved Andrea! Glad she's found a home at Tennis Channel!

    @kristiannelson1851@kristiannelson18519 ай бұрын
  • I love emotional Petko. Please more inflection in your commentating too!!

    @chrisrodriguez5268@chrisrodriguez52689 ай бұрын
  • I remember being surprised when my coach, who had a pretty big serve (125mph) and had been a top 5 junior player in the country, said that he might only be able to win “a couple of games” off of Agassi.

    @ER1CwC@ER1CwC9 ай бұрын
  • I used to be a 4.0 almost 4.5. At my club tournament I played a guy who’s was about 5.5 and 10 years younger. I was playing quite well. I won the first game on serve. And that was that. Didn’t win another game. Never got beyond 30 in any game. These guys who think they can get a game off a top pro, they should enter a drug rehab clinic.

    @EetsBack@EetsBack9 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. Even people playing challenger levels would have a rough time taking a game off anyone in the top 50. These 3.0-5.0s really think they can?

      @arkine11@arkine119 ай бұрын
  • I remember reading a thread on Reddit by a guy who picked up tennis at like 26 and he claimed that he had “amazing strokes and serves”, and he was winning “matches” and stuff. He asked the people there on the path to go pro and start competing in grand slams (no joke). Others quickly put him in his place saying it is “Incredibly, remarkably, amazingly, absurdly unlikely”, and there has never been a single case of anyone becoming a pro so late at that age, definitely not when they’d only picked up the racket a couple of years prior. But he insisted that he was confident in himself and always had his tech job to fall back to if it’s not working out. He also said “see you guys at the Wimbledon!” or something along those lines. Every year I follow Wimbledon to see if there was a story on someone who picked up the racket at 26 and made it to the draws, but of course there’s none, ever. Marcus Willis was an amazing story but he started at 9, not freaking 26. I just did a quick search and the original post has been deleted now (you can only read others’ replies) 😅 Lmao, the delusional confidence that some people have, really.

    @honeydew4392@honeydew43929 ай бұрын
    • Just goes to show that you need coaching (and from an early age), especially in today's game. Inherent skill and talent alone is not enough.

      @tomr6955@tomr69559 ай бұрын
    • There was one thread about “someone’s friend” who thought he could take a set off Nadal. I think he was 4.5. It became a meme on the subreddit and they are still laughing about him from time to time.

      @gabrielametodieva8360@gabrielametodieva83609 ай бұрын
    • lol saw heap of this on talk tennis forums

      @samster978@samster9789 ай бұрын
  • Petko's part had me HOWLING, I can't stop rewatching it

    @user-de4fc1vc8n@user-de4fc1vc8n9 ай бұрын
  • I’ve played tennis for roughly 25 years. At my peak, I was barely a 4.0 player and thought I was pretty decent. I watched the local college players play and realized how much better they were and even the best of them were maybe 5.5 players. Top pros are 7.0 level players. A pro playing against me would be like me playing a total novice who’s never picked up a racquet.

    @a32tl@a32tl9 ай бұрын
  • These ppl who think they can take a game off a touring pro have obviously never been to a tournament. Because all you have to do is stand behind the players as they're hitting--which is easy to do during qualies or for matches on outer courts--and you'll see how incredible good even a top 50 player is. The amount of pace AND spin from a tour player is nothing even a 4.5 player could deal with. The pros are 100% right.

    @qwerty4126@qwerty41269 ай бұрын
    • It’s not “even” top 50. Imagine being top 50 in the whole world, that’s an insane achievement. In the top 100 you’re better than 99% of all players who play tennis. Most people (including myself sometimes) don’t realise the meaning of the top 100, let alone top 50. They say someone in the top 30 is “so average” or “trash” 😂. Well talk about it when you become the 30th best employee in your field. Even Griekspoor said that the top 30 are insane and then the difference between 50-200 is the consistency really.

      @gabrielametodieva8360@gabrielametodieva83609 ай бұрын
    • @@gabrielametodieva8360 It’s more like this: Being Top 100 is better than 99.9% of all players. With UTR 9, I’m like 24,000 in the world so…

      @leumas0412@leumas04129 ай бұрын
    • @gabrielametodieva8360 Correct. My point was that all a player has to do is go to a tournament and watch a touring pro hit, top 50 or top 500. The skill will be obvious.

      @qwerty4126@qwerty41269 ай бұрын
  • Andy didn't hold back lmao, and he was absolutely correct!

    @karnudom@karnudom9 ай бұрын
  • Roddick's definition of pro may be a bit harsh considering how tough it is to make a living in tennis, even outside top 50, but even people who are solely playing challengers right now would likely not lose a game to amateurs.

    @arkine11@arkine119 ай бұрын
  • I think this discussion is interesting, because it gives context to how people are talking about pros in not only tennis, but in all sports, and esports, for that matter. It is really hard to see the jump in skill between a good amateur and a pro, if you have not been there or tried it yourself.

    @geir-arneroos845@geir-arneroos8459 ай бұрын
  • Note that this was a survey of the American population. Say no more.

    @Max_Cherry@Max_Cherry9 ай бұрын
    • we are guilty as charged.

      @LouCadle@LouCadle9 ай бұрын
  • This poll exhibits the latest form and level of people's entitlement! Absolute ludicrous!!!

    @chefpatsy@chefpatsy9 ай бұрын
  • I love fired up Roddick, and brutal Petko - absolute truth speakers tbh

    @TheSentinel909@TheSentinel9099 ай бұрын
  • I’m an NTRP rated 5.0. Can confirm, I can’t get a game off a pro. And I can maybe get one or two games off of the best college players who are 5.5s who would get bageld amongst REAL pros. This tennis game is truly a food chain. People don’t realize the crazy difference and how much work and dedication it takes.

    @HarryJohnson69@HarryJohnson699 ай бұрын
  • Great respect for roddikc and petkovic. Absolutely on point . I played some features tournaments and the amateurs have not idea the amount of hours, sacrifice, training , and commitment we put. They think things happen by magic. Let's put in another way: some division one players (top of the country) are exceptional athletes , great technique, great speed, great balance, great movement, great ball striking , great stamina and they will not win a game vs a top 100 atp player . Any atp pro will beat a club player easily 6-0 with the left hand (if they are righty).

    @antoniog2833@antoniog28339 ай бұрын
  • I'm a 5.5, i have a friend who tried to go pro and has since retired. He's around 32-33, i'm 24. He barely ever made it past the first round of challengers and did not come from a super wealthy family and eventually ran out of funding. For me, how it feels to play him now at a retired level is that as soon as he hits a forehand, the point is over. I can get a game if i serve and play the best tennis of my life. Casuals don't understand that the pros make each other look bad, and the ball looks 50% slower on TV.

    @harrison3910@harrison39108 ай бұрын
  • I used to play tennis over 25 years ago with 3 friends, 2 were top County and 3rd was our number 1 National under 18 who was serving 120MPH serves all day , he said against the top Pro’s such as Sampras etc he would barely win a point let alone a game. There level was in another World in every aspect . I personally used to play County table tennis however when I played against national players Who started playing at age 5 or so I could barely return their serves due to the immense spin . Rodrick has this spot on ,

    @hartgemini007@hartgemini0079 ай бұрын
    • In my community centre there was a 75 yr old ex Olympic table tennis player. Nobody could even score a point on him. We were all way above the average joe too but I think many people don't understand the level of talent and control these guys have over their sport. It's like they can do what they want when they want. He used to place the ball in exact spots he wanted and we'd always be a step behind. The spin would be so fast it would literally go around our rackets and hit us on the heads sometimes. It was surreal until you experience it firsthand. And again we were all pretty good amateurs but high level pros are different! I've watched him play millions of games with thousands of guys over 10 yrs of knowing him and have never seen him lose once. High level pros are different. It's true for every sport tbh.

      @loverofhumanity@loverofhumanity8 ай бұрын
  • I am an elderly 3.5 at best now. 30 years ago a bit better. At that time I was coached by a guy who had made 2nd round of Wimbledon 1978. I could rally with him, or rather hit balls with him, but I could never hit a shot that didn't come back. When we played points occasionally he would just say "you're not going to have much luck", and I never did.

    @EJP286CRSKW@EJP286CRSKW9 ай бұрын
  • Strange stuff. Federer won four games v Nadal in the RG '08 final. Murray won one game v Fed at WTF in 2014. This is *between* pros.

    @mantaishere@mantaishere9 ай бұрын
    • And not just pros, some of the greatest pros of all time 😅...

      @joniljoseph2934@joniljoseph29349 ай бұрын
    • @@joniljoseph2934 I mean, I WAS gonna say, the elitest of elite pros!

      @mantaishere@mantaishere9 ай бұрын
  • Love listening to Roddick - he should have his own segment or podcast. As a point of reference 2016 Wimbledon 2nd round and Federer vs Willis: Marcus Willis was approx 750 in the world, decided to give Wimbledon one more try, won quallies, won his first round match and was now on the biggest stage in Tennis against - arguably - the greatest of all time. Federer won 0, 3 & 4. The love set was Federer laying down his marker. Did he make a competition of the other two sets for the crowd? Who knows...

    @paulelverstone8677@paulelverstone86779 ай бұрын
  • Anrdrea's idea of "sacrificing" an amateur every now and then is wonderful (and funny)! I never lost in college (small liberal arts college in midwest), but I know I'd stand no chance for a game against anyone in at least the top 200. I think it would be incredibly entertaining. Just a few games even would be so much fun to watch and so enlightening. You'd appreciate the real top pros so much more!

    @TomAJohnson1919@TomAJohnson19199 ай бұрын
  • The Pro's are sooooo good & gifted they make matches look casual. We're looking at humans with speed & reflexes that belong in the animal world. Don't even think about it. 😂

    @angelmatos9143@angelmatos91439 ай бұрын
  • They are absolutely right. I once played the NJ State college tennis champion for fun. I was in my 20s and got 2 points off him. It was a fun and great experience.

    @BathshebaE1@BathshebaE19 ай бұрын
  • I completely agree with them.. however you could argue Emma Raducanu was a ‘club player’ because she never pursued Tennis until after she left School and she didn’t focus her training solely on Tennis either.. so her routine would’ve been similar to a Club Player, she only chose Tennis a few years ago.. so to some extent “a club player” with a lot of natural talent is probably the only exception. 😂

    @crazycatpetera1404@crazycatpetera14048 ай бұрын
  • Petkovic's English is so good!

    @rajeevshrivastava4488@rajeevshrivastava44889 ай бұрын
  • Watch players ranked ~1000 in the world They are insanely good compared to the average Joe And they probably would be happy to get a game off of a top 20 player 99.9% of recreational players will not get a point

    @timgallagher1041@timgallagher10419 ай бұрын
  • This happen in every sport. ⚽🏈🏀 fans who play at the local park all think they could have made the league if they wanted to but went and got "real" jobs instead.

    @saksit247@saksit2479 ай бұрын
    • Well, not only in sport unfortunately 😁

      @fortissimoX@fortissimoX9 ай бұрын
  • So good to see Petko. Never knew she did this.

    @diggler2002@diggler20029 ай бұрын
  • When a pro plays with you, they don't have the kind of pressure that can lead to double faulting. Then can hit much safer serves, and they still ace you. Maybe if they accidently trip and fall, you'll win a point. Lol

    @ql3670@ql36709 ай бұрын
  • The kruger dunning effect. You see it all the time.

    @The_Great_One@The_Great_One9 ай бұрын
  • I think all these people who polled are trolls

    @pepelipeau9628@pepelipeau96289 ай бұрын
  • I'd love to ace Andrea🤣 Her forfeit: 10 minutes of Petko-dance.

    @zetristan4525@zetristan45259 ай бұрын
  • I think Andy is being a bit harsh on himself saying he wouldn’t take a game off Djokovic - he’s only four years older than him. He had a good serve, if he had a game where he got all his first serves in I reckon he could sneak a game or two.

    @mostynf@mostynf9 ай бұрын
    • He just needed a good tennis coach!😂

      @ritaferdi5831@ritaferdi58319 ай бұрын
    • He’s just being honest. Djokovic’s returns are out of this world, and Andy’s serve is far from his peak. Andy would get smoked

      @HarryJohnson69@HarryJohnson699 ай бұрын
    • @@HarryJohnson69 Yeah that’s the main problem - Djokovic’s return game is phenomenal! Plus if any point developed into a rally that would be game over - so you’re probably right. Still think Andy could hit a few aces and unreturned serves though, as serve doesn’t deteriorate with age as quickly as court speed and other elements of the game.

      @mostynf@mostynf9 ай бұрын
  • Those surveyed must mainly be casual players. Anyone who has played at a club and taken a beating from one of the top club players knows this isn't true, because that top club player is getting bagelled by a D1 player, who's then going to get destroyed by the Challenger player and so on upwards to the pros. Club level is absolutely miles apart.

    @KrayzListerine@KrayzListerine9 ай бұрын
    • I’d also imagine a lot of those surveyed have not seen a professional match in person, close to the court.

      @tim916@tim9169 ай бұрын
  • Petko, great point putting amateurs in to sacrifice. Put them in the bye slots instead of a totally free round.

    @euroclyde@euroclyde9 ай бұрын
    • Not fair on the seeds. They worked hard to get to where they are, and shouldnt have to waste their time dealing with dregs. Not to mention the possibility of injury, and to prove what? If an amateur wants to play, they can work their way through qualies.

      @bigrobsydney@bigrobsydney9 ай бұрын
    • @@bigrobsydney There shouldn’t be byes in the first place. There are too few players who can make a living on the tour in the first place; losing a few players in the field is lame.

      @euroclyde@euroclyde9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@euroclyde This article is talking about amateurs v pro's. I'm not sure the amateurs would win any prizemoney against pros. I saw a golden set with someone who was an amateur playing a pro. Literally, the amateur did not get a single point; it's here on YT somewhere. If you want to have a discussion about why byes exist, I'll leave that to tournament organisers to explain.

      @bigrobsydney@bigrobsydney9 ай бұрын
    • @@bigrobsydney The idea of amateur v pro is just for amusement and of course doesn’t deserve any real consideration. However, the idea that so many people on any given week, for any given pro tournament, are competing their asses off in the qualis, for a sport that barely allows the top 100 to make a living, leave with so many slots unfilled is an injustice. It doesn’t help the health of the sport, either.

      @euroclyde@euroclyde9 ай бұрын
    • @@euroclyde I completely agree. But I don't think the issue is solved by having more people competing for the same amount of prizemoney.

      @bigrobsydney@bigrobsydney9 ай бұрын
  • Just the fact that the pro men are serving at 120 mph 1st service and mid 90s second serve , just to get in to the rally would be an achievement. Most amateurs serve around 100 mph tops with at most 30-50% accuracy, which pros could return for a winner almost every time.

    @Islam4Europeans@Islam4Europeans9 ай бұрын
  • Yes, people have no clue. I played alot of sports when i was younger but it was when i was 30 i started playing in a club. After a few years i am now at a high club level but when the club had the club championships i faced a junior who was 16 years old and competes in "real" tournaments. I lost 6-0, 6-0. Sure, i was close to win a few games but the difference was huge. He told me that he lost with similar numbers to the adults who competed for the club in the national series. Then you guys can imagine how those club would fare against real proffessionals.

    @davidaltamirano7672@davidaltamirano76729 ай бұрын
  • More Petko please

    @d_13g0@d_13g09 ай бұрын
  • The pace of play would be impossible to keep up with as a completely average player. 1st serves wouldn’t get returned, and if they did, it’s getting smashed

    @jwizdum2103@jwizdum21039 ай бұрын
  • For me as a follower of tennis, this is a classic.

    @jujjeelf309@jujjeelf3098 ай бұрын
  • I used to box. Most men feel the same about boxing.

    @MV-gt1qu@MV-gt1qu9 ай бұрын
  • Roddick always never took himself too seriously what Ive always liked about him

    @samster978@samster9789 ай бұрын
  • Haha...This is sensational!!'.Waking up to this, this Sunday you guys made my morning that I love you Andrea & my man Andy!"..And Roddick your the best because you were number #1 in the World and we still haven't seen an American that represented as you did my so cool & gracious sir!" So ur absolutely right... I'm ah 4.5 USTA player and no way ur beating ah pro its another way of life as you climb that ladder...Now i did play against ah pro twice both semi pro's and held my own but the consistency and skill is unmatched so... Haha. Love this guys and "Ancore"...More, more" 🙌👏👏😅🌞

    @crisalexx109@crisalexx1099 ай бұрын
  • Fans are delusional, but Roddick just with his serve could win one or more games off pro players for sure.

    @Ilegator@Ilegator9 ай бұрын
  • I think this is something bigger than that, that's the thought process of a lot of people as soon as they have the slightest idea of what they're talking about, they stand up directly as "expert" and this is just appalling... from sofa sports players to various subjects it's the same and it is just ridiculous. a lot of people live in their heads only.

    @dartfield4655@dartfield46559 ай бұрын
  • I saw Nadal play live in the US open (court side tickets) I couldn’t believe what I saw. I was like how is it humanely possible to return this serve. It was fast, it was high, it was kicking off the ground at shoulder height or above. It was practically impossible to return. Also, the game looks soooooo different in person. On TV it looks like - what? This is easy. Also, the angles that Djokovic creates, he will make you run from one end to the other until u start seeing stars in the daylight. People are truly delusional.

    @AP-qu8sl@AP-qu8sl8 ай бұрын
  • True. Roddick couldn't do it himself.

    @ifluvinguiswrong@ifluvinguiswrong9 ай бұрын
  • so, I took some classes at a local club, and was making moves, doing plays, like I was on the top of the world against people in my class, then I went into a hitting session with an instructor... the balls blew by me... I can't imaging taking on any pro... I'd be out of breath and crying... :)

    @wongjefx980@wongjefx9809 ай бұрын
  • Pure delusion from fans who did the survey, I guarantee they've never watched a pro match in person especially the men's.

    @KeviinHuynh@KeviinHuynh9 ай бұрын
  • I could maybe win 1 point vs Djoker. But a game? Heck no! Even to win 1 point I would need a stroke of luck, like going for broke on a serve and Novak missing (my serve sucks lol), a lucky net cord, a line clipper by 2mm, etc. With that kind of luck I would win 1 point and no more. A game? FORGET ABOUT IT Loved this segment. Funniest one in TC history lmao

    @J_NoNamesLeft73@J_NoNamesLeft739 ай бұрын
  • Those people are more than delusional LMFAO

    @640A@640A9 ай бұрын
  • At my peak i have clocked in a serve at 207kmh, but even with that power there is no way i would win a game against a pro. They are fitter, more consistent, more accurate, have much much much better shot selection, find it so easy to change directions with the ball, despite me being quick they move significantly better, they have better technique and so many more strengths over me. Its delusional to think i would ever even come close to winning a single game. As petkovic said, unless the pro makes an unforced error i would probably not only get bageled but also lose with a golden set...pros are no joke!

    @vinaye20@vinaye209 ай бұрын
    • I'm impressed with your speed! But even more impressed with your accurate self-assessment. I remember reading a comment elsewhere from just a junior college sprinter who was in a movie as an extra and had to let the reasonably fit Hollywood star win a race. He and his teammates had a hell of a time running slowly enough for that to happen! lol. And they were quite a bit below the average DI runners, who were much slower than Olympians.

      @LouCadle@LouCadle9 ай бұрын
    • With such a serve, a very fast court, serving 1st and 2nd with full risk and much luck you might can do it 🙂

      @EyeQQQ@EyeQQQ9 ай бұрын
    • @@EyeQQQ that would be extremely wishful thinking on my part haha

      @vinaye20@vinaye209 ай бұрын
  • We need a video

    @jillgreen5288@jillgreen52889 ай бұрын
  • I used to see the current Wimbledon under-14s champion train up close, most amateur club players would do very well to get a game off of him right now, let alone the pros.

    @joshforde698@joshforde6989 ай бұрын
  • Don’t you love how dillusional people can actually be.

    @garywright9715@garywright97159 ай бұрын
  • I did play once with a semi professional player who was about around number 500 and was playing in the Challenger tour. He did not beat me 60 60. It was more like 61 62. Games I won were my serve games. His serves were out of the world, especially his second serve surprisingly Am not convinced that Roddick cannot win a single game against Djokovic! I think he is exaggerating

    @rajaeelastname4878@rajaeelastname48789 ай бұрын
    • yea he was too generous. in fact he has a winning h2h record over djokovic.

      @arisadriano1544@arisadriano15449 ай бұрын
  • Who is responding to this survey? No way recreational tennis players can think they can take one game off Djokovic? I guess society is not what I expected these days. Even if I could serve 100-120mph for first serve, I wouldn't win a single game off Djokovic.

    @topspin1715@topspin17159 ай бұрын
    • you're smarter than they are, I guess! It's stunning, this level of delusion.

      @LouCadle@LouCadle9 ай бұрын
  • Why does Andy never go into the studio?

    @redplague@redplague9 ай бұрын
  • You can say whatever you want, but I don't have a negative score with the members of the big three, Djokovic, Nadal and Federero, and Alcaras hasn't beaten me yet, and I hope he won't either.

    @stojanovicvlada2009@stojanovicvlada20099 ай бұрын
  • Yo. Roddick really beat a great amateur player with a frying pan. This is the movie I need made. Wild...

    @deelak2329@deelak23299 ай бұрын
  • This was too funny, regular people thinking they could win a game from any legit pro. Pros don’t miss unless they’re pressing against another pro. The only way you’d win a point against a pro is if they got bored and fell asleep during the rally.

    @gomezaddams4347@gomezaddams43479 ай бұрын
  • If they think they can beat a player who earn a living from tennis, they are delusional.

    @user27107@user271077 ай бұрын
  • As Andy admitted himself: in contrast to winning a game, winning one single point against a pro is not completely of reach for an amateur that plays competitive tennis on a decently high level such as the German second Bundesliga . For average joes like you and me however... forget even that. If the rule is “the amateur wins if they are able to score one single point before they are sent home 6:0 6:0”, the pro will have to play way more defensively than they normally do where they can live with a few points lost due to unforced errors, double faults or shots that were out by a few millimetres. They must avoid making that one single small mistake at any cost that it only takes for the amateur to “win”. It’s like the pro having 48 match points in a row against them. The amateur however can go all in 48 times in a row and the chances of a lucky shot, a ball bouncing oddly of the net, etc. are there. It’s far from certain but it’s not completely out of bounds either. If the rule is “the amateur wins if he doesn’t lose 6:0 6:0” however, this is a completely different story and magnitudes more difficult as it requires the amateur having to win points systematically - in this case 4 out of 6 at some stage. If the pro doesn’t have to worry about losing a small single digit number of points on the way they can just play their usual game and blast the amateur out with a 6:0 6:0 in record time.

    @thomasreichert9088@thomasreichert90889 ай бұрын
  • Brilliant !! And it reminds me of a story about an ex pro golfer who hustled wagers against amateurs. He played with an umbrella, and a garden hoe. against a full set of clubs and of course he always won.

    @7robertdavies7@7robertdavies79 ай бұрын
  • I love this topic! Lol

    @charcoalberries819@charcoalberries8199 ай бұрын
  • I would volunteer for the fun of it

    @lchanceiv@lchanceiv9 ай бұрын
  • Petkovic wouldn't get a game off Djokovic either.

    @normangoldstuck8107@normangoldstuck81078 ай бұрын
  • Hearing people talk about players like Raducanu and Nick when they lose makes me laugh like do u understand the difference between you and them 🤣 especially Nick .

    @trishennaidoo1309@trishennaidoo13099 ай бұрын
  • I can get at least a set off of Alcaraz and Djokovic if not win the match! I am a tough NTRP 3.5-4.0!😁👍

    @Agent77X@Agent77X9 ай бұрын
  • Not only djokovic is a pro, there are many more player players than the best in history

    @szybenik555@szybenik5559 ай бұрын
  • Can i take this opportunity to officially challenge Petko? We can make a very entertaining segment i think. Im roughly a 4 0, aged 55. Come to London and well play at my club in Wimbledon.

    @andrewfinkelsteintennis1915@andrewfinkelsteintennis19159 ай бұрын
  • "Delusional Fans" ... What the hell are smoking those people? 🤦‍♂🤦‍♀ The only points they'll get would result of double faults or errors from those professionals, men or women; everything set would be 6-0! 🤣

    @Age_of_Apocalypse@Age_of_Apocalypse9 ай бұрын
  • The poll was bogus. Hell Andy could beat amateurs now with his hands tied behind his back.

    @PQV-8898@PQV-88986 ай бұрын
  • I don't think many people can even get a game off Federer now, even though he's retired- he'll still bagel most future and players outside the top 1000.

    @pauljohnson6019@pauljohnson60199 ай бұрын
  • Embarrassing

    @OX3YMORON@OX3YMORON9 ай бұрын
  • I feel if someone miss hit a ball and it was high and short I might win a point but bo way in hell I'm winning a game they are too consistent and half my age. I do think I'm a better outfielder than them however even being twice their age cause I too am competitive and played college baseball. 😅

    @seanbinder8316@seanbinder83169 ай бұрын
  • Says a lot about US society, the good and the bad.

    @andreasmueller8353@andreasmueller83539 ай бұрын
  • Most of those people probably can't return a serve from a (Top 100) pro lol

    @joking2512@joking25129 ай бұрын
  • LOL which fans are these that completed this poll...completely and utterly delusional for real! ahaha 99.9% of the people who answered that poll saying they could take a game off a professional tennis player, wouldn't even be able to get a racquet on the serve coming at them, yet alone win a point! LoL!

    @bpdynasty9265@bpdynasty92659 ай бұрын
  • So these pros are saying they are beyond making an unforced error just once? Idk about that.

    @rickmcphee4206@rickmcphee42064 ай бұрын
  • An amateurs best shot they can possibly hit is a top 500 players basic rally shot.

    @Naturalwino@Naturalwino9 ай бұрын
    • yeah, but get it back in bounds? :)

      @LouCadle@LouCadle9 ай бұрын
  • The average Challenger journeyman would destroy most regular people 6-0 6-0, let alone someone like Roddick

    @mate2618@mate26189 ай бұрын
    • Forget challenger. Even a competitive Usta open tournament player would hammer the average recreational player.

      @selvammascarenhas3020@selvammascarenhas30209 ай бұрын
  • My unkle (60yo at the time and never played tennis) thought he could beat prime Azarenka ❤

    @MariuszWelna@MariuszWelna9 ай бұрын
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