Dimitrov and Kyrgios are the next good things

By David Lord / Expert

For 40 Grand Slams over 10 years, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, and Andy Murray have dominated men’s tennis.

Federer’s won 15, Nadal 14, Djokovic six, and Murray two – there’s 37 of them.

Only Marat Safin (Australian 2005), Juan Martin del Potro (US 2009), and Stan Wawrinka (Australian this year), have broken the four-man cycle.

But there are two on the horizon who will give the quartet a right riyal shakeup, and it could well be this week at Wimbledon – Bulgaria’s 23-year-old Grigor Dimitrov, and towering Australian 19-year-old Nick Kyrgios who is on duty tonight against Rafael Nadal on centre court.

Kyrgios has beaten one player of note in his year long career – Richard Gasquet.

The fact that Kyrgios came from two sets to love down against the 13th seed was career defining.

Tonight it’s the ultimate test against the world’s number one.

Don’t write off Kyrgios due to his lack of experience. He has plenty of power in the tank off both wings, an excellent volley, and an even better serve.

It’s the serve that will get up Nadal’s nose. He treats rookies with contempt, and if he does it again tonight, he will do so at his own peril.

Don’t line up their respective career stats, they are too one-sided.

It’s what happens on centre court tonight that will be the only criterion.

Dimitrov has far more experience to call on than the Australian.

Dimitrov has already beaten Murray in three sets this year on hardcourt at Acapulco, and he’s beaten Tomas Berdych twice, Wawrinka, Milos Raonic, and Tommy Haas.

The Bulgarian is ranked 13th in the world, and even though Murray, the defending champion, has been in superb touch at Wimbledon, he will have to take his A-game to centre court tomorrow night, or watch the final on television.

While Dimitrov is a better player than Kyrgios at the moment, the Bulgarian has top quality Australian coach Roger Rasheed in his corner.

Rasheed will keep his charge on a uphill curve of rapid improvement, while Kyrgios has another Australian coach Simon Rea, who is even less known than his teenage boss.

Hopefully Australian master coach Tony Roche will get involved with Nick Kyrgios,

We wish Nick well tonight, just be yourself young fella, and let all that talent and power hang out.

The Crowd Says:

2014-07-02T10:04:35+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Murray is consistently in semi finals so he has knocked out any potential challenger like Berdych and Ferrer.

2014-07-02T04:58:54+00:00

Chop

Roar Guru


Don't write off Milos Raonic either, I think he's going to be very good for a long time. He's got a massive serve and forehand and is only young as well. I'd include him in the next gen group.

2014-07-02T03:48:07+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


Sorry I stand corrected. He has won 2, that just shows how much interest there is in Murray. He needs to win atleast 4 slams before I would even start thinking of him being on par with the other 3.

2014-07-02T03:17:07+00:00

clipper

Guest


He's won two, as well as being runner up 5 times, although I agree, he probably shouldn't be included with the trinity

2014-07-02T01:53:50+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


Please can we stop putting Murray in with Federer, Djokavic and Nadal please. He has won 1 grand slam out of the 40 on offer in the past 10 years. Give me a break - you are not a POM by any chance David?

2014-07-01T22:04:30+00:00

Milo

Guest


Good call David and a fantastic result. One other bonus from this is that the boy from the Gold Coast and his dumb(er) father-coach are no longer relevant in Australian tennis. Go Nick!

2014-07-01T19:36:22+00:00

Michiel

Guest


Information is not correct, Federer won 17 grandslams!!!!

2014-07-01T07:41:09+00:00

ak

Roar Guru


Lleyton Hewitt can also be the next good thing - In doubles.

2014-07-01T05:20:22+00:00

Margaret R.

Guest


Hi David. I like the advice you give to the young player . I wish him all the best for a great career in tennis. We certainly need some young talented players in our tennis world.

2014-07-01T04:42:51+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Maybe the Federer-Nadal-Djokovic-Murray mafia, has been more dominant than the 80's Becker-Lendl-Edberg-Wilander mafia, or the Agassi-Courier-Sampras mafia of the 90's. The current big 4 have basically cleaned the division out. Some fresh new young blood is needed to step up. Maybe this aussy pup might step up, Tomic tried and failed.

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