An amazing end of the year for Ram and Salisbury, who even came within 200 points of the year-end No. 1 team ranking.
With all the chopping and changing for next year's pairs, there is a certain irony that both sets of finalists have been playing together since 2019.
Interesting, irony indeed- Rusedski waffling on again about dubs re- pairings for the Olympics
Enough Greg, or back it up!
Mahut and Roger-Vasselin are the only new top flight pairing (so far), and of course Mektic and Pavic split up. There are of course existing all countryman pairings, the highest ranked being Gonzalez and Moltenyi. But don't get the sense that the Olympics are the driving force for doubles pairs in 2024. Amd traditionally singles players have been successful in Olympic doubles despite minimal doubles play.
I know - the pairs dont need to play as a pair all season to team up for the Olympics and hard to see any player messing Up their whole season just for one event - the French clearly have a different incentive with being hosts, but I read ERV isnt entirely convinced re Mahut as a partner and may not actually follow through on that pairing
Just watched the highlights - Joe was SO sharp, really good effort, really excited for how they have come back this season, winning these really big events and 2024 is an exciting proposition for them.
Watching Djoko, I have to say, that was stunningly good tennis. Djoko seemed to be enjoying that. Dont like the guy but kudos, that was good. GOAT? Could well be!
For those interested, the Tennis Abstract story of the 1973 season has reached the Masters - in 73, they were held in Boston, straight after the Davis Cup (other way around this season). This is the story of day 1 - an 8 player round robin, group format, just like today - just singles though, no doubles event - at least at the same time.
From Tennis Abstract
Pity poor Tom Gorman. Two days after a five-set loss to Rod Laver in the 1973 Davis Cup finals, the 27-year-old American was blown off the court by John Newcombe in a dead rubber. Two days after that, he opened play at the Grand Prix Masters in Boston, the distant eighth seed in an eight-man field.
Gorman had barely made the cut, securing his place in the draw with a title run in Stockholm a month earlier. As if to underscore his long-shot status, his first assignment in Boston was a round-robin match against Grand Prix leader and defending champion Ilie Nstase, who had beaten him in 16 of 17 previous meetings. In their latest encounter, when Gorman unexpectedly reached the semi-finals of the French Open, Nstase allowed him just eight games in three sets.
One could forgive the Seattle native for admitting that he had "no interest in this even at all."
Yet on the morning of December 4th, Gorman woke up eager, realizing he had nothing to lose. Pity poor Nstase. Or don't: It was a typical "mercurial" performance from the Romanian, who unexpectedly found himself battling an opponent in peak form, then came up with an excuse for his lack of a response.
Gorman saved break point for 3-all in the first set, when Nstase claimed that someone in the crowd called him a "bum." The American didn't hear anything, but he took advantage of his distracted foe, reeling off ten straight points and grabbing the first set. Nstase, who hurled far worse slurs at officials on a regular basis, later claimed that he "couldn't play" after being mildly heckled. However flimsy the explanation, it holds up: His serve fell apart in the second set and he stumbled to a 6-4, 6-1 loss.
That, for the American, was the good news. The bad news was that his next assignment was a second match in four days against Newcombe. Newk had arrived in Boston as engaged as Gorman had been detached. While Nstase fumbled, the mustachioed Australian dominated Jan Kode, winning 11 of the last 13 games for his own 6-4, 6-1 victory. Newcombe at his best was perhaps the most fearsome force in tennis. Gorman's path to an unlikely triumph in Boston wasn't about to get any easier.