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[personal profile] rhodochrosite
so I neglected to recap 13 months of reading in which I actually did not read that much but I did start reading sports bios/autobios for various canon review purposes late last year, which was probably the first time I have read nonfiction for leisure since I was like eight years old. here is a quick review post, not including the books that i read by ctrl f'ing to "vettel" "seb" etc. tennis and f1 below:

You are only as good as your wins. )

du du du du max verstappen

Jan. 26th, 2026 12:53 am
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[personal profile] rhodochrosite
highlight reel of quotes from unstoppable: the ultimate biography of max verstappen - mark hughes.

MAX INTERIORITY STUDIES
Introduction
Talk to him today and there’s no apparent damage; he’s relaxed and sociable, with a ready smile. The most special part of his personality, the most critical part, is that he is not cowed by anything. He fears no one and reputations mean nothing to him and never have. He’s straight-talking and on track he’s always the dominant one in any tango. But there’s been zero rebellion. Not as far as anyone knows. Just wide-eyed, straightforward, matter-of-fact openness, very characteristically Dutch in that way, taking forward the life and career Jos helped to shape.
//
Sensitive enough to engender a good atmosphere around him but not particularly reflective, Max doesn’t give the impression of devoting much time to contemplation. So the deep psychological questions about his childhood relationship with his father just wouldn’t resonate.
//
He’s a nice guy, a caring guy, a reasonable guy, but not one seemingly troubled by things beyond his immediate orbit. There is always this pull towards equilibrium. Not in the car, obviously.
//
But he is defined within the terms of the sport, and is not the sort of character who will transcend it in the way Lewis Hamilton has or Ayrton Senna did. He’s too straightforward for that, too uninterested in the world outside of racing. Because it’s a world in which he’s never lived. But within the bubble in which he has spent his entire existence, very few in history have ever flown so high.

Chapter 1: Monaco
Two things about Max Verstappen: his competitive zeal is extraordinarily intense, even by the standards of an F1 driver, and he tends to be binary in his assessment of situations—black or white, not grey.

Chapter 2: Father and Son
That Max is every bit as tough as Jos, however, is beyond question, and his aggression can flare, Jos-like, when provoked, both in the car and out. He has better control of his temper than his dad ever did, though. He can usually decouple the instinct from the action.

Chapter 3: The Making of a Champion
It is easy to see how, having reached the pinnacle of the real-life sport, Max found a new obsession where he could strive for excellence, assimilate afresh the requirements needed to dominate. This gives us perhaps more clarity on just where the urge to race in the first place came from. It wasn’t from Jos. There was no rebellion from Max against Jos’ dictates because it was Max who was pushing for it and Max who always wanted more. Max soaked up the knowledge and skill like a sponge as fast as Jos could pour it in, until he had surpassed his father.
  • i reckon a bit of a nature/nurture chicken-egg situation here tbh
//
‘Some people probably cannot deal with that kind of behaviour,’ said Max in 2021, ‘but I needed it. I was that type of character, probably, who needed this kind of treatment.’
  • macks……………………………………………. me in hell: Where is jos verstappen
//
When he’s racing, Max is entirely devoted to the task at hand. When he’s not, he relaxes.
//
He races because that’s what he does, that’s pretty much all of him… Just as reaching the goal of F1 was almost a routine matter; just as winning a grand prix on his debut with Red Bull was too.

Chapter 4: Disrupting the Hierarchy
[Max’s] recovery drive to victory is a beautiful demonstration of how he can decouple, in an instant, his natural ‘elegant’ driving style from the competitive necessities of the moment when overtaking sometimes demands a more brutal approach. Some of his out-brakes of rivals are far from elegant, but still require incredibly finely-honed skills to be made to work. It’s not only his super-precise sense of where the last possible braking point is (which is very different to the best braking point in terms of the ultimate lap time), but also the subsequent control which invariably rescues the wild moments his manoeuvres have given him. So he can drive with all the flamboyance and apparent wildness in the world when he needs to, but the default is the elegance which enables him to extract the ultimate lap time from a kart or car. And even at 12 years old—and almost certainly from well before then—he can effortlessly, unthinkingly, switch between the two at will.
//
Max clearly had that sublimely sensitive feel almost from the start, incredibly attuned to the messages the car and tyres were giving him in a way that few have ever matched. He didn’t know as much about the technicalities of karts as Jos and never sought to.

Chapter 5: Man and Machine
Max intuitively understands the dynamics and how to make the car go faster, even if not always the technical reasons behind that.

Chapter 7: From Rookie to Record Breaker
But Max had never been overly concerned with others defining for him the realms of the possible.

Chapter 8: Tensions Running High
But when attack and verve were the order of the day, [Max] was truly formidable.

Chapter 9: Heroes and Villains
That’s how it is with Max. Things happen, then it’s in the past. There’s little or no reflection. It’s a quality which takes the poison out of potentially vitriolic situations as he doesn’t seem to hold grudges. Winning is all there is and everything else is subservient to that.

Chapter 13: Irritations vs Rewards
Late in the race, he asked Lambiase what the fastest lap time had been. ‘We’re not concerned about that,’ replied the engineer. ‘Yeah, but I am,’ said Max.
//
As the marketing-led direction of the sport ramps up, it seems Max increasingly struggles to shut off that inbuilt Verstappen impulse to dismiss what he sees as stupid and irrelevant, and it eats into the energy reserves that keep him doing F1. There was a revealing moment in the official press conference that preceded the Miami Grand Prix weekend, after Max was asked a particularly vacuous question, when a look of irritated exasperation flashed across his face, before he then composed himself to give a suitably bland answer. These giveaway micro-expressions seem all of a piece with his growing disenchantment with the sport he has come to dominate. How big those reserves are and how much they are replenished by the rewards are racing are something only he could know—and even he probably doesn’t.


RED BULL’S GOLDEN CHILD SOLDIER
Chapter 1: Monaco
The events of Monaco 2022 are quite illuminating in this regard. They tell us about the complex, delicate relationship between Red Bull and Max and how even though they rely on each other totally for their combined success, in some respects it’s still not a full marriage. They have been partners for many years and enjoyed good times. But there’s still a distance—and it’s put in place by the Verstappens. It’s about control.
//
Verstappen is central to Red Bull: it all revolves around him at an operational and support level, he’s very happy in that role and that brings its own spiralling benefits… But even now that Max and Red Bull were contractually aligned for the foreseeable, it still wasn’t the Ferrari/Schumacher love-in where the joins were almost invisible and not a raised eyebrow of public criticism ever crossed Schumacher’s face. It wasn’t even the slightly less serene but still very close relationship of Mercedes and Hamilton.
//
It just works, [Horner] says. ‘Max feels very comfortable in the environment. There is a belief and a passion and a shared philosophy of how we go racing and I think he enjoys that. He is very loyal and protective of the team.’
//
Red Bull, much more than any corporate automotive team, can wear a little bit of controversy quite comfortably. The Verstappens fit into this ethos well—it’s even possible that Max derives some performance from it. This boy was always going to go racing if he wanted to and had the talent. It’s led to a certain free-spiritedness in his approach, answering only to himself.
//
Perhaps more than any driver on the grid, maybe even more than Fernando Alonso, Verstappen is racing on his own terms. Red Bull’s only intolerance—and it’s a severe one—is lack of performance, which is not something Max has ever had to worry about. He oozes performance, it’s locked into his own DNA, allowing him to be supremely relaxed in doing what he does—which only adds to the performance.

Chapter 7: From Rookie to Record Breaker
It’s tempting to imagine Max awakened the spirit of the rebellious young Marko. The Verstappens were the beneficiaries of his enthusiastic crusade, probably way more than they had anticipated. It made Max’s position far stronger than it would have been at, say, Mercedes or Ferrari. He was much more than just another driver in the Red Bull programme. He was Marko’s pet project.
//
‘He motivates everyone in the team,’ Xevi Pujolar told De Telegraaf. ‘Everyone sees his talent. But also his way of racing. Max is an attacker and that is something that captivates your mind.’
//
Christian Horner: ‘Max can be very demanding and very sharp when emotions are running high. He’s a thoroughbred, very strong-willed, and there’s many an engineer who will wilt under that pressure because Max’s expectation is incredibly high. GP is able to handle that and they each can give as good as they get, so much so that sometimes you forget which is the driver and which is the engineer.’

Chapter 10: All that was Needed was the Car
‘Max is a very difficult teammate,’ says Christian Horner, ‘because it must be soul destroying that you are looking at a piece of data and he’s three quarters of a second up the road and you are thinking how the hell has he done that? And it’s not just at one race, it’s at every race. Yet he doesn’t demand number one status, he doesn’t have anything in his contract that stipulates he has to have all the best bits, the newest bits, the developments; he is very fair in that respect, but the team will always gravitate around the driver that has the best chance at the end of the day.’

Chapter 12: Unbeatable
‘Can we do this for many, many, years?’ were Max’s words to his Red Bull teammates as he rode the high of his slow-down victory lap in Abu Dhabi 2021.


DRAGON & PHOENIX sure i'm just visually doing ctrl-f to leclerc but why else am i reading sports nonfiction if not to improve my yaoi scholarship.

Chapter 4: Disrupting the Hierarchy
Both were disqualified, Max for deliberately forcing Leclerc off the track in retaliation for earlier contact when Leclerc had relieved Max of the lead. Leclerc’s disqualification was for driving Max off the track after the end of the race in a fit of pique.
  • “a fit of pique” is soooooo cute

Chapter 5: Man and Machine
Frits van Amersfoort: ‘An average race driver, normally gets better where he was always good, but forgets where he was weak. And it was the opposite for Max. He knew where he was weak and what he had to work on, and that’s the talent, that’s something you can’t teach. Charles [Leclerc] was exactly the same; from day one they knew what to do.’
//
Atze Kerkhof: ‘With a textbook driving style—aggressive on the brake and very smooth coming off, turning at the right time, you can get within five-tenths [over a lap]. But that last five-tenths is dancing on a very thin line, balancing the car and stepping away from the textbook braking style—it’s still there in the basics but it needs to be adjusted intermittently in millimetres to have a positive effect on the balance. And that’s what [Max] and Charles Leclerc can do better than others.’

Chapter 10: All that was Needed was the Car
Max’s old karting adversary Charles Leclerc, now at Ferrari, was setting the tracks alight, especially in qualifying.
//
At Silverstone, the Verstappen-Leclerc dice continued where it had left off in Austria, albeit only for third position this time as Mercedes dominated. Their wheel-to-wheel dice had the crowd cheering wildly and this time it was Leclerc who emerged on top.

Chapter 12: Unbeatable
The Mercedes, driven by Verstappen’s 2021 rival Lewis Hamilton and Hamilton’s new teammate George Russell, were badly afflicted and would no longer be Red Bull’s main competitors. That turned out to be the Ferrari driven by Verstappen’s old karting rival Charles Leclerc.
//
Max’s on-track problem was now Leclerc, who in Bahrain qualified on pole, 0.1 seconds faster, and proceeded to lead the race, with Max in chase… After the first pit stops, Leclerc calmly repelled Max’s three out-braking moves on the Ferrari.
//
In Saudi Arabia, Max at his tenacious best won a brilliant race-long dice with Leclerc…
//
What was noticeable about his thrillingly close dices with Leclerc in both Bahrain and Saudi was that there were none of the ruthless, zero-compromise moves he'd so often used against Hamilton. He denied there was any difference, but others saw it.
  • WHO ELSE SMILEDDDDD... max races charles more respectfully than he races other people it's trueeee


THE TWO BULLS IN THE RED BULL LOGO IN QUESTION
Chapter 1: Monaco
Team boss Christian Horner is a skilled operator and understands the delicate dynamic well. His first experience of walking that line came in Red Bull’s first era of title success with Sebastian Vettel who didn’t always react well to any challenge from teammate Mark Webber.
//
‘[Max] can be very sharp and cutting,’ says Horner, ‘when emotions are running high and a lot of engineers would wilt under that strain. He is demanding. The fuse is a little shorter than it was with Seb.’

Chapter 7: From Rookie to Record Breaker
Horner: ‘It’s a quite different relationship to that between Rocky and Seb. Rocky really got into the mind management of how to get Sebastian in the right mental frame whether it was writing things on his balaclava, naming his car, all these little things. It’s a lot less touchy-feely with Max and GP. They are just brutally honest with each other, no holds barred, and in that respect, I think it’s a very pure, very honest, relationship.’

Chapter 10: All that was Needed was the Car
Horner: ‘Sebastian was a very deep-thinking person that needed to feel very secure; he was studious in his attention to detail. That’s where he got his security and confidence from. Max in many respects is much more binary, more straightforward. You bolt him in, you know you’re going to get 110 per cent. You know if he feels he isn’t getting 110 per cent back that pisses him off and he is going to voice it. But that is it. He doesn’t carry it out of the car. But then, he is not going to be the guy that is going to be in a debrief for two and a half hours. He is very specific about what he needs from the car in order to go quicker, he has a very good feel for what he does need, for where the limitations are, but he is not going to take 25 minutes talking about a formation lap and the clutch-biting points and temperatures and so on that Sebastian would do even before he got to the debrief. Max is just very focused on this is what I need to go faster, give me that and I will sort the rest out.’

Chapter 11: Long Live the King
Waiting for him by his motorhome was Sebastian Vettel, who said he just wanted to check that Max was okay. It meant a lot.


GOAT4GOAT
Chapter 3: The Making of a Champion
[Max is] the ultimate insider. When Lewis Hamilton, maybe the ultimate outsider, made his F1 debut in Australia 2007, as he climbed from the car he caught his father’s eye and they celebrated. ‘We’ve done it! We’ve bloody done it!’ they said as they hugged and laughed, having pulled off something that had seemed so extraordinarily remote when they started, so impossible. It’s not a scene which would probably have much resonated with the Verstappens. Max is a way less complex character than rival Hamilton. But then he’s bound to be. He’s had a way less complex set of circumstances to grow up in and a far more certain path to achieving his ambitions.

Chapter 4: Disrupting the Hierarchy
Giancarlo Tinini: ‘Also, he has the same competitive instinct as another of our old drivers, Lewis Hamilton, someone who had to be first in everything, even if it was going down the stairs or drinking a hot chocolate!’

Chapter 5: Man and Machine
Jenson Button: ‘Lewis [Hamilton] can drive with pretty much any balance, it doesn’t seem to matter. He can seem to be struggling but when the moment comes he can just pull the big lap out of the bag regardless of the balance. But Max does seem to be at his absolute fastest with a very unstable car. I think he can get even more from such a car than Lewis. but maybe Lewis’ spread is wider, I don’t know. It’s very close.’

Chapter 6: Fast Track to Formula 3
Tony Shaw: ‘But [Lewis] just took the thing by the scruff of the neck in a very limited around of time. He didn’t mess around, Lewis. He just went hell-for-leather straightaway. Whereas the test with Max, it felt a lot calmer… What they had in common as young teenagers is that they were both bloody quick and totally unfazed to be in a racing car.’

Chapter 7: From Rookie to Record Breaker
[Max] was asked there [at Austin] if he considered Lewis Hamilton—on the verge of sealing his third world championship—the best driver in F1 and replied, ‘I don’t know. Give me his car and I will tell you.’

Chapter 8: Tensions Running High
As they started for the third time, Max was immediately stalking his prey Rosberg…
  • re Brazil 2016, didn’t want to create a whole new section for 336 but enjoyed how this was phrased lol
//
Ahead now was Hamilton, who was displaying much the same virtuosity as Max but in a faster car.
//
‘I could have closed that door, obviously,’ said Hamilton to Max in the cool-down room before the podium celebrations.

‘But you were fighting for a championship,’ Max finished off.

‘Yeah, I didn’t want to risk it,’ said Hamilton.

That conversation summarised the basic dynamics of the race but the bold way Verstappen had made his move clearly registered with Hamilton, as he referred to it a week later after winning the Japanese Grand Prix with Max right on his tail…. It sounded for all the world like Max had got into his head.

Chapter 9: Heroes and Villains
Verstappen had pricked [Lewis’] attention in Malaysia the previous year and the tension was only building. Max was surely fully aware of the significance of how he chose to race Hamilton.
//
It was a brilliant win by Ricciardo but perhaps more significantly, an extraordinary little vignette of the pride of the pack and the young challenger whose thrusting energy had been de-railed by a cynical slap down. Was Hamilton surprised that Max had tried there? ‘Yeah,’ he replied. ‘I’ve not ever seen anyone pass anyone there, certainly not a top driver. I’m surprised he tried it.’ Leaving unsaid that Lewis himself had invited it.
//
Verstappen refused to surrender and the wheel-to-wheel dive lasted for the next few corners until Hamilton used the run-off on the exit of Turn 18, effectively surrendering rather than risk contact and a non-finish.

‘I thought you gave me a lot of room,’ said an amused Verstappen later. ‘Yeah,’ said Hamilton, ‘I never know with you. I didn’t want a coming together…’
//
Hamilton seemed to be offering advice, saying, ‘Yeah, but he had nothing to lose. You did.’ It was an expression of the different stages they were at in their careers, Hamilton talking from the perspective of someone who’d been annealed by years of success and was able to take a strategic view, Max still with it all to do and bursting with unfulfilled ambition.

But Max’s charging, uncompromising style continued to make Hamilton wary of him on track.
//
Chapter 10: All that was Needed was the Car
‘I braked into Turn 1 and all of a sudden Max is alongside me. If you’ve seen races before, I always leave Max a lot of space—it’s the smartest thing you can do. But there wasn’t a lot of space for me to give him…’

Max was still clearly very much in Hamilton’s head. Whenever he was around, Hamilton was not racing naturally.

Chapter 11: Long Live the King
The principle of entropy always prevails, though, as the energy dissipates and the names made by success are coaxed away by rivals; a steady erosion of the advantage over the team in the ascendant, in this case Red Bull. If we’re lucky, there will be a season or two of overlap where the titans go at it; if we’re really lucky, the generational shift of the teams will play out between the king and the pretender in the cockpits. So it was in 2021…
//
It was a season which cast the two combatants in elemental roles, accentuating the contrasts in their make-up. Hamilton is more emotionally driven, has worked hard through his racing life to put a lid on the cauldron and to direct his feelings. His competitive self—the intimidating warrior—is quite separate from his persona outside the car, which is a sometimes vulnerable, questing one, wrestling with the big questions. Then there’s the showman within him, the guy who will crowd-surf at Silverstone or do smoking burnouts on his motorbike in the car park for the fans at Monza, the fashionista, the musician. He’s all these things and more. The social justice and race equality campaigner, the LA scene face who mixes in Hollywood circles, and still, sometimes, in off-guard moments, the boy from the Stevenage council.

In Hamilton, you can sense the immense pride at having achieved against the odds. There’s a keen antenna for criticism, which he’s had to work hard at concealing. When the pride is pricked, he’ll fire back with steely conviction, the underlying intensity of his self-belief seeming to ooze from his being. There’s also a need for recognition, though, for external validation. This is someone who still carries the scars of having forced his way into a sport that looked unattainable for reasons of both finance and race, and who hasn’t forgotten what it felt like to be fearful that it could all be taken away.

For Max – someone who was injected direct into the veins of F1 – it's much simpler. He's a lighter, sunnier, less complex personality. Neither criticism nor praise appears to make the slightest impression. He really isn't interested in validation and has what appears to be almost a disdain for his success, like it has always been, for him, his destiny. It isn't so much carried with arrogance as just matter-of-fact realism, hardly something even worth pondering. There are just the realities of what he is facing at any given race weekend.
//
Although Verstappen and Hamilton are near-neighbours in Monaco, the chances of them hanging out are close to zero, not because of any animosity—they are neither of them poisonous characters—but simply because their wavelengths do not resonate in either frequency or amplitude. The only time that happens is on the track.
//
In 2021, Hamilton and Verstappen were the two greatest racing drivers on the planet. One of them had been around long enough for that reality to be converted into career numbers and had almost forgotten what it was like to lose, even though he knew it would come one day. The other had been stared of that winning feeling for too long, had been waiting years for this opportunity of racing where he knew he belonged—at the very front, all the time, fearless and ready to battle all-comers, but especially the man with all the titles and plaudits.
//
The bigger point had been made at the first corner by Verstappen: he would continue to race in the same merciless way he’d always done, and Hamilton would have to tailor his approach accordingly. Hamilton, who had several times over the previous three years admitted that he didn’t really know how to handle Verstappen’s aggressive style wheel-to-wheel and would instead just give him room, had evidently realised that was a policy he could no longer afford.
//
It was an unsettling thing for Hamilton: the spotlight was now on how he, with the pride of being multiple world champion, was going to handle this seemingly unstoppable force. It was all part of the Max effect.
//
Verstappen raced that corner exactly as he’s always raced. What was different was Hamilton’s refusal to accept that.
//
On being asked if he thought he made Hamilton nervous, [Max] replied, ‘He would never admit that. At least I’m not afraid of him. Yeah, I think I’ll make him nervous if he sees me in his mirrors. He’s a different driver than me, less aggressive. He doesn’t know how to race like I do.’

Chapter 12: Unbeatable
Giedo van der Garde: ‘I think now Lewis has a lot of respect for Max and Max now has more respect for Lewis. When they are together there is a bit of a tension, the energy between them is sometimes too high and I think that is why they crash.’
//
‘It wouldn’t have mattered anything for my race, because we were just way too slow. But it’s just a shame, I thought we could race quite well together, but clearly the intention was not there to race.’

‘You know how it is with Max,’ countered Hamilton. Clearly, their uncompromising attitude towards each other when their cars were competitive was still there, one year on.

my jellycat collection!

Jan. 19th, 2026 04:19 pm
girlrock: (Default)
[personal profile] girlrock
said i would make this post a few days ago! i have more non-jc plushies too but again this is already enough... as of this post i have 25 plushies + 2 keychains (i forgot to add the cherry charm but it's on my snoopy bag).

Read more... )
unsospiro: (Default)
[personal profile] unsospiro
i missed my first daily journal entry yesterday ahhhhhhhh. well. here's my penance i suppose.

life updates: the semester has started and life is kind of crazy! a ballroom competition is coming up in a couple of weeks and it feels like there’s so much to manage right now ugh.

writing updates: uh oh i started a new fic. i think i just need to finish something rough just to finish something. it's hard because the more i write, the more i learn what i don't know how to do (as with any skill) and i get stuck feeling incapable of executing the ideas i have.

that aside, i am happy with some of the progress i've made; writing my first draft felt like trying to speak a foreign language: slow, stilted, and with an unnecessary amount of embarrassment involved.

i'm still not quite past the point where i can read things i've written without flinching every other sentence but well. we persevere.

wip cryostasis chamber and other writing thoughts )

wip graveyard II

Jan. 18th, 2026 10:39 pm
onetenths: (Default)
[personal profile] onetenths
everything shelved from the last idk year~ ૮₍ ˶• ༝ •˶ ₎ა˖ ࣪⭑

dump )
kestrelofink: Lee Jiwoo of tripleS looks at the camera, head tilted to the right, long hair falling over her shoulder. She is reaching up to brush her hair back. (Default)
[personal profile] kestrelofink
Now for the third year in a row, I have been roped into filling out the 2025 kpop tierlist (a bit of a misnomer, actually, because it ostensibly only lists title tracks to individual releases, and even then is missing some songs, or oddly lists others. For example, tripleS' Q&A is on the tierlist despite not being a title track). In one part as reason to compare and yap with friends, and in part to prompt me to listen to a bunch of music outside of my usual tastes.

It also happens to be a great way to discuss my thoughts on 2025's releases and reveals a lot about my tastes. Also, my tier names are funny and I like attention. Therefore...

flover: (juun motogp)
[personal profile] flover

god i've forgotten what it feels like to fall for a new kpop group [smoking_duck.gif]

1-2 punch of fantastic early discography and this mv specifically that reminds me of a wonji/kpop gg magical girl school x produce series x battle royale AU i've spun around in my head for nearly a year at this point.



juun with the tape measure whip 😵‍💫 jiwoo and a-na sparring sequence 😵‍💫

unsure whether i'll do the whole process of stanning, but i've long since listened to their catalog and only started watching music show stages and some variety—i watched the highlights of h2h competing in the 400m relay and air pistol at isac, which intensified the Thoughts. i haven't watched anything from isac since skz in 2020, so. you know.

i think i just want to enjoy the escape part of kpop again without going the whole nine yards. it's nice and fun to have girls to root for! (come back to this when i've inevitably lost my mind) (i hope they all but especially juun and jiwoo have a nice day)

Welcome to my Delulu World

Jan. 15th, 2026 09:56 am
haitangkitty: (yunjin jellyfish)
[personal profile] haitangkitty

KiiiKiii has become my favorite 5th gen group. This is their new release for their upcoming album "Delulu Pack". I love both the song and the music video, this might be my favorite release from them. Overall i loooove house music. I really love their creative vision and the girls are very funny and sweet. They updated their website for the comeback and it's really cool and interactive way of marketing.


Dark Moon: The Blood Altar (anime): EP1.
So the Enhypen anime based on their manhwa premiered last week. I really liked the first episode, it went by so fast it felt like 5 minutes. I can't believe the main love interest Heli is based on my bias Heeseung :D The main character Sooha is a kind of self-insert for engene. I think it's a funny concept. Vampire romance was big part of me when I was a young Twilight fan. I've re-entered my vampire phase with Enhypen and Interview with the Vampire. I think I'm also gonna start watching Castlevania soon, since it has vampires as well. 


Enhypen will have a comeback tomorrow. I'm so excited!



source

sincaraz hype moments and aura

Jan. 14th, 2026 03:10 pm
rhodochrosite: (Default)
[personal profile] rhodochrosite
highlight reel of quotes from changeover - giri nathan. this will not be my last post about this book.

JANNIK SINNER
Chapter 3: Boot and Rally
Mostly, though, he worked. Cvjetkovic remembered Sinner as a child with an unusual capacity for work, and an unusual gift for simplifying that work. A technical detail that might take others six months to learn, he would handle in a week.
//
Everyone noticed the same thing about Sinner’s tennis then as they do now: the sound produced when he makes contact with the ball. I have listened to it up close. Depending on his effort level and the acoustics of the court, it has sounded to me like a firearm, a vehicle backfiring, or a hydraulic press. I can understand why that talent scout thought Sinner was a construction site.
//
To track a fast-approaching sphere, intuit its trajectory, and start a swing at just the right moment to strike it cleanly—this is known as timing. Sinner has perfect timing the way a singer might have perfect pitch. The impact of strings on ball is devastating and pure.
//
Sinner came to Turin a sphere of heat and light, the home favorite, lustily cheered by Italian crowds.

Chapter 4: Dancing in the Pressure Storm
Standing on the court afterward, he said with a coy smile that he wouldn’t be disclosing his tactics, because he hoped to play his elder again and again. He was that rare young player who genuinely craved more encounters with Novak Djokovic, like a sheep that had developed a taste for wolf.
//
And yet here was Sinner, a sedate counterexample. A new, clearer picture of the Italian began to unfurl. Someone who came late to tennis, was never cornered into it, was at little risk of burnout compared to his peers, and instead maintained a gluttonous appetite for improvement. Even with the trophy sitting in front of his face, he was talking about next steps. “It’s a great moment for me and my team,” he said. “But in the other way, we also know that we have to improve if we want to have another chance to hold a big trophy again.” Tennis was no longer the sport for gentlemen who liked a cigarette during changeovers; it belonged to single-minded ascetics.
//
This evolved Sinner was one of the tour’s most balanced players, in every sense of that word: on both forehand and backhand, serve and return, defense and offense. And yet, according to a certain reductive but pervasive fan perspective, the scoreboard was clear: one major title versus two major titles. Get to work, kid.

Of course, nobody was more amenable to that imperative than Jannik himself.

Chapter 5: Smiling Through the Swarm
This should have ended the point. The ball was too far away from Sinner. But he ate up all that distance with hunched, loping strides, looking like a highly task-oriented antelope, and he did not merely put a racquet on the ball but somehow punched a proper backhand down-the-line, abruptly taking control of the point.

Chapter 9: Tossing Out the Syllabus
When I asked Berrettini what had changed most in Sinner since they had last played, since his vault to the top of the tour, he pointed to his softer touch with the racquet and his ability to “read the moments” in the match and detect when to deviate from the script. “I think he missed three balls in the whole match,” he said. “It didn’t give me that oxygen that sometimes you need.” Often Djokovic’s game was described with similarly stark images of oxygen deprivation. They both could suffocate an opponent by hitting ball after ball deep in the court.

Chapter 11: Damage Control
But in the second set, no matter how gingerly Sinner walked between points, once the ball was in play he was floating all over the court, smooth and wraithlike, whipping his racquet to a blur.
//
The art of winning a title like the Cincinnati Open was consistency, conserving energy on the good days, salvaging the bad days. Hazy serendipity had to be converted into a solid routine. The genius had to be repeatable.

That repeatability may be the central feature of Sinner’s tennis, and perhaps even of his spirit. In Cincinnati, as he’d acclimated himself to the surface, weather, tennis ball, and other particularities, he refined that capacity. Day by day he homed in on the pulse of the hard court itself, and once he’d locked into that beat, no one in the world could hang with his tennis. He made every moment uncannily like the last one, the next shot just as pure as the one last struck.

Chapter 12: Digestion and Indigestion
“But, no, I’m always quite relaxed. I’m someone who forgets quite fast something.” The gist: I don’t think about him at all.
//
Sinner’s best tennis feels both languid and violent; it can be difficult to connect the cause with the effect. In between shots his lank frame looks almost floppy, and as he skids and scrambles and makes his little adjustment steps around the court, you wonder if those feet will give out from underneath him. But right when the ball is approaching, all that ambient floppiness is aligned into one sublimely synchronized chain, from foot to hip to wrist, as he readies his full-body slingshot groundstrokes. A compact backswing, a snap, and the ball is gone. The visual is loose and jangly, but the sound is like someone hucking a billiard ball against a garage door. Real power in tennis comes from relaxation and timing, rather than pure muscular output. Sinner’s what you’d get if you made a whole tennis player out of that axiom.
//
Judging from that performance, it would be difficult to argue that anyone else on the planet was better at the simple, terrible task of placing a tennis ball heavy and deep into the opposing court, over and over.
//
Fritz had a chance to serve for the third set, but Sinner foreclosed on the comeback attempt. He moved through the endgame with a finality reminiscent of Djokovic, as if he’d done this a dozen times and would do it a dozen more.
//
After winning in straight sets, Sinner threw his hands in the air and left them there, in keeping with his low-impact style of celebration. Nothing frenzied, no loss of control—just a young man taking in the cold, clean air at the top of a mountain.

Chapter 13: Changeover
Not all players need that communal aspect. Jannik Sinner, for example, had a different orientation at a similarly tender age. His second skiing coach, Klaus Happacher, said that once Jannik really began to take the sport seriously, he requested that he leave his group lesson and train solo with the coach so he could better focus. Some people see more clearly where friendship and the pursuit of excellence diverge.


CARLOS ALCARAZ
Chapter 2: Cabeza, Corazón y Cojones
If you hadn’t paid attention all along, you might have been surprised to discover that the harbinger of tennis doom looked like such a cheerful adolescent doofus. But that was the feeling of early-career Carlos. So visibly happy to be there, so transparently living out a fantasy—a happiness that could infect any viewer, and a happiness that he channeled into his improvisational and blitzing style of tennis.
//
Imagine any discernible tennis skill. It doesn’t matter if you have the local jargon for it (“pace,” “footwork”) or just a general impression (“hits ball comically hard,” “runs around well”). You could look at Alcaraz and see that skill perfected.
//
Imagine the goalie on a foosball table, so explosive and responsive. Just that one little dude, gliding along a horizontal, ready to be spun at a furious pace with a light twist of a wrist. In his baseline exchanges Alcaraz stood on top of the line, never ceding more than an inch, waiting to meet the ball with lethal force, smooth in his movement but full of coiled rage. Then he reset instantly and did it again, melding caffeinated teen dynamism with a multi-major-winner’s point construction. There was a fluid, unrelenting quality to his play that I did not usually ascribe to animate objects, or anything that needs time to recover from physical exertion.
//
That’s the thing about Alcaraz—there are so many possible versions of him that in best-of-five, an opponent will eventually have to beat several. It was baffling how many distinct parts of tennis he had mastered, how they cohered into this figure of ruin. My initial mistake was trying to fit him into my general schema for understanding tennis players: as human beings whose technical and physical specs grant some gifts and take others off the table. Big servers tend to be too ungainly to return nimbly. The lightest and fastest players often lack punch. The slow-surface specialists panic when the ball bounces faster. But none of these trade-offs seemed to apply to Carlitos. He could simply have it all ways. This was why he evoked a sense of impossibility more than any other player in recent memory, because he combined so many traits that don’t belong together into a single psychedelic point.
//
That broad, sharky smile was a dark omen for the rest of the tour. If he was enjoying himself, his tennis was probably unplayable.

Chapter 4: Dancing in the Pressure Storm
This match epitomized the Alcaraz puzzle. His losses can look worse than the losses of other top players. He can be capable of stupefying ingenuity while playing against the best opponents, even in the most tense moments of a match. He can also, in more pedestrian moments, play squirrelly and confused tennis. He might get fixated on ideas that amuse him but do not win him points; he might start peacocking prematurely.

Chapter 5: Smiling Through the Swarm
It was Alcaraz’s dynamic range, his command of both delicacy and brutality, that drove opponents into hopeless guessing games. In one rally, as Zverev struck three consecutive kill shots he expected to end the rally, and Alcaraz pulled off three increasingly preposterous retrievals, the kid started smiling.
//
The point captured Alcaraz’s blend of sloppiness and imagination. He gets himself into a bind, then works his way out of it, via some diabolical logic that no other player could follow.

Chapter 6: Triage Ward
He spent the days leading up to the tournament on the practice courts, with his right forearm mummified in tape, bunting his forehands gingerly, an adverb that typically would not come within a mile of the tennis of Carlos Alcaraz.
//
Perhaps it was reasonable to wonder if his body would survive his own violent and beautiful playing style.

Chapter 7: Joy in Suffering
With Alcaraz, you get the sense that if there were no crowd, there would be no point to all this. His trade is tennis, but it is also spectacle. He never looks happier than when working a stadium into a froth of awe and glee. His tennis alone does most of the work for the fans, but he likes to embellish his genius with small gestures. A finger pointed up to his ear, beckoning the crowd to roar, while the ball he’s struck for a winner is still bouncing past his hapless opponent. A bright sharky smile, like a child who has committed a naughty deed but knows he can charm his way out of punishment. A silent raised fist. A cocksure nod. A single bellowed “vamos,” his mouth open wide enough to eat the tennis ball. A nonverbal howl, the carotid artery pulsing like a garden hose on the side of his neck. Or his favorite: eyes narrowed and teeth fully bared—not a grin, more like a big cat reminding you of its fangs.

None of this seems affected. It is all expressive and improvised, just like his play. Sinner has said that he admires this aspect of his rival, his ability to enrapture the masses. As I’ve noted, the Italian’s own forays into crowd work are humbler: a fist pump, a compact nod, an ashen gaze into the middle distance.
//
It isn’t incuriosity, just a case of tacit bodily wisdom winning over explicit analytical fact. To tear around the court and hit balls at the speed Alcaraz does seems to require an uncluttered mind. Getting wrapped up in the minutiae of equipment or injury could only lead to overthinking, to the gestation of doubts. Alcaraz knew as much as he needed to know and would not be weighed down by a grain of superfluous information. In that, he was like so many other intuitive high performers: It was better to feel than to know.
//
You have to find the joy in suffering,” said Alcaraz as he was interviewed on court minutes later. It was a perfect and subconscious homage to Rafa Nadal, who over his career spoke volumes about the masochism of tennis, his worldview still evidently looming over his tournament.
//
Harder to understand is how Alcaraz responds to pressure. For him, pressure seems clarifying. It forces him to stop temporizing. He stops surveying his various options on court and commits to the lucid, slashing style that made his name. It’s as if pressure snaps a lens into focus, revealing his own identity.
//
Alcaraz threw up the standard hand of apology, the usual etiquette when a player wins a point after his ball strikes the net cord—and then, when Zverev looked away, he cunningly curled his apology hand into a fist pump. No time for guilt. Some luck, sure, but also a glorious jolt of improvisation, the type of shot that explained why I’d overheard some French fans describe him as “pétillant”—sparkling, fizzy, like wine.
//
He concentrated his brilliance into a few critical doses and timed their delivery perfectly. That was enough. Carlos Alcaraz was capable of transcendence, but he was now also capable of winning a major title while far from transcendent, defeating many of his best contemporaries along the way.

Chapter 9: Tossing Out the Syllabus
Alcaraz is an alarmingly efficient mechanism for turning matches into useful muscle memory and actionable wisdom, I thought at the time.
//
But even then, as Alcaraz lifted the golden cup, he was just 46 hours and 15 minutes into his grass-court career. He was flying on sheer feel and animal instincts. True prodigy gets to skip the trial-and-error phase.
//
And then he came clean: “And I put in videos of myself last year. I’m not gonna lie,” he laughed. “To see what I did, and how I did it.” From him, it wasn’t arrogant, just sensible. Tennis’s most brilliant pupil had decided he didn’t need a syllabus anymore; he had become his own assigned reading.
//
He banged big first serves and followed them with unanswerable drop shots, condensing into two shots the force-finesse mix that was his stamp on the modern game.
//
He’d been watching videos of himself. Why go elsewhere for knowledge? Plato once theorized that people have immortal souls, full of knowledge accrued from past lives, so learning is actually just rediscovering that forgotten knowledge buried inside. Perhaps this has only ever been true of Carlos Alcaraz. How quickly we’d arrived at the juncture where there was so little for him to learn from other people’s examples, where he was writing the future of the sport by himself, expanding its possibilities with every half-volley and high-pressure triumph. He was eating at the big table already, and ravenously.

Chapter 10: Hoard of Gold
Alcaraz was the rare elite athlete who seemed to optimize his own pleasure at every moment on court. Sinner, too, spoke often about how treating tennis as a hobby was critical to his glacial cool in decisive moments, but the pleasure was less discernible on his face. With Alcaraz it was unmissable in that joyous, vacuous grin, making every passerby’s day. Here, as always, he looked adept at having fun.
//
To watch Carlitos pick up a new skill was one of tennis’s most reliable pleasures. Every coach he’d ever had was astonished by his capacity to integrate new information into his play.
//
“It’s going to be the best moment of my life, probably,” he said, referring to a high-pressure contest against a man who had spent the duration of Alcaraz’s conscious life siphoning his opponents’ joy with his tennis.
//
Carlitos learns so fast that it generates unintentional humor, best seen in his post-Wimbledon remarks. “I am totally different player than French Open. I grew up a lot since that moment,” he said, sincerely, about a match played five weeks before. He undergoes emotional and professional transformation in a span of time when most people his age might only fill a laundry hamper.

Chapter 11: Damage Control
But Carlitos is the consummate good boy. For an hour afterward I remained in shock, as if I’d witnessed some kind of natural disaster at a remove. My colleague Patrick Redford, watching at home, said it was like watching a puppy smoke a cigarette. With his four smashes, Alcaraz shattered an enduring image of professional happiness. As a kid, he’d had quite a temper, and while he’d managed it well enough to win four majors, perhaps he hadn’t exorcised it completely.

Chapter 12: Digestion and Indigestion
At an evening match, where the fans slurped down several of those under the bright stadium lights, the party ambiance intensified. It was an apt setting for Alcaraz, who was more or less a nightclub in the form of a tennis player.

Chapter 13: Changeover
He was the star pupil conjoined to the class clown.
//
Alcaraz had tried to sneak forward when there was no advantage to press—but instead of panicking, he simply created the advantage out of whole cloth, with an audacious volley from no-man’s-land. Then he kept creeping forward to the net. His talent overrode his error in judgment; the gambit paid off.
//
Here was another instance of him responding to scoreboard duress with his bravest tennis, living and dying by his reflexes and gut intuitions. Nobody was better when cornered.
//
He was a player for whom every single shot was physically possible, and when he lost, he tended to frame failure in emotional rather than physical terms. He might be a hunter always in search of a good feeling, capable of peerless play when he found it, but liable to sulk when he lost it.


SINCARAZ
Chapter 3: Boot and Rally
Sometimes it seems that the trick of playing Alcaraz is to strip him of opportunities to remember how original he is. Sinner, somehow recovered from his trials, managed to pin Alcaraz to the back of the court, as a butterfly to a corkboard. He used his power to deprive Alcaraz of his usual creative resources: wide angles, ample time on the ball, openings for a drop shot.

Chapter 5: Smiling Through the Swarm
Soon there were six points in a row that felt like a single hallucination, more vicious and vivid than the tennis we’d seen in the Big Three era. Alcaraz sprang a trap with a drop shot to lure Sinner in, hoping to hit a passing shot right by him, but Sinner, with his whole body still facing the back of the court, blocked a no-look volley into open space. I detected a new swagger in him—there he was, punishing another drop shot by slashing a slice hard crosscourt—as though Alcaraz were infecting him with his own way of life. Anyone who’d been watching tennis recently could tell they were doing something well beyond the usual patterns of the sport. They were inventing a new grammar all their own. Balls were struck hard at discombobulated elbow angles, immediate return winners were lashed off of big serves, sudden solutions were lobbed back at difficult questions. It was a matchup with no neutral shots, no peace talks. Attack or be attacked.
//
On court Alcaraz was asked about “how special a friend” Sinner is to him. “He means a lot to me,” he responded. “I always say that first thing is you have to be a good person, and athlete comes after that. And I think Jannik is the same.” The sun began to set over the mountains, in cotton-candy hues of pink and blue.
  • the cut to beautiful romantic sunset is insane work it's giving charamu reunion in mobile suit gundam zeta ep 14
Chapter 6: Triage Ward
Recall that, mere minutes after the Indian Wells win, the sweat still damp on Carlitos’s brow, an interviewer stood on court and asked him about “how much Jannik means to you.” The question wasn’t completely unprompted—they had hung out during the rain delay that interrupted the match—but the almost romantic intensity of the phrasing made me laugh out loud in the moment. Imagine that you are friends with a colleague, but firmly in the water-cooler-buddy tier of acquaintance. A couple of inside jokes, some shared workplace gripes to fill any lulls in conversation. But then imagine that you are periodically interviewed, for the entertainment of hundreds of thousands of fans, about how much that colleague means to you. I mean, he’s pretty nice, I guess?
  • rip my beloved sincoworkaraz dynamic 2019-2025
There’s a paradox in the friend-rival. On the one hand, it’s hard to be close with someone with whom you are locked in zero-sum competition for all the prizes you most lust after in your career; on the other hand, there is no one else in the world who knows the pressures and predicaments at the top of the game, no one else who could relate as easily to the contours of your strange life.

Chapter 7: Joy in Suffering
When Alcaraz plays badly, he can look uncentered and full of bad ideas. When Sinner plays badly, he looks like a machine just slightly miscalibrated, erring but with the right intent.
//
The tennis seemed to come out of nowhere. Writing about a match like this is attempting to impose a legible narrative on what is, effectively, two people trying to devise increasingly sophisticated ways of murdering one another for four hours. They were experiencing all kinds of small-scale spiritual and physical ups and downs, some of which would later make it into their comments after the match, and some of which will remain forever unknown, hard to articulate even for them, certainly in a second or third language. Often the real tennis match—its problem-solving, its private pains, its triage—resists after-the-fact comprehension.

Chapter 9: Tossing Out the Syllabus
At this stage of their careers, Alcaraz was more prone to burning out psychologically, and Sinner physically.

Chapter 10: Hoard of Gold
Old archetypes were often applied to new superstars, and in those formulations, Alcaraz was most often seen as the love child of Federer and Nadal, blending the former’s extempore all-court play with the latter’s brawn and vigor. Sinner, meanwhile, was the one seen as a power-injected, neo-Djokovic.

Chapter 11: Damage Control
Djokovic was still recovering from his Olympic bliss and would not play the role of the chaperone at the teen dance making room for the Holy Spirit between the youthful duo.
//
Some gifted but lesser players seemed to have this reaction to Alcaraz. He invited them into stimulating, inventive exchanges that reminded them of their own capabilities. Sinner, on the other hand, might just remind them of how far they were from the mountaintop.

Chapter 13: Changeover
Every time Sinner and Alcaraz saw an opportunity to attack, they seized it. Gone were the cagey, slow-burning rallies of Djokovic versus Nadal, each man hunting for a momentary lapse in stamina or focus. For the new kids, the game plan was to attack first, attack second. There was little taste for playing in a safe, error-reduction mode, the kind that Djokovic mastered in tiebreaks. Instead, Sinner said in an interview with Sky Sports that his tiebreak philosophy was to consider all the various attacks he’d tried over the course of the set and commit to those he felt had worked best. Sinner and Alcaraz were pioneering an era of “point-and-shoot” tennis, as Clarke put it, evoking the visual grammar of a first-person-shooter video game. If the ball was there to be hit, it would be hit—and hard.
//

Between these rivals, I could see each one mapping out the other’s tendencies, and then figuring out how to exploit the map the other had made. Specifically, in that second set, I came to appreciate a new wrinkle in the Alcaraz attack. He would rear back to hit a forehand, switch his grip as if to massage a drop shot—any savvy opponent would see that grip change and start shifting his weight to run forward—only to drive a slice deep through the court instead. He used this trick in two mesmerizing rallies, and each time it startled Sinner, perhaps the most balanced player I’ve ever seen. Both times he lost his footing and the point. With this mischief, Alcaraz had grafted another limb onto the decision tree in Sinner’s mind. The next time he moved his racquet that way, Sinner would remember what had happened before and wonder whether he should sprint ahead or stay put. To burden your opponent with additional uncertainty is to win the mind war.
//
The absolute best tennis induces laughter in audiences. This rivalry induced laughter even in the participants.
//
They both played true to their reputations. Sinner maintained a cruising altitude from start to finish, a level of tennis thousands of miles above most opponents, but not this one. Alcaraz’s level dipped and bobbed, but ultimately surpassed his rival’s in critical moments.
//
One was mercurial; the other methodical. One was a master of compartmentalization; the other seemed to feel everything all at once. Together they had made the sport anew.
//
Each has something the other lacks and would like to infuse into his own game. Alcaraz praises Sinner for his capacity to play every point at “9/10 or 10/10” intensity; the unspoken addendum is that he himself can fluctuate between 2/10 and 12/10. Sinner needs to find more comfort in the unscripted moments of feel and daring that are Alcaraz’s native habitat; there is more to tennis than the routine.
//
But the future will surely be defined by these two, interlocked in a joyful and absorbing struggle. They’ll get bigger and stronger; they’ll get smarter; they’ll get hurt; they’ll hurt each other. They could become genuine friends. They could drift apart.


BIG 3
Chapter 1: Empire
In the beginning, there was Roger Federer.
//
Perhaps the most poignant way to understand the Big Three was to see the optimism steadily squeezed out of their contemporaries, as if by a juicer, a cup filled to the brim with hopes and dreams.
//
Broadly speaking, these valiant victims of the Big Three moved through recognizable phases of career grief. First in this sequence was Persistence; all it would take was some dedicated training, some tactical adjustments, perhaps a few more twists of good fortune, and an important match may well swing his way in the future. After said match definitively did not swing in his favor, nor the one after, nor the one after that, the player might admit to Cluelessness. At this phase, they would have no particular intuition about what they could have done to win, and would feel altogether lost on the court. There could be bright flashes of Anger or Despair en route, but in time, the player arrived at Resignation. Perhaps this was the reality of playing tennis in this era, as stark and immovable as the face of a cliff, and there was nothing else to be done. At the end of this path was Enlightenment, a lovely ego death. To play a game for a living, to travel the world, to be alive at all, was a privilege—what’s that about a major?—no, he was content to sniff the freshly cut grass, kick the clay out of his shoes, and feel gratitude.
//
[Djokovic's] thinking was sophisticated in some ways and regressive in others, a prominent example of what might be termed “jock epistemology,” where elite athletes accumulate some useful beliefs for good reasons, some useful beliefs for bad reasons, and some bad beliefs for bad reasons.

Chapter 3: Boot and Rally
Then came the gatekeeper. It was an axiom in men’s tennis: If you do well enough in a meaningful tournament, there will come a time when you line up across the net from Novak Djokovic.

Chapter 4: Dancing in the Pressure Storm
When Djokovic is playing a best-of-five match, there’s often a luxurious lack of urgency to the affair. So what if he starts flat-footed? He is inevitability personified. He knows, as he gradually gets the blood pumping and the synovial fluids flowing, that he has a dozen higher gears of tennis at his disposal, and he’ll activate them as needed. He knows that his top gear can be matched by only a handful of people in the history of the sport. One of them was retired and probably eating fondue (Roger Federer), and another was busy rehabbing his hip (Rafael Nadal), and the youngest had just been upset the day before (Carlos Alcaraz).

Chapter 7: Joy in Suffering
And over the last two decades of the men’s tournament, one player has been its chief deity. Rafael Nadal has a higher success rate winning matches at Roland-Garros than I do at tying my own shoes. Heading into the 2024 tournament, he had won 112 of his 115 matches there. It is not merely one of the great feats in tennis, but one of the most consistent performances in any competitive human endeavor. Being that good at something must make it difficult to stop, as Nadal’s body now seemed to be urging him to do.
//
And yet Nadal has always played strange games with hope.
//
The old rites were all intact, even if the old tennis wasn’t.
//
On this court Nadal used to rigorously delete his opponents. A No. 1–ranked tennis player historically wins about 55 percent of points in a season; that much of an edge equates to a dominant performance. In his prime, Nadal had on several occasions won nearly 70 percent of the points in his matches at Roland-Garros. In his prime, it sometimes appeared he was landing eight haymakers in a row on an insensate corpse.
//
Then, while serving for the set, Nadal fell into a 0-40 hole he could not crawl out of. Watching him hit his signature shots, I started to see a ghostly overlay of the 2013 Nadal projected over the present-day reality. The 2024 down-the-line forehand pass that bonked into the middle of the net post would have instead arced savagely outside Zverev’s reach before dipping back into the corner of the court, following that infamous “banana” curve. It was possible to see the thrilling, crackling outlines of what Nadal once was, and occasionally the ghost and the present slid into serene alignment, before falling out of sync again. A slow and rickety recovery step, a belabored backhand falling a few feet before the service line, and the illusion dissipated.
//
Three years before, Musetti had taken a two-sets-to-none lead, only for Djokovic to leave the court, change his clothes, and wrest back control of the match, with the crushing inevitability of a bear trap. Musetti retired from that match while getting blown out 4-0 in the fifth set. He said he wasn’t actually injured but had simply realized “there was no chance that I could win a point.”

Chapter 9: Tossing Out the Syllabus
[Djokovic] summons some of his best ball when playing from a place of spite; he is most magnetic and authentic when playing the heel, too.

Chapter 10: Hoard of Gold
My internal terminology for the best Djokovic-Nadal matchups is Wide Tennis. It takes two—and really, only these two—to produce Wide Tennis. When playing lesser opponents, its full parameters cannot be glimpsed. Nadal can spend most of a match perched near the center of the baseline, imposing his entire will on each ball, cracking one crosscourt forehand, then putting the next into the cavernous opening left behind. Djokovic can spend most of a match sitting directly on top of the baseline, taking the ball early, batting it to opposite corners until the end of time. When together, however, they are both hell-bent on hijacking the other from their seat of comfort. The result is a version of tennis that is as visually striking as it is physically baffling. The legal area of play for singles is fringed by two strips known as the doubles alley, which extend the court wider for two-on-two play. But Nadal and Djokovic sprint behind, through, and even beyond these alleys in their singles matches. They travel out to remote locales, then recover back to the center of the court just in time to begin their next far-flung foray. Thus their tennis took on different dimensions. It looked distorted, as if reality’s projectionist had made an error with the aspect ratio.
//
Each man hybridizes offense and defense in a way that commands constant vigilance from the other. Each ball is struck with a reasonable expectation that the next ball will be coming back over the net, perhaps even harder and more angled. Both men intimately understand how difficult it is to hit the ball somewhere that would bother the other. Watching this version of tennis is like reading a text stripped of punctuation marks. Where you’d expect a point to reach its natural conclusion, it simply refuses, instead flowing out into a sequence of shots and sprints and shots and sprints that leaves no room for breath or error.
//
There was a ragged yearning in Djokovic’s body language, but a crystalline refinement in his actual strokes.


OTHER ATP HOPEFULS
Chapter 5: Smiling Through the Swarm
I felt somewhat sad as this man [Auger-Aliassime], who had at one time been considered the future of the sport, was devoured by the actual, undeniable future of the sport.

Chapter 8: Meddy in the Middle
[Medvedev's] personality, too, has left casual fans convinced that he is some enemy of the game. Perhaps they are reading too much into the expansive plain of his forehead, those cunning beady eyes, the physiognomy of a supervillain plotting to take down the power grid.
//
And in the middle of this fretful moment—scrapping with the greats, wondering if he would ever be loved, announcing his disillusionment—he was dealt another devastating fate. Enter the biggest prodigy in decades, seven years Medvedev’s junior, permanently a-grin, and instantly beloved.
//
One boy wonder was a healthy challenge; two of them muddled the future. Long ago, Medvedev had declared that his dreams were dead. Now he observed that tennis no longer held any joy. What was this melancholic Russian novel of a career? He had timed his birth poorly. He should have planned that out better.


TENNIS
Chapter 2: Cabeza, Corazón y Cojones
Tennis is a terminally nostalgic sport, always trying to make sense of its future by using its past.

Chapter 6: Triage Ward
In this way the court takes a record of the tennis played on it. A divot over here where someone took a hard fall after a diving volley. A smear over there where a player slid to retrieve a drop shot. A small comma behind the baseline traced by the back foot while a player served. In the right light, the clay itself looks like soft velour and the footprints look like places it has been thumbed against the grain.

Chapter 7: Joy in Suffering
The crowd is the third participant in every tennis match. It can bend the outcome, like the sun or the wind. If players are shown love by the crowd, they can tap into new reservoirs of confidence. If they are shown scorn—and they happen to be named Novak Djokovic—they can also tap into new reservoirs of confidence.
//
Tennis had gotten brawnier over the decades, but its competitors were still pressed into that display of genteel civility, just seconds after they’d spent four hours wired to kill.

Chapter 9: Tossing Out the Syllabus
Unlike hard court, which sits inert, or clay, which is groomed and restored between matches, the grass cannot be reset. Wimbledon is a story of degradation.
//
Tennis is unambiguous that way. No loss can be blamed on a teammate or coach or external force. You are only as good as your wins.

Chapter 13: Changeover
Level is separable from the player; it can be commented on at a remove, as if a player were holding their own tennis out at arm’s length, putting it up to the light to study it more closely. Level is an instantaneous snapshot of where a player stands—their accuracy, ferocity, ingenuity at a given point of time. It is the result of their training, but also their jet lag, their love life, their legal proceedings, their last meal.

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EVERYTHING IS ROMANTIC

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