Wimbledon - Injured Monfils out of Wimbledon

Eurosport - Thu, 18 Jun 17:28:00 2009

Frenchman Gael Monfils has withdrawn from next week's Wimbledon championships with a wrist injury.

TENNIS Gael Monfils Queen's 2009 - 0

The 22-year-old was on Wednesday named the 14th seed for the year's third Grand Slam but he was forced to withdraw from last week's Queen's Club tournament after falling and injuring his wrist in a second-round win over Kazakhstan's Andrey Golubev.

Monfils, who also missed last year's Wimbledon with a shoulder injury, will be replaced by a lucky loser from qualifying.

The Frenchman had never been past the third round at Wimbledon but he did win the junior event at SW19 in 2004.

Reuters

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  1. Fed's games priority is not the get­ broken, be­ satisfy with one break and if the opponent­ loses his­ confidence then you see a 6-0. This is how­ he has been­ able to dominate for so long
    1. It makes opponents­­ make mistakes, or question how hard they really have­ to­ push, just to win one point. This can change an­­ opponents complete mindset over a match. It is why­­ people, even Nadal and Federer hate playing Murray
    No­ thats not why... they hate playing him cause hes better­ than the 4th ranked player and below. Everyone runs for­ balls...
    "The die hard runners are to suffer most­­ upsets as the count on the other making­ mistakes.."
    Lol silly. Proof please.
    "With­ what the Murrays like do, it will be­ very hard to win­ GS"
    stop being silly. This is so bad, please get­ some proof..

    From wasdwasdedsfedsf, on Sat 20 Jun 7:39AM
  2. "Fed's games priority is not the get­ broken,­ be satisfy with one break and if the opponent­ loses­ his confidence then you see a 6-0. This is how­ he has­ been able to dominate for so long"
    No thats not­ how. Hes been able to dominate for so long by being­ better than the others.

    From wasdwasdedsfedsf, on Sat 20 Jun 7:22AM
  3. Teapsky: If you follow biathlon, Andresen & Larsen­ would prove your point. Sabotage themselves because too­ gung-ho, but won't change to a sport they could­ consistently win. No doubt at all that training could­ improve a Monfils's serve, backhand, etc. but doubt­ it would ever change the basic style. . .and would we­ enjoy watching tennis so much if it could?
    Grateful to­ all of ye for such a knowledgeable and thoughtful­ discussion!

    From connemara, on Fri 19 Jun 7:11PM
  4. Ahh what a shame for daddy long legs Gail i like to­ watch him.Its all that diving around the court he does­ not good for the body.

    From AJ, on Fri 19 Jun 4:14PM
  5. Some good points made here for a change. As far­ Monfils's concerned, it would be very difficult to­ "change" him. Diving, giving everything he­ has to save a point is the way he loves playing tennis,­ the only way he enjoys it and makes him forget all the­ sacrifices you have to make as a professional­ tennisplayer. I am a big fan of Monfils, I was in the­ crowd during his match against Melzer and it was so­ great to watch him play. So good to see players showing­ emotions and motivation and giving us some spectacular­ moments. Everyone has its own preferences. And not only­ in tennis. Some people like disciplined football teams­ and others prefer to watch some crazy brazilian­ artists, even if their tricks are useless.

    To­ conclude, I'd say that a emotionless Monfils would­ be sad to watch.

    From teapsky, on Fri 19 Jun 1:06PM
  6. what a shame, I always enjoy watching him on the court,­ he's so talented, but also very entertaining to­ watch. I say again - what a shame!!!

    From xence, on Fri 19 Jun 11:32AM
  7. shame really for this so talented guy to have such­ problems !

    From Igor K, on Fri 19 Jun 11:06AM
  8. I'm a Monfils fan, but he frustrates me to no end.­ He must stop diving all over the place and save himself­ needlessly pain. Was looking forward to seeing him at­ Wimbledon.

    From Kenneth O, on Fri 19 Jun 10:57AM
  9. Draw is happening as we type ;)
    Safina has a potential­ showdown with Nicole Vaidisova in the second­ round

    10:25

    Ladies draw has started and Venus­ Williams is in the same side of the draw as Dinara­ Safina.

    10:20

    exciting....
    we will have it full later­ today ;)

    Cheers
    Roger Federer will play Yen Hsun Lu in­ the first round.

    10:15

    Andy Murray will play Robert­ Kendrick of the USA.

    10:07

    Rafael Nadal's first­ match of Wimbledon will be against Arnaud Clement of­ France. He could play Lleyton Hewitt in the second­ round.

    10:05

    Rafael Nadal has been drawn in the same­ half of the draw as Andy Murray, while Novak Djokovic­ and Roger Federer are the other half of the draw.

    From hervé a, on Fri 19 Jun 10:31AM
  10. good point herve... If your oppo keeps hittin those­ lines it doesn't really matter what you do! :) So­ excited for the draw. Does anyone know when it is out?

    From James L, on Fri 19 Jun 10:19AM
  11. You said it all guys!
    Congratulations! you can all­ change your jobs and go out there and train some tennis­ players ;-)
    What about resuscitating Martin Verkerk and­ teaching him how to turn physical strength into a real­ threat to opponets?
    Good luck to all the 128 + 128 men­ and women starting next week for just 1+1 winners!

    From Durandinho, on Fri 19 Jun 10:03AM
  12. Hi James!
    totally agree with you! but there is a price­ to pay for everything... for ur strategy etc. (injuries­ or tiredness the next day is the price they pay for­ their game)... Like I everyone says Hi risk, hi­ return... The die hard runners are to suffer most­ upsets as the count on the other making mistakes... If­ you get to play a guy on his element or day, blasting­ forehand hitting lines you have no chance. Fed never­ allow Gonzo or Soderling or Verdasco to play their­ shots because he want to score and not let them make­ mistakes... With what the Murrays like do, it will be­ very hard to win GS... because in a best of 5 GS, u can­ always run meet a guy on his day... I personnaly like­ agressive Tennis and variation of shots... This is­ obviously why I am one of many Fed's fans. Working­ physical and mental strength will make of Joker the­ biggest treat to everyone out there! He defends very­ well but go for it, like to dictate rallies too. Not­ bad to watch...
    Cheers buddy

    From hervé a, on Fri 19 Jun 7:39AM
  13. Good, he is paying the price for being stupid and­ diving for balls when it just doesn't need to. ­ I'm tired of this boy getting the chance to shine­ and he just messes it up, let him feel it because his­ coach has said many time that he should stop this­ diving c r a p. He is such an amazing talent and will­ end his career as an almost because he spend 90% of his­ time impressing the crowd and not just getting the job­ done

    From janice m, on Fri 19 Jun 7:34AM
  14. Running down every ball helps players like murray,­ montfils, hewitt et al to maintain a psychological edge­ on their opponents in two ways.

    1. It makes opponents­ make mistakes, or question how hard they really have to­ push, just to win one point. This can change an­ opponents complete mindset over a match. It is why­ people, even Nadal and Federer hate playing Murray

    2.­ It helps the player to maintain a belief that every­ point is the same. You shouldn't treat 0-40 any­ different to 15-15. If you did that then when match­ point came around it might have more impact on your­ ability to deal with nerves. Also, that same­ consistency is unnerving for an opponent.

    So there you­ have it... Bosh.

    From James L, on Fri 19 Jun 1:56AM
  15. good night

    From ralph r, on Thu 18 Jun 11:42PM
  16. good points herve sorry if i came across a bit­ disgruntled. something in the air tonight. all the best

    From ralph r, on Thu 18 Jun 11:40PM
  17. Hey Ralph, good point u made there! I would not make to­ many sense to stretch this so much! As I understand­ what you mean, I would like to reinforce what Connemera­ is saying again... My point is simply that some style­ of play would lead more to injuries than some other.­ Whether adopting a style is due to being more or less­ gifted does not change the point.
    By saying playing­ intelligent I want to say that depending on the style­ of play, 6-0 set of a Nadal, or Murray or many others­ might be sometimes longer than a 7-5 set of a­ Federer... I am not sure that he is not training as­ hard as others... he is still one of the fastest out­ there, ... another example will be: A player who­ chooses to work @#$% his back hand and another who­ chooses to run over and hitting a forehand istead­ (Grosjean, Gonzo, Tsonga, Monfils are good­ examples...)... As they are all talented, the winner­ will be the one who is working @#$% what the nature­ didn't give him.
    Fed, or Petes' serves­ were/are difficult to read.... hard work, having to use­ the same throw for all serve... it is work work and­ work.... Nadal as a right handed was trained to play­ with left... (giving him almost two forehands)... That­ is work n u see how it pays off... To reduce long rally­ that might get u tired loosing points against great­ runners, work aggressive play... Work work work and­ discipline. This is all I am trying to say.

    From hervé a, on Thu 18 Jun 10:41PM
  18. These are all interesting points (and a great relief­ from the bickering in so many of these threads). Good­ point about the level of training necessary, but­ training should make one more resistant to injury,­ whereas a certain style of play increases likelihood of­ it. To what extent is general style of play­ innate--can someone like Monfils or Tsonga be taught­ not be quite so daredevil in the heat of a match? It­ seems as if it might be a trade-off between playing­ naturally and risking a career shortened by injuries.

    From connemara, on Thu 18 Jun 10:08PM
  19. by the way all are extremely talented its just that­ some are more GIFTED than others which is why many­ empathise with the fighter who shows hard work can get­ u all the way to the top.

    From ralph r, on Thu 18 Jun 9:55PM
  20. herve are u actually aware that as in life as in tennis­ we are all different, for physical reasons, stature­ reasons, ability to recuperate i.e. size of lungs and­ the list goes on add to that personality, levels of­ testosterone and u get my drift, my point is how can u­ compare all players to one norm. its not like that,­ some are more talented some have to work harder, fed­ (talent) hewitt (work) hewitt to keep fit when he was­ very young and assaulting the higher echelons of tennis­ would run out into the australian desert and run till­ he dropped, he would then rest and run back, do u think­ a fed ever did that, no because he has the talent to­ avoid such brutal training. tennis players have to work­ out their strengths and weapons and try and perfect­ them so that they beat their opponents so one has to­ chase while the other has to concentrate on holding his­ serve, but i tell u it would be a boring world if they­ all did the same. cheers

    From ralph r, on Thu 18 Jun 9:52PM
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