Episode Details

Back to Episodes

Sinner’s Exit, Shelton’s Clay Problem, and the New Depth of Men’s Tennis

Published 1 week, 2 days ago
Description

Jannik Sinner’s five-set Roland Garros loss to Juan Manuel Cerundolo leads the episode, but the conversation quickly moves beyond the upset itself. Alvin and Torrey examine whether the result was simply a physical failure from Sinner, or whether it reflects a broader shift in the men’s game: deeper fields, longer rallies, and more complete opponents who can no longer be dismissed as early-round obstacles.

The most detailed tactical section centers on Ben Shelton’s loss to Raphael Collignon. Shelton’s clay game is improving, but the match exposed issues that matter on slower surfaces: return percentage, predictable forehand direction, and the need to build points from neutral positions rather than relying on first-strike power.

The episode closes by looking at the next generation of men’s tennis and the physical cost of the modern game. Players are faster, stronger, and more tactically advanced, but the body may not be evolving at the same pace as the sport.

Send us Fan Mail

Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us