Submitted by twintig5 t3_10o9fsl in dataisbeautiful
NoLuck_NoWealth t1_j6dg44d wrote
Federer with the steepest curve
Dragon-Ash t1_j6fqeqr wrote
And then it levels off -fast- as Djokovic and Nadal hit the scene.
E_M_E_T t1_j6h3izi wrote
Imagine if he was in any other generation of players, that slope probably wouldn't have leveled off so quickly
Dragon-Ash t1_j6h83ft wrote
Quite possible.
Or maybe he just gets bored and retires?
Always interesting to wonder to what extent the Big Three pushed each other to improve.
Bjorn Borg had the record for most grand slams in the Open era, at 11. His last Grand Slam was 1981. That record stood for 18 years, until Sampras won his 12th in 1999.
19 years after that, *three* players had passed Sampras.
Kinda feels like that record may stand for a while. The only current players with more than one Slam win: Murray and Wawrinka, and they are zero threat to win another Slam.
One of my favorite stats - after winning his first Slam at Wimbledon in 2003, Federer won 12 of the next 17 slams. He won 13 slams his first five years. Heck the seven slams he won over the last 13 years would be a good career in and of itself!
yourfutureyesterday t1_j6gkp3f wrote
This had me intrigued, here is how steep each one is starting each from the first year a title was won. (not winning any awards for my graph, took a minute) https://imgur.com/a/7W0PTgW
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