Lee comes back after essential repair to bowl three yorkers to Yuvaraj before the winning runs are scored.
Never say die.
Posted via email from Musings
I am not sure of what form this would take - logs, more formal writings, forums or something else. I am content to let it evolve...
Posted via email from Musings
Federer explained his loss in 3rd set to Tsonga at the 2009 Rogers cup as such:
“Well, I think I got off bad starts on all of my service games towards the end. I think I was down maybe Love 30 in each service game. That was a problem for me.
If I maybe just get off 15 Love, 30 15 kind of game, then things might look different, you know. But I didn’t, so I had to scramble each time and have to start playing safe a little bit, and that’s exactly kind of what he needed because otherwise I was just going to hand it over to him.
This way, you know, he made me work for it and he did well to come back. It’s not something I go through very often, being up 5 1 and ending up losing, get broken back to back after having not broken especially throughout the whole match.
It’s tough, you know, but you’re still in it with a chance. But in both tiebreaks I served horribly, and I guess that cost me the match in the end.”
Why I did quote him instead of giving my own theory (after all, I can also pretend to be a pundit, thanks to blogging paradigm!)? Simple: he explained my theory! Its key to have an edge in your service game when you are truly dominating in a match. Else, it opens the door for your opponent to claw his way back in. Towards this, the first 2 points on your service games are critical. Fed plunged on his first serve percentage and paid the price.
Cost benefit analysis is a top decision-making tool in business world. While using it in terms of marginal benefits to costs comparison, it does have its share of intricacies. Here is one such intricacy, explained beautifully.
http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/03/why-my-wife-doesnt-cook-dinner/

Q. After the victory of Wimbledon last year and after the victory of the hard court now, I guess you proved yourself as a true king from this moment. How do you think about that?
RAFAEL NADAL: Can you repeat the last thing only?
Q. You proved yourself as a true king.
RAFAEL NADAL: Oh, no, no. Well, the true, no. I don't know. I just win for sure an important title for my careera. But I no better five hours before than now, no? That's the true, no?
When you win an important match, but you have to know before the match who you are and after the match you have to know who you are, too. You are the same, no?
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