
The Body Serve
302 episodes — Page 3 of 7
Ep 318Bloviation Station
ETennis returns to China after four years away, as Iga Swiatek reminds us who's boss and Jannik Sinner takes a huge step forward by beating Alcaraz and Medvedev for the Beijing title. Meanwhile, the Cancun organizers are building their Field of Dreams in less than a month and several top players are already bowing out of BJK Cup. We also cover the growing chorus of abuse survivors who are taking aim at the USTA, and why this is far from the last time we'll hear about it. Plus, a few diversions about Zheng, "athleticism," Safarova's extremely brief non-return, and how tennis babies its players when it comes to endangering the people who work on court. 1:05 WTA returns to China with none of what it demanded 7:00 Iga sets things straight with Beijing title 12:25 Jannik Sinner gets his first Meddy win by using a tactic that’s becoming more common … 18:35 WTA Finals in Cancun: stadium is loading ... (currently at 1%) 27:15 Can you ever forgive me? Qinwen says definitely not 33:30 It’s not only about trans people’s participation in sports and it never was 38:30 Tennis is very unserious about hitting staff with flying objects 42:40 USTA legal team under fire for how they’ve handled sex abuse cases 54:30 Lucie Safarova’s very brief return to tennis 56:25 We saw Stevie Nicks!
Ep 317Performance, BYE!
EHiiiiiii, we’re back to discuss the fallout from the Simona Halep verdict and the tennis results since the U.S. Open. Now that Simona has been officially handed a four year suspension, we have a bit more clarity as to what’s been going on in actuality, not just on social media. Spoiler: it doesn’t look good for the former world #1 and two-time Slam champ. Maria Sakkari did what needed to be done (at long last) in Guadalajara, it’s just too little too late for Félix at Laver Cup, and we weigh in on Elena’s performance bye disgust in Tokyo 01:10 Patrick goes on CNN to claim Coco’s success and divert attention 04:00 The Simona verdict is handed down: the fallout 15:01 Darren is still going to bat for Simona 19:33 Why are players and journalists undermining the anti-doping process? 27:47 Now, why did Serena wade into this mess? 29:52 Sakkari headlines the post-USO results. Good on ya, mate 37:38 Barbie K is back and Kenin is on the come up 38:55 The men: All of a sudden Félix has something to say 43:29 Rafa news and it doesn’t sound good (to us) 45:16 Ryabkina and coach let it rip at the WTA and on social media 51:11 Some concerning news about Holger Rune’s health
Ep 316Not Gon’ Cry
EWelcome to Part II of our US Open wrap, this time focusing on the men’s draw. Djokovic wins #24 and the challengers (aside from Alcaraz) have gotten no closer to cracking him mentally or physically … they’ve perhaps gotten even farther away. We talk about the semis, including the straight boy shade fest over PhoneGate and Medvedev’s 12 out of 10 performance against Alcaraz. The other major story of the week is Simona Halep’s 4-year ban for doping, handed down by an independent tribunal. It doesn’t look good, folks. We finish up with the Williams-Ohanian tweets, some trophy size comparison, the WaPo match fixing story, and a few more odds and ends. 0:30 ND24: sharing a throne with Margaret Court (and if you don’t like it you’ll be told to “cry more”) 6:00 Stubborn Medvedev against serve and volleying Djokovic 16:45 My country, my tax shelter + more semiotics! 30:30 Djokovic-Shelton: the phone thing and banking on Shelton’s overall appeal to the youths 45:30 Doubles: Ram/Salisbury threepeat, Bopanna runner-up at 43 51:45 The Spectrum-Disney stalemate blacks out US Open tennis for millions 55:20 Simona Halep’s 4-year ban: first, the news 62:15 The Halep fallout: Patrick, Serena, Genie 77:35 US Open trophies: if size doesn’t matter then why … nevermind 83:40 Reporting from the Washington Post on the largest match fixing ring in tennis history
Ep 315Miss Gauff
ECoco Gauff -- a child prodigy who built her career step by step -- grabs her first major title at 19 to cap a stunning turnaround this summer. She slays every question, embraces gratitude, thanks her haters, and will leave New York a superstar. Aryna Sabalenka ascends to world no. 1 for the first time, reaching the semifinals in every Slam this year, but couldn't stop Gauff in the final. The US Open leaves women's tennis in a truly exciting place, with a clear top tier and a number of women with diverse playing styles always a threat to win. We're also talking about the WTA Finals announcement, the second annual ball controversy, doubles, and Pegula's rich girl confidence. 0:30 Cori Dionne Gauff is the US Open champion! 7:15 The final: fighting back from a first set blowout 25:45 How we talk about male coaches in women’s tennis 31:15 Aryna’s disarming honesty 40:05 Madison zones for 70 minutes but comes up short against Sabalenka 48: Other notes from the second week: Ostapenko’s fitness should not be in doubt 53:20 Doubles: Dabrowski/Routliffe win the title and Townsend lit up the courts all week 59:35 The WTA Finals are where? 63:35 What is up with the US Open balls? 71:30 Speaking of haters
Ep 314Lollygagging at the US Open: Week One
EWe're fresh off our second visit to the US Open (and James' first!) and sharing our observations of the grounds, the big stadiums, the Honey Deuces, and the record crowds. James tells the story of night one on Ashe, something he's wanted to experience for a long time. Coco Gauff wrested control of the match but Laura Siegemund and her antics spurred *discourse* that crossed into the mainstream. We discuss the matches we saw, the big breakthroughs, and where we are in the draw. We're also covering the mysterious "respiratory [and apparently gastro] illness" ripping its way through the site, the competing bids for the WTA Finals, some big American retirements we're not torn up about, and finally, celebrating Black excellence at the US Open. 5:10 Night 1: Siegemund's scams and her failure to own them 13:40 Michelle Obama?! 17:30 The overcrowding is no joke but finding respite with Dasha on Court 6 made my Tuesday 28:30 There’s marijuana in the park?! Plus observations of the stadiums 31:55 Everybody is sick - what have we *not* learned a few years into a pandemic? 38:10 Round of 16 lineup: 4 Americans each in the men's and women's draws, very few major upsets 53:00 Court 5 and Holgerian hubris 55:55 Another delay with Simona Halep’s doping case 61:20 Isner and Sock retire and do we care? 66:55 The bad publicity surrounding a potential WTA Finals move to Saudi Arabia 73:15 A few thoughts before signing off
Ep 313Flush(ing) With Possibility: 2023 US Open Preview
EIt’s The Body Serve’s second visit to the US Open (James’ first!). We recorded part of this episode in Toronto, minutes before leaving for the airport, and then broke down the draws after arriving in Queens. There was a lot of news to get through, namely the ATP’s financial security pilot program and the rumors of the WTA Finals taking place in Saudi Arabia. Our draw analysis focuses on first round matches to watch, the Americans’ chances, the fourth consecutive Iga-Coco quarter, and the contenders hoping to spoil another coronation. 1:05 Where are the WTA Finals going to be played? Riyadh, Prague, Washington, DC are options 7:35 The ATP’s Baseline program: guaranteed income, injury protection, and money for up and comers 14:20 State of the tours ahead of the US Open, compared to last year 21:45 Mother is a mother again! 24:40 Previewing the draws from NY! 26:15 Men’s draw: another Alcaraz-Sinner quarter? Anyone stopping Novak? 40:15 Women’s draw: Iga is the favorite but the hype is high for Gauff, Pegula + Muchova, Sabalenka, and Rybakina are top challengers
Ep 312Bee For Real
ECincinnati was starting to feel like a hangover from the Canadian tournaments but finals Sunday turned that all around. Coco Gauff grabbed her first 1000 title -- going 11-1 since her loss at Wimbledon -- and Djokovic beat Alcaraz over 4 hours in one of the more dramatic three-set matches you'll see. Are we seeing a May-December rivalry in the vein of Martina-Steffi? We've also got the bee story and the return of The Rant, with each of us giving it a go. 1:05 The blazing women’s 100m final because this is a Jamaican track and field stan podcast 5:35 Coco Gauff wins her first 1000 title (and the defunct US Open Series) 15:55 Townsend & Parks win the women’s doubles title 18:55 The rivalry that men’s tennis desperately needs 24:35 Give me the juice 34:10 Bees in the trap: Tsitsipas vs Bee Lady 38:40 Was that too harsh? (a common refrain in our household) 42:00 Vaya con Dios, Robert y Juan Sebastian 44:35 The Rant is back (Parental Advisory)
Ep 311Is She A Karen, Or Is She Iconic?
ETennis returned to Canada as weather wreaked bedlam on the women's draw in Montréal. Jessie Pegula won her second 1000 title and scored a great win over #1 Iga Swiatek, but we need to talk about some horrendous scheduling decisions that impacted Rybakina and runner-up Samsonova. Jannik Sinner wins his first Masters title on the men's side, while de Minaur and Paul record massive wins of their own. We've also got Casper Ruud's tour of Canadian Content, the weird rules revelation in the Raonic-Tiafoe match, and the strange persistence of American high school line dance standard "Cotton Eye Joe." Most importantly, we ask you all to decide once and for all: is Danielle Collins a Karen or an icon? 01:04 : Cincy FOMO and our initial forays into Toronto tennis this year 07:20 Recapping the men's action in TO amidst intermittent weather 13:41 Casper Ruud's many many looks off the court 19:51 The women's tournament is rocked and wrecked by rain 27:38 The Notebook: an Iga hate story 31:52 Where did you come from, where did you go? 33:59 Is she a Karen or is she iconic? 38:23 Caro's back and the reviews are mixed 41:46 A net is not a net, when there's no doubles players there 45:49 Coco's revival and Brad's involvement 51:38 Now, why is Dasha in it? Kyrgios is unthinking, unserious, and unsavory
Ep 310Mikael Me Maybe
EWelcome to the brief, post-Wimbledon grass-clay-hardcourt-Euro-American-Hopman Cup season, with players fighting for money and points across various countries on all surfaces. We start with the news of Mikael Ymer’s 18-month suspension for missing doping tests (the ITF didn’t like the first ruling so they went back to the well). Then we move on to the news that Alexander Zverev’s ex-partner has pressed criminal charges for bodily harm, which are currently winding their way through German courts. We talk newcomers Akugue and Michelsen, Ruud’s bagels, and what’s next for the summer hard court swing. 1:00 Mikael Ymer banned for missing doping tests after the ITF appealed his innocent verdict 8:35 New criminal charges filed against Zverev for intimate partner violence, Berlin prosecutor applies for penalty order 17:10 The Zhang/Toth incident in Budapest - Toth was wrong but the reaction swung wildly out of proportion 25:50 Kei Nishikori is back! 28:05 Breakthroughs for Noma Noha Akugue, Clervie Ngounoue and Queenwen! 34:20 ATP updates: Mannarino at home on grass, plus Alex Michelsen, Fils, Ruud, and Stanley 43:05 Canadian Open ticket prices, my word! 47:20 RIP Sinéad
Ep 309The Audacity Of It All: Wimbledon Wrap
EWell well well, what has Wimbledon wrought?! Carlos Alcaraz and Marketa Vondrousova are your singles champions, defeating Novak Djokovic and Ons Jabeur respectively. We try to get to the bottom of how both results happened, while touching on some of the other happenings from the final stretch of the tournament. Many congratulations to Naomi Osaka and Ash Barty on the births of their babies, and a closing rant by James on Novak hagiography 01:12 Carlos Alcaraz did WHAT? 14:00 Does this shift the best men's player narrative? 17:00 Will Alcaraz’s win signal that the field has a chance? No 25:16 Put some respect on Vondrousova's name 35:10 Jabeur disappointment and moving forward 40:48 WTA consistency: Svitolina, Swiatek & Pegula 44:24 Rounding out the Wimbledon champions 47:48 Babies Osaka and Barty have arrived! 49:25 Jennifer Brady is back & one final rant from James on Novak hagiography
Ep 308Policing the Panties: Wimbledon Week One
EWimbledon’s first week is in the books (almost), dominated by talk of rain, curfews, scheduling, and the queue. We highlight the big stories and top performers of the week – Svitolina, Eubanks, Berrettini, Vondrousova, etc. – and a few of the stumbles, including ADF’s shocking mental wobble against Rune and an unnamed reporter’s gaffe toward an unflappable Paula Badosa. We spend a good chunk of time on Wimbledon’s stubborn peculiarities and finish with a quick rant on Cirstea’s odious presence on social media. 0:35 Big stories in the first few days: Venus, Elina, Eubanks, Berrettini 14:35 “Congratulations on your win” … “I lost” 21:10 The round of 16 lineup and how we got there 33:20 Tradition! Queues, debentures, and pineapples 45:15 It’s not the curfew, it’s the scheduling 52:10 Kontaveit and Chardy retire, Brooksby catches a case for missing three doping tests 58:00 Tsitsidosa s*x dreams?! 63:10 Cirstea clarifies who she is - thanks for saving us the time!
Ep 307The Rothesay Wimbledon Classic: SW19 Preview
EWe’re back from Europe just in time to recap the brief grass season, share our experiences at the bett1open in Berlin, preview the Wimbledon draw, give our takes on Break Point part two, chat about the ATP/WTA overtures to Saudi Arabia … anything else?! Buckle up because we’re covering a lot of ground – get it? 'Cuz it’s on grass – on this episode. Feel free to join our Wimbledon bracket challenge on the TNNS app using the code laver-ace-9494. 0:30 Our experience at the German Open in Berlin! 18:20 The other grass results: Frances & Carlos, Penko, Babs K, and Venus’ return 27:35 Break Point actually gets better: Ajla’s story pays off 41:00 Trying to avoid a LIV-style disaster, tennis goes straight to the source: the Saudi Public Investment Fund 44:45 WTA announces new calendar and a “pathway to equal prize money” 48:10 A few retirements and one huge unretirement: Wozniacki to return, gets US Open wild card 54:45 Men’s draw: who is stopping Novak? (no one) 68:20 Women’s draw: Yes, it is lopsided
Ep 306TBS Mailbag: Tethered to Nothingness
EWe’re on the road, so we have a mailbag episode to tide you over until we get back on our thrones up North. So much tennis stuff has happened already since we’ve been away, and we’ll be back next time to recap all of that alongside our Wimbledon preview. In the meantime, we hope you enjoy our yappa yappa yappa on a whole host of subjects as we dive into as many of your questions as possible. Here are some of the major questions and themes: 1:30 Does the LIV-PGA merger have an impact on tennis? (Is that thing still happening?) 15:45 Which tennis player would be the best travel companion? 26:30 Which player is most likely to have a burner social media account? And who could you convincingly imitate on social media? 33:55 Create your own tournament: surface, location, dress, mascot … 38:35 Lots of questions about the likeliest next first-time Slam winner 48:38 If women played best of 5, who would gain/lose the most? 55:05 WTA girl group! 68:20 Are certain players just better at tiebreaks? How much stock do you put into the tiebreak records vs match-ups and other factors? 79:20 Plan a dinner party with 6-8 tennis people, alive or dead
Ep 305The Next (De)Generation: Roland Garros Wrap
ERoland Garros 2023 is in the books, as Iga Swiatek extends her dominance and Novak Djokovic beats a field that offered very little resistance to the new major singles title leader. All respect and admiration goes to Karolina Muchová, so far the toughest challenger to Iga in a Slam final. We talk the science of cramping and answer listener questions about Sabalenka's approach to press and what we expect of athletes speaking on politics. Finally we tackle the doubles default controversy -- a strict rule that should be strict -- and praise the wheelchair winners and everyone's favorite doubles pairing (or ours, at least): Taylor Townsend and Leylah Fernandez. 0:35 Men’s draw: Dedicated hateration 13:25 Cramping: what’s the science? Well, it’s not entirely clear … 24:50 Women’s final: Karolina Muchová gives Iga a scare 33:55 The Sabalenka handshake controversy leads into a few questions from listeners about what we expect from athletes 54:40 The default of Miyu Kato 60:50 Doubles results: Hsieh is back + Fernandez-Townsend, Ivan Dodig schools the French Federation in public 65:00 Wheelchair singles: de Groot wins her 10th straight major(!!!) + Oda becomes the youngest male Slam champ in history
Ep 304The Placebo Effect
EWe're halfway through Roland Garros -- most of the favorites are still around plus a few clay sensations on the bottom halves of both the men's and women's draws. We're talking Sloane, Svitolina, Muchova, Iga, Carlos, Jannik, Meddy and more. We were reminded that politics and sport are, in fact, intertwined and inextricable with Djokovic's commentary on Kosovo and Sabalenka's response to questions about Lukashenko. Last week we asked for updates on Seyboth Wild's case and we got more than we bargained for. Plus, the RG crowd, our favorite looks, and a Rafa update. 2:30 Starting with the men … Frances, why??? 15:00 Where we are in the draw: the bottom half lacks a few seeds but shouldn't be a surprise 18:00 Iga’s bakery: Iga says don’t be disrespectful 21:00 Plenty of upsets but were they actually surprising? 27:45 Sloane Stephens is tailor made for this tournament 37:35 Aryna Sabalenka vs. the press 47:50 Novak’s politics 55:10 Nanotechnology to the rescue 58:15 The elusive Thiago Seyboth Wild: abuse allegations, journalist intimidation, and … N*zis? Wtf? 66:05 Et ceteras: Taylor Fritz shushes the obnoxious crowd; Gasquet crypto captain? 70:45 The looks: Grigor is Lacoste
Ep 303Come Hell or High Pasta: Roland Garros Preview
ERoland Garros will begin without Rafael Nadal in the draw, for the first time since 2004. In his stead, Alcaraz and Djokovic are favorites, but Medvedev’s Rome win and Rune’s consistency might complicate things. On the women’s side, the fabled “new big 3” have kept up their sides of the bargain through the clay season and it’s made for a fairly balanced draw. Iga remains the favorite but Rybakina, Sabalenka, Jabeur, Krejcikova, or Ostapenko could snatch (among others). Join us for our draw analysis and recap of the clay season so far! 2:20 Who are the WTA contenders apart from Iga? WTA clay so far: the “new Big 3” is still winning 13:00 WTA draw analysis 20:20 Come hell or high pasta: some outrageous early match-ups in the women’s bottom half 32:55 Rafa’s absence looms large + the men’s clay winners this year 41:20 Men’s draw analysis: ultimate troll Medvedev engineers a potential Djokovic-Alcaraz semi 48:00 Bottom half: the Rune-Ruud rematch we deserve? 57:00 Join our league on TNNS Live and fill out your bracket 58:35 Et ceteras: more from Simona + Break Point part two announcement
Ep 302Rome in Ruins
EAnother clay Masters, another disastrous finale. They couldn’t help the rain, but between the weird scheduling and the fumbled women’s singles trophy presentation, Rome left a bad taste in our mouths after this expanded clay experiment. Rybakina and Medvedev prevailed: Rybakina recording her third straight win over Iga Swiatek and Medvedev shakes up Roland Garros predictions with his first clay title. We dive into the proposal to move the Western & Southern Open to Charlotte, NC, plus a segment on the latest Simona Halep anti-doping news and Hugo Gaston’s shocking behavior and fine. 1:00 Rafa pulls out of RG, gives career update 3:05 Another fortnight, another Master disaster 9:55 Rybakina emerges from the Rome ruins 13:20 Daniil Medvedev did WHAT?! 18:10 Djoko smashed, new Iga allegations & Aryna’s deft touch 26:05 Cincinnati moving to Charlotte? More public money for what … 31:55 RG withdrawals: Thiem didn’t get a wild card but it didn’t matter 35:00 Gaston unsportsmanlike conducts his way to one of the largest fines in history 36:45 More bad anti-doping news for Simona Halep: what is an athlete biological passport? 39:40 Simona & Patrick accuse the ITIA of “harassment”
Ep 301The Gender Cake Gap
EEpisode 301 takes us crashing back to Earth in the wake of genuine concerns over the Madrid Open’s treatment of women players. The overlong, overcooked tournament ended in a flurry of bad press, which started with some symbolically loaded cakes and ended with a tournament terrified of letting women speak at all. Aryna Sabalenka and Carlos Alcaraz continue fine seasons, each winning their second titles here. To wrap up, we cover some depressing injury news, Murray-Stephens Challenger wins, and an addendum to “SERENA” which features *your* favorite Serena moments. 3:35 Madrid experiments with a longer format, and honestly let’s leave it in 2023 7:50 The model ball women: the culottes are worse than the crime? 9:45 Ceci n’est pas un cake 19:45 The women’s doubles finalists are literally silenced 28:15 Imagine, the original controversy of Madrid was Genie Bouchard’s possibly defamatory tweet about dopers 30:15 Onto actual tennis! Sabalenka d. Swiatek as this rivalry really heats up 33:15 Alcaraz title #10, Struff’s clay serve and volley, Zhang’s breakthrough 37:40 “Hola a todos” should come with a warning 41:00 Anisimova to take a break from tennis to take care of her mental health 44:40 Your favorite Serena moments: oh, he’s still … ?
Ep 300SERENA
EEpisode 300 of The Body Serve is our meditation on the career of Serena Williams - an episode we’d put off, partly out of denial and partly because we wanted so badly to do it justice. In 1999, just before beating Steffi Graf at Indian Wells, Serena said: “I’m tired of losing to people I should beat. Whatever my potential is, I want to reach it. Now.” She did just that for over two decades, amassing 23 major singles titles, 14 major doubles titles with Venus, international fame and cultural influence, and hundreds of Open Era tennis records. The hardest thing about covering Serena is to take her out of the realm of metaphor: she is (rightfully) an icon, someone who means even more than what she did on court, but how do you take a measure of the woman herself? What follows is not a full biography. We look at distinct eras in Serena’s career and weave in themes of misogynoir, body shaming, integrity, sisterhood, shade, and finally, a celebration of Serena’s legendary kits and press conference moments. 3:00 Let’s look at the receipts: the resume and the records 7:25 The early years: a “perfect bond of union” and Serena’s first WTA match 20:45 You can’t tell the story of Serena without Venus 27:20 Domination Part One (2002-2003): Serena Slam and prophecy fulfilled 32:00 The desert (2004-2006): acceptance is conditional; the Great White Hope 40:40 The Chris Evert letter 50:50 Getting back to #1 (2007-2010) 57:00 The myths of 2012 lead to one of the greatest stretches in tennis history (2012-2017) 1:02:25 Returning to Indian Wells, 2015 1:10:45 Twilight (2018- ) 1:14:50 Misogynoir 1:23:10 Controversy: why is it always the US Open? 1:36:10 Serena in press: there is truly nothing like it 1:45:25 Serena dropped a massive bombshell while we were recording, and it gave us closure 1:49:10 Legacy 1:58:20 The legendary fits: Cameroon, catsuits, and Puma supremacy
Ep 299Man in the Mirror
EEpisode 299 (almost there!) brings us to Andrey Rublev's first Masters title with his win over young menace Holger Rune. Medvedev & Zverev fire a few shots at each other, culminating in Daniil's clear 'we are not friends and keep my wife's name out of your mouth' moment. We talk about the WTA's decision to suspend their boycott and return to China, despite the Chinese government failing to meet the WTA's demands. Plus, a very depressing injury update, a few more thoughts on 'fairness' and what trans exclusion means for cis women, and celebrating the trans excellence of Sasha Colby, winner of RuPaul's Drag Race season 15. 1:15 Ruby wins his first Masters title! 10:20 The testy exchanges between that guy and Medvedev: “Look at yourself in the mirror” 17:45 Grigor and Andrey besties ❤️ 22:45 Stuttgart so far: the fourth straight Krejcikova-Sabalenka match, Badosa rising, and an impromptu QUIZ! 33:00 WTA decides to return to China: they took a big swing on the boycott but didn’t get much solidarity 42:55 Blue Check Novak Djokovic playing in the Djokovic-owned Srpska Open but he is not enjoying the conditions 45:15 Quick bites: Conchita-Garbiñe split, horrible injury news followed by encouraging injury news 51:00 The Zendaya-Guadagnino tennis film is guaranteed to be wild 52:30 An addendum to last episode’s segment on trans inclusion: the trap of ‘fairness’ 59:40 Sasha Colby wins Drag Race, rightfully!
Ep 298Betwixt, Betrayed, and Betweener-ed
ERain across the Southern US nearly derailed a few tennis tournaments this weekend, but Ons Jabeur and Frances Tiafoe held on to win Charleston and Houston, respectively. We chat about the early clay season, Naomi's post-baby goals, and some updates on Wimbledon, Carlos, and Iga. For a good chunk of the episode, we take on Martina Navratilova's escalating takes on trans athletes, and more broadly, trans women. How did this expand past trans women's participation in sport to a more generally exclusionary worldview? What will it take for the tennis establishment to say something? 0:35 Don’t count out Ons Jabeur just yet! 7:55 Frances Tiafoe makes it through the rain, wins career title #2 12:25 Other first-week clay events: Casper, Tatjana Maria, Dominic Thiem 16:20 Naomi Osaka’s recent interview on Japanese TV had everything; injury updates 21:10 Plus: updates from Wimbledon on their policy change on Russian and Belarusian players; a few huhs(?) and a surprise from Del Potro Trigger warning: this is tough subject matter and there is some coarse language to follow 28:10 Martina’s history and evolution on the subject of trans women: the infamous 2019 op-ed, the apology, the Women’s Sports Policy Working Group, and their misleading “facts vs feelings” rhetoric 37:05 It’s become about much more than “protecting women’s sport” - what type of womanhood is authentic? 45:50 “LGB” is a lie 49:20 It’s been time for tennis to say something
Ep 297Petrafied
EOur Miami champs – Kvitova and Medvedev – underscore how tough it is to win the Sunshine Double. Petra Kvitova completes one of her most unexpected tournament runs by winning her 30th WTA title and ninth at the 1000 level. On the men’s side, Daniil Medvedev caps an astonishing run of tournaments with title #4, and Alcaraz and Sinner’s electrifying semifinal gets widespread attention. We've also got Eubanks, Gauff/Pegula, a decision from Wimbledon, and Pouille's openness about mental health. 01:35 So much rain, so much discourse 05:25 Petra wins title #30! 16:15 Barbie K says WTA Big 3 is fake news! 18:55 Yes, Sinner vs. Alcaraz is becoming a really good rivalry 27:35 Medvedev turns his whole trajectory around these past few months: 4 titles in 5 tries 30:50 Chris Eubanks makes his career-best run and enters the top 100 34:45 Between Gauff, Pegula, and Townsend (and more!), American women’s doubles is lit 38:20 Wimbledon will allow Russian & Belarusian players who sign neutrality declarations 42:20 When is Rafa returning? 44:20 Lucas Pouille opens up about depression, substance use, and learning humility
Ep 296Pocketful of Sunshine (Double)
EWe’re coming to you mid-Sunshine Double, which at this point is more like Sunshine Month? Sunshine Quarter? Anyway, pack your SPF. We’re seeing storylines emerge for the year: is there a WTA Big 3 emerging? Who else will join that top tier? Is Carlos poised to dominate? Will the racquet talk? Beyond the tennis being played, we’re covering two continuing stories: the attempts by the WTA to protect players from abuse and exploitation, and the CVC/WTA deal and what that means for revenue. We also have a discussion on one of our favorite topics: the state of tennis journalism and its many challenges. 0:35 Hashtag tyranny 4:55 Rybakina beats Iga & Aryna to win Indian Wells - a new “big 3?” 14:20 Carlos comprehensively picks apart the draw in IW 19:00 Miami so far: is Bianca “back?” Taro Daniel bagels AZ, the world cheers 24:30 Iga debuts a new clothing sponsor 29:40 Continuing story: new developments with the WTA’s efforts to combat abuse 37:45 More on the CVC deal: finding new revenue opportunities based on the social (and real) value of equal prize money 43:50 The conundrum of tennis, or any sport, having a diligent, critical, and *paid* press corps 55:10 Listener questions: Scream 6 and Daddy Pedro Pascal
Ep 295Say Something
EIt’s a little bit of everything this week -- first, some thoughts on the first week of Indian Wells, whose courts are slower than Daniil Medvedev’s bathroom breaks (his words). We chat about Murray, Medvedev, Raducanu, Muchová, and the undeniable Ben Shelton. In business news, we talk about the WTA’s official partnership with CVC Capital Partners, a private equity firm that has just promised a $150m in new and better revenue streams for women’s tennis. Plus, Denis Shapovalov goes all in on gender pay equity, Netflix’s Break Point announces a season two, and Rafa’s all-time top 10 record is lost. 0:30 Some housekeeping and a thank you 3:10 Indian Wells week one: Daniil says it’s not a hardcourt (and is he really wrong?) plus some chatter about the women’s draw 10:00 Jonathan’s new fave Ben Shelton 12:50 Private equity firm CVC invests $150m in WTA Ventures, a new commercial subsidiary 17:50 The Tsurenko-Steve Simon story - where is the reporting? 23:00 You got nothing to say now? Holger Rune gives himself the rare Double L 26:40 Denis Shapovalov honors his mom and says equal pay for equal work NOW! 38:25 Big up Sloane Stephens Foundation! 39:40 We’re getting a Break Point season two whether we like it or not 45:10 Rafa’s record for consecutive weeks in the top 10 will end at 912 46:25 Injury updates: Kontaveit plus where is Jen Brady?
Ep 294Fly Like A Bird
EIt’s been a rough week in the Body Serve household, as we said goodbye to our beautiful 16-year-old beagle Vince. He’s felt like a third co-host over the years, a presence who was always just off-mic (and sometimes on it when he snored). In tennis, Barbora Krejcikova did the thing – taking out #1-2-3, saving match points, serving and getting served bagels, and pummeling Iga’s second serve to win Dubai. On the men’s side, Medvedev won three titles in three weeks, getting back into the top 10 and stopping Novak’s dominance of their head-to-head. Andy and Ruby have great weeks, plus Chaka comes for Mariah and Joe Biden catches strays over the literally endless Novak vaccine drama. 0:30 Vince
Ep 293We Need a Preposition
EFebruary in tennis: four continents, three Iga bagels, two male US Open champs winning titles, and one white woman wearing racially inappropriate hairstyles. This month is nothing if not eclectic. We also chat about Hsieh dropping in then dropping out of Dubai, what the hell is going with Schwartzman and Muguruza, and the breakout star who will change tennis in his country forever. 0:45 Iga generously doles out bagels; Sakkari Semifinal Segment 13:45 Wu Yibing becomes first Chinese man to win a title, also gets people to watch an Isner match 20:10 Carlos is back; plus a rankings factoid 22:50 Finance pro Matija Pecotić leaves work early to beat wild card king Jack Sock 25:45 What’s going on with Diego Schwartzman and Garbiñe Muguruza? 28:45 The disingenuous comparison of men’s records to women’s 31:50 Counting inches: Novak, the Sunshine Double, and the “proof” that nobody needs 36:15 Hsieh resurfaces, Ostapenko’s appropriation, and Eubanks’ near miss 44:40 Things we like/dislike: withholding stars, oats, and beans
Ep 292Same As It Ever Was
EPost-Australian Open tennis continues around the world, but this week we’re mostly talking about the seeming conclusions of the ATP’s two highest profile domestic violence cases (but not their only cases, btw). The ATP quietly dropped a new release shortly after the AO that the Zverev investigation had concluded and that the results were, well, inconclusive. Days later, Nick Kyrgios pled guilty to common assault against his ex-girlfriend but the charges were dismissed. A lot of tennis talkers and front-office folks will likely be relieved, but where does this leave us? Are we any closer to tennis organizations handling DV with care and responsibility? Also, more about the business side of tennis: the spectacular collapse of the Davis Cup-Kosmos deal, billionaire “disruptors,” and looking at PTPA financing and its latest presentation. 01:55 Results: Parks, Zhu, Stanley! 05:40 ATP quietly drops the news of the Zverev investigation 17:40 Nick Kyrgios pleads guilty to common assault, court drops the charges 23:50 Lots of concern about the consequences to the perpetrator 26:00 What will the ATP do? …. Bueller? Bueller? 30:10 US says COVID is over, we’re not paying for your shit anymore (and also Novak is coming) 32:40 ITF ends its Davis Cup contract with Kosmos a mere TWENTY years early 37:05 Money in tennis: the “disruptors” 40:30 What are the PTPA’s goals? Looking at their recent presentation 51:20 Lepchenko ban reduced … these supplements get ‘em every time 53:45 The Grammys do it again!
Ep 291Gaslight, Gatekeep, Girlboss: Aus Open Wrap
EOn the 14th day since the Australian Open started, we rested while Novak wept. The victimhood tour is complete, Jonathan is annoyed, and we pay it as much (or as little) attention as we can muster. Meanwhile, Aryna Sabalenka did THAT. Wow, what a moment. From her grit, skill, and determination on court, to her goofy glamour the following day, we put some respect on that incredible women's final! Other matters of business: lots of geopolitical tensions boil over, the Djokovic pater creates yet more headache for his son, Tursunov comes for Pam, the ballkids work for free, and Babs and Kat simply don’t lose Slam matches anymore. 3:00 Sabalenka & Rybakina give us an insta-classic 16:15 The men: so …… anyway 23:45 The bweh tragedy; and Shelton’s upside and areas for improvement 31:15 Doubles: Krejcikova/Siniakova haven’t lost a Slam match since 2021; Sania plays her final Slam 35:10 Et ceteras: so, nationalism eh? 43:05 Papa Djokovic ignites a flag scandal 52:05 Pam’s tweet brings Tursunov out of the woodwork, why? 63:55 Is it work? Pay the ballkids 67:45 Tiafoe wins best dressed by a mile 72:00 ESPN keeps its team Stateside 74:30 Punting the Kosmos mess but staying for the strawberry jam 77:15 Extras: rankings movers, TBS fantasy, and a disclaimer
Ep 290That’s Not The Rule, Kerrilyn
EWelcome to the third installment of our Australian Open series! We're at the quarterfinals, and the men's draw is giving chaos while the women's seems kind of … correct? We talk about Djokovic's mini-battle with the press and overall less than sunny mood, the state of safeguarding against abuse on the WTA, and another induction into our Hall of Fame. Finally, we offer our review of episodes 4 & 5 of Break Point (much improved!) and our favorite segment, Alison Riske-Amritraj's vociferous defense of the rules. 0:00 Don’t skip the intro this time 3:50 The women’s quarters - being able to appreciate tennis as more non-partisan than ever 15:00 Azarenka captures magic again, Sabalenka fixes her f***ing serve 20:55 The men’s draw has been a touch chaotic, no? 24:25 Novak Djokovic’s resentment tour 32:40 Korda, Shelton, Ruby, Rune 42:20 The PTPA’s nothing salads 45:40 That's Not The Rule, Kerrilyn 54:15 Sabalenka gets inducted into the TBS HOF 55:00 Recapping Break Point 4 and 5 - some depth and more real insights than the previous installments 63:50 Continuing to look at the effort to curb abuse and exploitation of women on the WTA Tour 70:35 The charges against Tsitsipas and why they don’t stick
Ep 289The Bushbirds Are Sh*tting
EHey there, just popping in to offer some thoughts on the first few days of the 2023 Australian Open and the first three episodes of Netflix’s tennis docuseries Break Point! We talk about a few standouts from a pretty rocky and wet week one (don’t be offended if we missed your fave, it’s not comprehensive); we discuss the Netflix Curse chatter that seems to be dooming 8 of the 10 featured players; and we think about some fascinating press conference moments from Taylor Townsend, Rafael Nadal and, in a rather different way, Camila Giorgi. 2:50 The Netflix Curse or the Netflix picking the wrong players syndrome? 5:10 Standouts in the first few days: Parrizas Diaz, Volynets, Brooksby, Shelton 11:00 Let me complain for a minute: the AO app is not good; and the rain highlights tennis’ built-in inequities 14:20 Andrew Murray plays for 10.5 hours over two matches 17:10 TBS Hall of Fame gets two new inductees! 21:35 Rafa leaves Australia with a new injury, smashes a cliche about athlete ‘sacrifice’ 32:05 Taylor Townsend shines in doubles, gets real about tennis finances 34:25 Camila Giorgi faces the music about alleged vaccine fraud and blissfully exists on her own planet 40:25 Novak: hamstring, hamstrung 42:25 Recommendation for tennis from James’ parents, only one of whom watches tennis 47:00 Discussing Break Point - who is it for, what’s it meant to accomplish, and does it do that? 51:20 The tennis brat / bad boy trying to reform -- it’s not giving us anything new 55:35 Go to the business center
Ep 288Pregnant With Possibilities: Australian Open Preview
EThe first Slam of the year doesn't give us many weeks of tennis to form opinions, but it's delivered on story lines, with one taking the cake: Naomi Osaka -- having already withdrawn from the Australian Open -- announced she's pregnant and will miss the 2023 season. This barely a week after defending champ Ash Barty announced her own pregnancy. Tournament director Craig Tiley is up to his usual hijinks, this year banning booing, rolling out NFTs in an inhospitable market, and extracting surplus labour from what used to be free (player practices). All that plus draw analysis, January standouts, PTPA news, a complete diversion on our take on Rolling Stone's greatest singers list. Ready? 2:30 Naomi Osaka is missing the Australian Open, yes … but why, pray? 10:50 What kind of mess will Craig get into this year? Well, funny you should ask 16:00 Booing Novak Djokovic is illegal. Is this a real thing? 19:50 Scamming scammers: extracting surplus value from player practices plus the AO NFT gallery 29:10 The PTPA announces an executive committee 33:50 Who’s standing out in the first two weeks of 2023? Peggy, Sabs, Linda, Novak, Taylor, Cam 44:50 Carlos Alcaraz misses the Australian Open but gets an international Calvin Klein underwear spread 49:50 Women’s draw analysis 60:55 Men’s draw analysis 71:35 Our greatest singers - fie, Rolling Stone!
Ep 287A Positive Start
EWelcome to The Body Serve 9! We're recovering from our first-ever bout with COVID but tennis never stops and the show must go on. We offer some things to look out for in 2023 -- a true rival to Iga? A few more Big 4 retirements? -- and share some of our (and your) hopes and dreams for the upcoming season. We also catch up with the tennis news cycle, including the latest Camila Giorgi controversy, Simona's doping suspension, Venus' return, and the debut of United Cup. 00:28 Season NINE: Housekeeping & #NameTheTennisPlayer 07:25 Things to look out for this season (The Giorgi Syndicate) 18:53 Nepo babies & the sprawling United Cup 29:53 Queen Vee is BACK and looking evergreen 35:07 Wading into the homosexual waters 45:47 James is definitely going to reach his breaking point this season 51:52 Boris is back and updates on the Simona sitch 54:59 Breakout candidates for the 2023 season 60:35 Our hopes and wishes for the 2023 season
Ep 286How Did We Get Here? TBS Culture Edition
ETo cap off our 8th season and tide you over until 2023, we’re bringing you the rare TBS culture episode. No tennis talk whatsoever -- we even had a few tennis-related items on the agenda which we deleted. We’ve got: an hour of TV talk including spoilers for The White Lotus and a few lightning-round rants; thoughts on “queerbaiting” and Kit Connor’s forced coming-out; Mariah Christmas concert review; and takes on blackfishing, digital minstrelsy, T Swift, and more! 5:55 Spoilers ahead for The White Lotus, one of the few remaining watercooler shows 15:45 MVPs Aubrey Plaza & Meghann Fahy 20:50 Siamo tutti gay! 27:30 Is the Golden Age of Television over? It’s ok if it is, all things must pass 31:50 Some shows we enjoyed: Mo, Industry, Better Things, Heartstopper, Somebody Somewhere, The Bear, P-Valley, and more 53:25 Each of us do a mini-rant about TV 01:02:00 Heartstopper and the extratextual: Kit Connor comes out after the fandom accuses him of queerbaiting 01:10:20 David Archuleta from American Idol comes out 01:15:15 So what happened with Bros? 01:20:55 Recapping Mariah’s Christmas concerts in Toronto! 01:30:30 We need to talk about Taylor Swift (without losing half of our listeners) 01:40:00 Miss Patti has still got it at 78 01:44:30 Terrible news about Celine Dion’s health 01:47:00 Kardashian-Jenner hegemony: when will it end? 01:57:30 Asking each other a tough and a not-so-tough question
Ep 285The Merchants of Menace: 2022 ATP Wrap
EIt’s time to wrap up the 2022 ATP season, and we’re treating the guys with a healthy (and earned!) dose of suspicion, starting with a rundown of the most badly behaved children of the year. But it’s not all bad - we also cover Rafa’s personal-best start to the season, Carlos’ rise, Novak’s disappearing and reappearing acts, Felix fixing his finals bugaboo, Holger’s Paris breakdown and later his Paris Masters title, and Roger’s retirement. And since tennis news will stop for no one, we had to recap Canada’s historic win at Davis Cup and the implosion of Team USA. 0:00 Cold Open Men behaving badly 4:25 Starting with the worst: That Guy 9:20 The Nick Kyrgios redemption nightmare 13:50 Craig! What the hell, dude?! 18:00 Jaaa-gate, Moutet, poop shorts, and Shapo gets scolded by Daddy 25:55 Davis Cup: USA cancels themselves, does the work for us 31:20 The Verdasco ban and Reilly’s basement tweeting Notable Moments 40:30 Djokovic removed from Australia + Rafa wins a very memorable Australian final 48:35 Carlos Alcaraz breaks out in March; Rafa’s injuries start and never end; weird Wimbledon 57:20 US Open was our first major (and Carlos’ too)! 61:30 Laver Cup, frat behavior, G***k y*g*rt, Federer retirement 65:30 Other retirements: Del Potro, Tsonga, Anderson, and many more 68:55 Three other players we need to mention: Feliz, Casper, Holger 79:25 How’d we do on our choices for breakout players of 2022?
Ep 284The Inroads (and Outroads?) of the 2022 WTA Season
EThe 2022 WTA season had everything: a 37-match win streak, the retirements of the current #1 (abrupt) and the GOAT (expected), a Wimbledon with no ranking points, and a major drug suspension. Iga Swiatek’s dominance didn’t leave much room for her competitors, but other highlights included Ons Jabeur’s steady rise to world #2 and two Slam runner-up finishes, Caroline Garcia’s singles renaissance and WTA Finals title, and utter doubles dominance from Krejcikova/Siniakova. We’ve also got some juicy listener-generated “things you loved/hated” content and the kind of typically bizarre moments that keep us coming back every year. Plus, we’ve just launched our GoFundMe - please read a bit about we do and donate if you can! 0:30 Announcing our GoFundMe 2022 and reiterating our mission 6:05 Three key moments: Ash’s Australian win + retirement, Iga’s win streak, and Serena’s evolution 11:00 The other major stories: the instability at the top for everyone but Iga, Simona Halep’s remarkably odd year, and the total breakdown of COVID protocols 18:40 Starting the year with Barty as the undisputed #1 25:20 Ash’s retirement coincides with the start of Iga’s 37-match win streak 34:45 Grass season: Serena dominates the conversation from Eastbourne to the US Open; Rybakina wins the points-less Wimbledon 42:00 Summer hardcourt stretch: our own return to live tennis; Halep & Garcia grab titles but Swiatek restores order in New York 54:55 Discussing the WTA year-end award nominees 60:45 Our own picks for 2022 breakout players - how’d we do? 63:25 Remember when? A broken necklace, a broken doubles team, and Ostapenko's ... everything 72:45 Things you loved about WTA tennis in 2022 81:50 Things you loathed in 2022: no points at Wimbledon, no more business buns 85:55 The WTA’s finances: Hologic sponsorship and a potential deal with private equity
Ep 283Muchas Garcías
EThe WTA regular season comes to a close with comeback kid Caroline Garcia grabbing her biggest career title, dispatching Iga-vanquisher Aryna Sabalenka in a boom-boom final. We discuss the last-minute nature of the event and the tough financial and ethical positions the WTA continues to occupy in light of the China situation. On the men’s side, Holger Rune caps a momentous autumn swing that brings him from #33 to the brink of the ATP Finals, but not without a lecture from daddy. Elsewhere in bad behavior, the FFT disowns Moutet, Reilly earns lifelong haters, and Kyrgios settles a silly (disclaimer: this is James’ opinion; please don’t sue) defamation suit. 0:45 Garcia’s Finals title and Sabalenka’s upset of #1 Swiatek add unexpected layers to this WTA season 8:35 Some props for Sakkari, Kasatkina, and doubles champ and singles-almost-made-it Kudermetova 17:30 Lots of commentary about attendance and the choice of venue – what the WTA has been up against vs. what is of their own making 28:55 Holger beats Djokovic, ends Felix’s win streak, and becomes first alternate for Torino 33:30 Magic potions and goofy huddles; it’s not actually a ‘thing’ but it’s no surprise that people think it’s a thing! 39:00 WTA CEO Steve Simon’s strange and conflict-heavy statements on the ongoing Halep doping situation 41:10 James’ tormentor Gilles Simon finally retires 47:45 Et ceteras: Moutet loses the bag; WTA institutes coaching program to attract and develop female coaches; safeguarding against abuse in tennis 57:00 Reilly thinks telling people to vote is cringe and that tennis used to be free of politics … ok hun 63:50 The biggest merch sale of the year: The Body Serve’s RedBubble Store
Ep 282Félix Aviation Administration
ECanadian King Félix Auger-Aliassime. As Rihanna said, let’s start there. Félix has turned around his final-round performances to the tune of three straight titles, beating world #1 Alcaraz twice in the past few weeks. Elsewhere, in Texaaaas, the world’s best women have a blast dressing up but will soon look to take on the dominant force of Iga Swiatek at the WTA Finals. We’re also covering Rune’s on-court and online hissy fits, previewing Paris and the ATP Final scenarios, and getting the Iga starfish case off the docket to make room for worse offenders. 01:45 Félix with 13 straight wins! Momentum is a hell of a drug 06:15 Holger’s temper tantrum(s) 14:00 Medvedev steadies the ship in Vienna, Shapo on a consistent run 16:00 ATP Finals qualifications: Wimbledon is the tournament that is and isn’t 23:30 The WTA women dress up and have a blast … stop with the amateur fashion critiques unless you’re being nice! 29:25 James takes a shot at WTA social media marketing and Jonathan is way more fair 35:50 Is anyone beating Iga? 41:00 United Cup, what’s it all about? 47:00 Case dismissed: Iga addressed the handwaving and yes, we must move on 49:00 Coaching carousel: Garcia’s coach splits with literary flair and Stan & Magnus are back together 52:20 What’s next for TBS
Ep 281The October Surprise
EJust when we thought we could go away for a spell without anything crazy happening, the ghost of an ugly hotel carpet threw things into disarray with Simona Halep testing positive for a banned substance. We begin the episode by wading through these doping waters, before catching up on the 7,000 tournaments since we last dropped an episode. Just take a look at the timestamps for the remainder of the docket: a lot of MESS before we finish with a salute to two all-timers who left an indelible mark on this fraught world we live in 01:55 Simona Halep tests positive for a banned substance 17:44 Catching up on the results 23:36 When are the authorities going to arrest Belinda Bencic? 28:45 WTA Finals qualifiers and James’ obsession with the Napoli mess 36:40 An update on one of the handful of ATP players accused of domestic violence 38:16 Coaching carousel: Tursunov’s self-serving MESS 44:10 Does pickleball want the sloppy seconds of tennis? 52:12 TENNIS BABIES!!! 55:00 Our top three Mariah studio albums 58:24 In memoriam: Queer icons Dame Angela Lansbury & Leslie Jordan
Ep 28025 Languages But Is Arabic One?
EThis is a hodgepodge episode, catching up with the recent tournament results across four continents, including Tunisia’s first WTA event, Djokovic’s clearing of the Next and CurrentGen, and Tiafoe’s continuing run of good form. We spend a good amount of time on Ostrava - the destined-to-be-a-classic final, Iga’s status as an activist #1, and Krejcikova’s return as a top singles player. All that plus some news about the Kyrgios case, WTA Final qualification scenarios, and a WTA coming-out (Happy National Coming Out Day!). 1:00 So who’s been winning all these tournaments around the world? 5:45 Novak clobbers an incredibly stacked ATP 500 draw 10:35 Fritz wins Tokyo, he and Tiafoe reach career high rankings 15:45 Thanks to Ons Jabeur and IMG, WTA tennis comes to Tunisia! 19:35 Ostrava has become a real autumn highlight - Krejcikova and Swiatek deliver a classic 25:40 Why do some see Iga as the complainer-in-chief? 33:30 Kiki Mladenovic knows her brand! 35:25 Kyrgios’ lawyers will ask his case to be dismissed on mental health grounds 40:35 Et ceteras: RaducanuOUT, Podoroska *out*, tour finals qualification
Ep 279Question: Tell Me What You Think About ...
EThanks to you, our listeners, we’re back with a special mailbag episode, answering your questions about any and everything. You asked about tennis, of course – lots of questions lingering from Laver Cup and Roger’s retirement, and about the states of various players’ games on the women’s tour – but you also allowed us to be self-indulgent and talk about what we’re watching and listening to, our favorite breads and cheeses (a new one!), and our nerdiest qualities. 1:40 Rapid-fire from @SamsBiceps: Federer matches, Beyonce, desserts, and Oscar best actress predix 13:50 Daria Saville’s IG post after her injury: interesting insight or just too much honesty? 18:15 What’s up with Naomi? Will she be back in form next year? 24:00 Dream WTA Team World - Team Europe lineups (and we added thoughts about what a dream Laver Cup should set out to accomplish 32:15 What are we watching/listening to/reading lately? It’s been a great year for horror fans 41:35 Pair any five tennis players with a Mariah track, which would then be their theme song (hey, Grigor) 46:25 Us as commentators: what’s our green room rider? How will you diplomatically call out your colleagues for bad takes? 53:15 What is the nerdiest non-tennis thing about each of us? Well, there’s a lot 59:10 If one of the Big 3 never played tennis, how many majors would the other two have won? 65:00 Our favorite breads and cheeses! Amazing question! 69:20 An FMK from our most reliable contributor 71:40 What is happening with Garbine? And some thoughts on a coach’s role 78:45 Our own tennis playing styles
Ep 278It Doesn’t Even Matter
EAnd just like that, another GOAT says goodbye. This time, it’s Roger Federer at Laver Cup, giving tennis and his fans one last glimpse at his greatness. Confession: we haven’t always been the biggest FedFans, but we’re still paying respect to the man and his genius, offering some of our most enduring Federer memories. Along the way, we chime in on Laver Cup itself, the tender Fedal moments, where the event worked, and where it falls short for us. ‘Til next time, Roger! 0:30 Federer retires: regret over letting stan wars cloud our appreciation 14:35 Federer’s imperial period: if you know, you know 17:05 Our favorite Roger memories 21:10 A non-recap of Laver Cup 29:40 The racist abuse leveled at Frances Tiafoe; fans now trying to find their next prop to prove they’re not racist 37:40 The touching retirement punctuated by truly absurdist theatre 41:20 Rafa & Roger’s unique and genuine bond - men showing affection! 52:20 Big Three or Big Four? Yes, we want to go there, just for a minute 55:10 What exactly is Federer’s legacy? What did he bring to tennis that no one had before? (thanks @seasaltandrum for the question!)
Ep 277Barely Bleating: US Open Wrap
EThe final Slam of the season sees Iga Swiatek troubleshoot and learn now to extend her dominance, and the coronation of the (not very) long awaited Carlos Alcaraz as a major winner and youngest male #1 in history. As always, we try to be skeptical of hype and take a fresh look at the results and what they might mean for the near future. Also at this US Open: the shambolic choice to have Supreme Court Justice Patrick McEnroe helm the women's doubles presentation, profiteering off Serena's name, and more awful revelations about sexual abuse in women’s tennis. 2:30 Iga Swiatek doesn’t always play her best but proves why she’s the dominant #1 14:40 The women’s draw gets a wonderful crop of quarterfinalists, representative of many of the year’s best 21:45 Are we in the Iga Era? How do we define a deserving number one? What do we want from women's tennis? Who cares! Sit back and watch 24:35 Men’s champ: from barely bleating to curry-ready 35:10 Frances Tiafoe! Not to say I told you so but … 42:50 Listen to Jonathan stretch a subordinate clause far past its breaking point 44:55 Women’s doubles: Krejcikova/Siniakova win the Career Slam; plus, the massive insult of Patrick McEnroe presiding over this trophy ceremony 56:10 TW: SA - Fiona Ferro’s case against her former coach puts another spotlight on abuse and exploitation in women’s tennis 60:55 Et ceteras: bootleg Serena merch, the too-late night matches, and the partisan but only partially engaged US Open crowd 69:25 WTA Finals is moving to … Texas? 73:11 Randomly, our favorite and least favorite types of pasta
Ep 276Very Good, Serena Williams: US Open Week One
EWell folks, that was quite the first week of the US Open, wasn't it? Jonathan is back from his trip to Flushing Meadows, and we are back to talk about Serena's last dance (or at least our first stab at it). There's a lot to unpack from the first week of the season's last major, so grab a honey deuce and join us for the ride. 2:35 Serena d. Kontaveit 12:00 The Farewell: Serena bows out to Ajla Tomljanovic in the third round 26:10 Jonathan’s observations from the US Open: Venus, Danielle, The Penko Experience 43:00 Thoughts on Arthur Ashe Stadium 54:40 Indulge me for a moment: the sound mix and off-court coaching 64:45 Commentary, a lifetime appointment? 69:20 Quickly running through where we’re at in the draw: women’s round of 16 is stacked 81:35 Rafa’s first week: nerves and a shocking smack in the nose
Ep 275Looks Like We Made It: US Open Preview
EWe're piecing together a preview for the US Open on precarious hotel wifi, but the show must go on! After all, this is Serena's final Slam. Jonathan is in NY taking in the action, while James holds down the TBS fort (i.e. Vince) in Toronto. Hear Jonathan's initial thoughts on TBS’s first trip to a Slam, plus we're talking about Novak’s eleventh hour withdrawal, this year’s version of the bathroom break distraction, and of course the just released US Open draws, seemingly some of the most balanced draws in recent memory. 01:05 Jonathan's initial thoughts on Flushing Meadows and the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center 12:25 To no one’s surprise the entry requirements did not change and Novak Djokovic pulls out of the US Open at the last minute 20:00 Kyrgios legal update plus a perfect distraction, a ridiculous defamation suit 27:30 WTA draw: hey, it could have been a lot worse 30:30 Women’s top half: cracking first rounds, including Queenwen vs. Ostapenko and Raducanu vs. Consecutive Slam Queen Cornet 42:00 Women’s bottom half: Madison gets a tough road early on; Serena’s fourth quarter … what to make of it 48:30 Men’s draw: a historic #1 seed leads a wide open draw
Ep 274No Qualifier Needed
ECincinnati lost its stars early but still brought us a wickedly good weekend, with comeback kids Borna Coric and Caroline Garcia taking the titles. We talk new shoulder (Borna), new confidence (Caro), new professionalism (Stef?), and the resurgent Petra and Madison. We take a stab at the ball controversy and how it speaks to a larger battle in tennis governance. The second part of this episode features an interview with author and illustrator Tom Humberstone, whose gorgeous graphic novel Suzanne hits bookstores in September. Suzanne Lenglen was one of the very first sporting superstars; Tom tells Suzanne’s story with specificity, avoiding comparisons with today’s greats, exploring what made her so compelling and how the well worn cliches about her fail to do justice to her life and accomplishments. 3:30 OG NextGen kid Borna Coric is back in the conversation, wins Cincinnati with his new serve (and new shoulder) 14:30 Iga, Ons, Serena out early? No problem - Petra, Caro, and Madison are getting butts in seats 21:20 Tennis ball controversy: Iga Swiatek vs. Wilson Regular Duty 27:00 Whom does it serve to tweet about someone skipping a press conference? (Check the replies, that’s who) 30:05 Jonathan’s preferred Serena match-up and Vika’s slightly anticlimactic announcement 35:10 Interview with Tom Humberstone, author of Suzanne and Body Serve illustrator! 47:45 Translating the unique visual spectacle of Lenglen to the page 55:15 How to balance “legacy” while honoring a person’s specific life experiences 59:20 Lenglen forced the skeptical press to respect women’s sport
Ep 273In The 6ix
EWe’re back after attending our first live tennis in THREE YEARS! Wow, what a moment. A moment most pleasing to us in our podcasting careers. The happy feelings didn’t last long as we had to grapple with the end of Serena’s career when she announced her imminent retirement at the US Open. We also chat about Simona and PCB’s wins in Canada before sharing a few of our observations from seeing the women in person last week. Buckle up folks, it’s going to be a hell of a ride the next few weeks 01:53 Serena rocks our world with news of her impending retirement 10:52 The relief, the joy, and the pain of grappling with this announcement 15:16 Simona Halep fightergirls herself to the Toronto title 17:33 The pusher discourse has gotten way out of control 20:32 Putting some respect on Haddad Maia and Zheng Qinwen’s names 23:45 PCB wins his biggest career title in Montreal 32:53 Observations: Watching Serena live in Toronto 36:36 Sloane’s defence, Kenin’s comeback, and endless deuces 44:32 Loving Bianca off the court and struggling with the mess on it 49:44 Why is it always MEN who are super loud and clueless at tennis? 58:19 Let serves and Giorgi/Ostapenko live lasers
Ep 272Summer Renaissance: Hardcourt Preview
EThe unbearable August heat and humidity means it’s time for the North American hardcourt swing, for a brief magical period known as the US Open Series. Instead of a typical recap, we decided to present a summer hardcourt preview to mark this distinct segment of the season. Who are the old reliables on this surface? Will Medvedev extend his mastery over these courts? Will Iga add some more titles to that expanding hardcourt resume? What will Venus and Serena’s matches look like? Will Djokovic become a wedge issue in the midterms? (No.) Plus a snapshot of our favorite moments from Beyonce’s stunner, Renaissance. 2:55 What are the main storylines going into the greatest rrrrroad trip in esport? 11:20 DC: Serena descends upon the capital, creates confusion 16:55 Venus’ first match since last August - what’s the takeaway? 25:35 Hardcourt preview: the comebacks, reboots, redos, and those with something to prove 35:25 The hardcourt stalwarts of the past few years, women first: Naomi, Iga, Vika, Aryna, and more 41:20 The hardcourt “kings” and we use the term loosely 45:20 Novak Djokovic and US Republican members of Congress: with their powers combined … 52:35 Medvedev and the race for the men’s #1 54:05 Raducanu’s choice of coach riles the British press 58:35 Our upcoming tennis plans 62:35 Beyonce’s Renaissance - a postmodern tour of Black dance music and reveling in the face of a plague
Ep 271In Our (Mail) Bag
EIt’s the hottest part of the summer and the post-Wimbledon haze is the perfect time to outsource our agenda planning by asking our readers for questions. Fortunately, your questions were well in sync with important topics of the day and what we wanted to cover. We discuss the documentary/vlog featuring Dasha Kasatkina and Andrey Rublev; the intimacy of the format; and the considerable fallout caused by Dasha’s coming out and their tough words on their home country. We spend a little time chatting about recent tennis news but that’s really not the focus – look out for questions on the world track and field championships, climate change, R&B covers of songs from other genres, and our current favorite snacks and TV shows. 2:00 Etceteras: Coaching splits, Matteo’s racist IG story, and TBS pet merch! Mailbag 7:35 The Kasatkina-Rublev doc and the immediate fallout 19:35 What to make of the ATP’s partnership with You Can Play to improve LGBTQ inclusion? 23:25 The Jamaican women continue to dominate sprinting; Shelly-Ann is the GOAT 33:45 Climate change as an existential threat to tennis 39:45 We’re not here for the scamming 42:25 Quick diversion about snacks 45:20 What are our favorite R&B covers of songs from another genre? 48:30 Why pundits are critical about Serena’s comeback(s) and fitness level 55:00 New TV we’ve been watching 61:50 To live and *let* live? To asterisk or not to asterisk?
Ep 270The S#&% Show Must Go On: Wimbledon Wrap
ELet's start with the good news: Elena Rybakina powered her way to a major title, and Ons Jabeur reached another career milestone while winning hearts and eyeballs around the world. The men's side was, uh, less appealing. Nick Kyrgios reached his first major final on the heels of an assault accusation (that's 4 ATP players currently accused of domestic violence if you're keeping count); a cursed bromance emerges; Rafa pulls out with an abdominal tear; and the younger generations fail again to capitalize on legends who weren't even close to their best tennis. 3:05 Elena Rybakina, another surprising but not surprising Slam winner on the WTA 14:45 Ons Jabeur, self-proclaimed Minister of Happiness – and this government ain’t falling 26:25 Tatjana Maria and reconsidering the narrative surrounding mothers in tennis 31:45 An unconventional recap of the men’s final 33:05 Nick Kyrgios is accused of assault by his ex-girlfriend, will face charges in court 38:35 Bromance from hell 49:30 The greatest fighter narrative works for Rafa but should we be celebrating the suffering? 58:50 Doubles: Krejcikova/Siniakova earn legend status 63:05 The ranking jumps are a little more dramatic than usual 65:40 The Telegraph spun the Serena Williams controversy wheel and came up with “five cars”
Ep 269In Perfect DisHarmony: Wimbledon Week One
EWimbledon week one saw a GOAT come and go, her sister light up the doubles court, the two male legends anchor their sides of the draw, and the loquacious Cornet end Swiatek's 37-match win streak. Saturday lit up the tournament for reasons good and bad; after Anisimova notched an impressive win over Gauff, Kyrgios and Tsitsipas gave an absolute shit show of code violations, toxic behavior, and occasionally compelling tennis. All the while, COVID reared its ugly head despite the tournament's determination to ignore it. 2:05 Serena, queen of net rushing and accepting her tennis mortality 14:30 Tami Korpatsch: a social media star is born 18:35 Venus & Jamie: you bring me joy 25:15 The upsets: the surprising (Hubi) and the less so (Muguruza & Kontaveit) 34:10 Round of 16 match-ups: Cornet ends Iga’s streak 41:40 Men’s draw: Covid wreaks havoc on the bottom half 48: 50 Covid is still here, surprise! On tennis’ players’ “civic spirit” 54:05 The All England Club as an extension of the British government 56:20 Novak’s new tennys text buddy 58:55 The men get messy: ADF, Rafa, Nick & Stefanos