Australian Open: Only sensible, dismal sods can't appreciate extremes

By Darren Kane
Updated January 17 2015 - 3:18am, first published January 16 2015 - 7:23pm
Savage beauty: Rafa Nadal has a violent elegance on court Photo: Joe Armao
Savage beauty: Rafa Nadal has a violent elegance on court Photo: Joe Armao
Savage beauty: Rafa Nadal has a violent elegance on court Photo: Joe Armao
Savage beauty: Rafa Nadal has a violent elegance on court Photo: Joe Armao
Savage beauty: Rafa Nadal has a violent elegance on court Photo: Joe Armao
Savage beauty: Rafa Nadal has a violent elegance on court Photo: Joe Armao
Savage beauty: Rafa Nadal has a violent elegance on court Photo: Joe Armao
Savage beauty: Rafa Nadal has a violent elegance on court Photo: Joe Armao

It's a sport of considerable extremes, tennis. Suave, yet often brutal. Far more cosmopolitan and nuanced than simply being a version of ping pong involving a tap dance on the table. The savagery of Rafael Nadal; the effortless, almost surgical precision of Roger Federer; the unorthodox, impossible-to-imitate service action of John McEnroe, who would serve standing with his back to his opponent.

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