The Body Serve

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Tennis podcast featuring casual, semi-respectable conversations about the ATP & WTA.

The Body Serve Tennis Podcast


    • May 6, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • every other week NEW EPISODES
    • 1h 8m AVG DURATION
    • 379 EPISODES

    4.7 from 229 ratings Listeners of The Body Serve that love the show mention: james and jonathan, jonathan and james, best tennis podcast, tennis fans, tennis podcasts, wta and atp, justin polar opposites podcast, phobias, favorite tennis, clap clap, tours, serena, gender, happenings, court, nuanced, body, sexual, race, results.


    Ivy Insights

    The Body Serve podcast is a standout in the world of tennis podcasts. With hosts Jonathan and James offering insightful analysis, unique perspectives, and a touch of humor, this podcast is a must-listen for any tennis fan. What sets it apart from other podcasts is its ability to delve into the social and cultural aspects of tennis, discussing topics such as gender equality and LGBTQ+ issues within the sport. The hosts' chemistry is evident, making listeners feel like they're part of the conversation with close friends.

    One of the best aspects of The Body Serve podcast is its balanced analysis and thoughtful approach to discussing controversial topics. Whether it's dissecting the Serena Williams vs Naomi Osaka controversy or exploring the legal aspects of transgender inclusion in sports, Jonathan and James provide a sensitive and nuanced perspective that takes into account various viewpoints. As licensed attorneys themselves, their insights into legal matters are particularly astute.

    However, one potential downside of this podcast could be its focus on pop culture references that may not resonate with all listeners. While these references add humor and entertainment value for some, they might be lost on those who are not familiar with certain TV shows or celebrities mentioned. Additionally, some listeners might prefer a more straightforward recap of tennis results without extensive discussions on social issues.

    In conclusion, The Body Serve podcast stands out as an entertaining and informative source for tennis fans. With its diverse range of topics covered, balanced analysis, and engaging hosts, it provides an enjoyable listening experience. Whether you're interested in tennis history, current events in the sport, or discussions on broader societal issues related to tennis, this podcast has something to offer.



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    Latest episodes from The Body Serve

    This Sport Is Brutal

    Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2025 55:21


    Madrid ends with Aryna Sabalenka further extending her lead as number one, Casper Ruud grabbing his first Masters, and a lot of discourse around Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff, and Naomi Osaka. We've got updates on: Jannik Sinner's hero's welcome in Rome, Bianca Andreescu, Anastasija Sevastova, Tyra Grant, and more. We do a quick review of the strange but sometimes interesting Alcaraz Netflix documentary before wrapping the episode with a dive into the Max Purcell doping suspension, which is way more fascinating than he first let on.  Theme music courtesy of Oleg Fedak from Pixabay 01:45 Penko being Penko 5:05 Madrid: the Iga discourse  9:45 Sabalenka d. Gauff to win Madrid, joins the 11,000 points club  13:40 Casper wins his first Masters 1000 20:20 Osaka drops a level and wins!  23:15 Jannik, the ironic vir triumphalis, returns to Rome 26:15 Updates on Andreescu, Sevastova 30:20 The perplexing Alcaraz Netflix doc 40:00 Is Venus quiet quitting (or did she already)? 43:05 The Max Purcell doping case gets a lot more interesting

    Hateration, Holgeration In This Dove Soiree

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 64:01


    Clay season is underway, and we've seen a Runeaissance, a re-Alcarization, a Penkopalypse even. Stuttgart -- always reliable -- brought a stunning quarterfinal lineup and a surprise winner, while Holger reminded the class that there's still tons of time to fulfill his promise. There's much tennis business to talk about, including the first hearing in the PTPA antitrust suit and Opelka's testimony; Lesia Tsurenko's lawsuit against the WTA and Steve Simon; and a somewhat voyeuristic ITIA press release. Plus, Dart's out of left field comment, Shelly Ann clearing the field, and wondering what happened in that Met Gala bathroom meeting. Theme music courtesy of Oleg Fedak from Pixabay 0:40 Housekeeping: catching a case, getting postcards out 4:50 Holger's back; Alcaraz wins Monte Carlo, returns briefly to #2 15:45 Stuttgart moves like a 1000-level bitch  22:15 Another spectator calls out That Guy, this time in Germany 26:50 PTPA gets their first hearing, Opelka testifies 35:00 Harriet why?!   37:00 Serena on Jannik and … Maria? 42:20 I always feel like somebody's watching me  45:35 Lesia Tsurenko sues the WTA 56:25 Our other sporting interests: Shelly Ann & Rory

    Futility

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2025 47:26


    Yes, it's been a minute, but we're back to catch up on Monte Carlo, Charleston, and sadly yes, all the way back to Miami. The top men have utterly failed to capitalize on Sinner's mandatory vacation, while on the women's side, Sabalenka extends her rankings lead and Pegula snatches #3 with her strong start to the year. We've also got: Kasatkina's move to Australia, the top WTA and ATP players sending a letter to the Slams a few weeks after the PTPA lawsuit, a few listener questions, and more.  1:10 Monte Carlo updates: why, Grigor, why? 9:10 Charleston results 14:20 Miami: Eala stuns Iga, Aryna extends her lead 25:30 Don't count your chickens before they hatch  28:20 Dasha Kasatkina is now representing Australia  31:00 The players do love an epistle  37:20 Coaching and baby news 40:35 A listener question

    Vibes Cartel

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2025 67:20


    This week, we're diving into the antitrust lawsuit brought by the PTPA against the tennis ‘cartel.' The wide-ranging complaint takes aim at prize money, scheduling, ranking points, anti-doping, and what they broadly view as anticompetitive and illegal activity by the tennis governing bodies. What does the PTPA hope to gain? Which parts make sense, and which leave us with some skepticism? Is unionization a goal, and if so, is it even possible? After spending most of the episode breaking down the major issues in the lawsuit, we hop over to Miami, where all 4 male Indian Wells semifinalists have crashed out, Rafa Nadal Academy grads are making waves, and Djokovic is hobnobbing with the Establishment. 0:55 PTPA files an antitrust lawsuit in three countries - first up, yes we know it doesn't technically matter, but why these plaintiffs? 06:55 What are the allegations? 24:15 What is the desired outcome? 28:05 Is unionization possible (and is it even a goal)? 36:10 What works and what doesn't 40:05 The parallels with LIV Golf 46:00 Crashing out in Miami  55:00 You are the company you keep

    Waste Management

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 66:08


    Well, well, well, what do we have here? Have we entered the Mirra era? If you know us, you know we're not saying that, we just wanted to say Mirra era. Andreeva fashioned a Keys-esque run to the title in the desert, beating the same four players Madison did to win the AO from the fourth round onward...in the same order! We talk about Iga, we talk about Jack, and we field some more listener questions on TBS 375 02:15 The Mirra Era 12:19 The Conchita Effect 17:01 What's up with Iga? 26:28 Jack Draper arrives 37:34 Taking a question about Larry Ellison … 46:32 Finding joy in tennis when things outside of tennis are generally terrible  51:22 If tennis were played on only one surface, which would you keep? 53:38 RHOP and other Bravo musings 

    Indian Hells

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 59:22


    We're back to a regular schedule, and up first it's week one of Indian Wells: Nick and Novak struggling with injury and form, That Guy simply struggling to avoid the #1 ranking. We chat about the draw, the WTA's new maternity leave benefits program, plus Danielle Collins' clothing collab and the impetus behind it. Later on we get into some fun listener questions, with subjects as diverse as cricket, gospel music, the Knicks, and public transportation.   03:15 Question from @lisacrispin on Bluesky: how long does it take to produce each episode? 08:35 Nick's wrist injury 12:50 Dutch tennis rolls over Novak and That Guy   17:25 Danielle Collins' merch drop 24:55 IW draw recap 29:15 WTA announces maternity leave benefits program funded by PIF 33:55 How are we feeling about the Knicks? (question from @dabigjoker on Bluesky) 38:00 Jonathan picks his test cricket XI from tennis players (question from @edwardpolsen) 46:55 Public transit fun (@irascibly)  49:25 Since it's Oscars season, what actors could you see playing various players in imaginary biopics? (@lobjan)  54:45 And finally, what's with our nickname for Kimberly Birrell? (@tomcharles2710)

    Sh*t's Creek

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2025 62:05


    February ends with Andreeva's arrival, players getting flewed out by Jessie Pegula, Stef's mystery racquet saving his career, and Andrey live laugh loving in Doha (but in all seriousness, happy for him!). We're also covering the WTA's anti-purple rebrand alongside Billie Jean King's “tear it all down” approach, Venus Williams' momentary wild card to Indian Wells, and Serena coming to our town with the WNBA! 1:20 My favorite season: awards 5:25 Stef's boat  8:35 Something rotten in the state of Guerrero 15:35 Other results: Navarro, Djere, and Peggy's private plane 20:30 Rublev wins Doha, opens up about learning to be kind to himself 23:40 Andreeva arrives as a genuine teen prodigy  28:00 Who jumped out the gate in 2025? 32:20 Venus is back! Oh wait, no, she's giving a talk in Denmark! 36:25 Indian Wells surface change - let's wait and see, ok? 38:40 The WTA rebrand: no more charity language and no. more. purple.  54:45 The WNBA (and Serena!) are coming to Toronto

    Stay In Your Lane

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2025 67:01


    Tennis, stop. Give us a minute, my God. The chaotic February schedule gives us a first-time 1000 title winner (Anisimova), a first-time ATP titlist (Fonseca), Ostapenko's fifth unanswered defeat of Swiatek, and Bencic winning a big title soon after her return from maternity leave. While trying to keep track of tennis results, we also saw the resolution of the Sinner's WADA appeal, the conclusion of the WTA's investigation into Stefano Vukov, and Simona Halep's retirement.  01:40 Anisimova wins Doha, Penko turns her year around 5:35 Fonseca's first title, Schwartzman's swan song, and will the South American swing go hardcourt? 11:40 Alejandro, por qué??? 15:10 Last week: Bencic, Alcaraz, Shapo 19:40 The Sinner Agreement 31:05 US Open makes mixed doubles a glorified exhibition 40:55 Compton's most famous daughter 47:05 Rybakina's coach Vukov suspended for a year  53:30 Simona Halep retires 62:20 We don't need straight men's takes on which men are hot

    Intent Intent Intent Doesn't Exist

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025 44:41


    Madison Keys has been a major champion for over a week now! This episode isn't really about that, but it bears repeating. Checking in on tennis in February, we've got Felix winning yet another indoor title, Mertens and Alexandrova making up for somewhat disappointing Australian Opens, and a whole heap of man drama at Davis Cup, featuring one of the only head-on collisions you'll see in tennis and the current state of ATP umpiring. This episode covers lots of odds and ends including Petra's imminent return(!), more from the AO men's final protestor, Ymer's unretirement, and the US Open's expansion.  0:35 WTA titlists Mertens and Alexandrova; Felix wins his second title of the year 6:55 Davis Cup: Garin gets literally run over by Bergs 17:40 Certainly not while wearing that moustache 20:00 Mikael Ymer did the opposite of “break up with your [tennis], I'm bored”  20:55 Petra Kvitova is coming back, maple syrup magnate Vasek Pospisil is leaving 28:05 One more thing about Madi 34:20 Craig Tiley's comments on the AusOpen protestor are … lacking  39:35 The US Open's manspread 

    Truly Madi Deeply

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 66:31


    This was one of those rare finals weekends where pretty much everything we hoped for came true. A perennial fave of fans and her own coworkers, the one-time prodigy Madison Keys showed remarkable maturity and grit to win her first major title. She let go of the “need” to win a Slam, and then managed to defeat #2 Iga Swiatek and the 2-time defending champ #1 Aryna Sabalenka back-to-back. Jannik Sinner defended his title without facing a break point in the final. Tennis keeps trying to make his opponent happen, alas to no avail. Plus, we got cracker women's doubles matchups, Novak HIPAA-violating himself, and Sakkari attending the inauguration instead of winning tennis matches. 1:25 GoFundMe update: Thank you!!! 6:05 Once a tween prodigy, then a best-never-to-win, now a Slam winner 12:05 Madison said therapy works … can't argue with that  27:50 After a diversion, a few more notes on the women's draw 33:40 The ceaseless pushing, literal and figurative  38:00 “Australia believes Olya and Brenda” 46:45 Ben Shelton v. the media  53:05 Women's doubles: SMASH on the girls  62:25 Call me OptaAce because I've got stats 

    I Learned From The Best

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 64:47


    Just past the midway point of the 2025 Australian Open, the big favorites are mostly still here; a few NextGenners made a big splash in week one, including Joao Fonseca and the episode namesake Learner Tien. We'll take you through the draw, the first week highlights, the upsets, and the reverse hex I put on Alejandro ;)  As always, we spend a lot of time with all the extra stuff happening on top of the tennis: coaching pods, the Danielle Collins mini-controversy, Djokovic's ‘boycott,' Nick's non-event, and a few notes on commentary. 1:55 The first week upsets (aka James was wrong about pretty much everything) 12:00 How the faves are doing? Monfils, Coco, Alejandro (you're welcome) 24:15 The quarters and how we got here  30:15 He came for the nepo baby and that was the last straw 33:30 Coaching pods! (At least they're not mic'd) 38:50 The Danielle Collins (and Colleen?!) Fund 46:05 WADA will not appeal Swiatek's case 50:30 Tony Jones gave Novak a grievance. Thanks a lot, Tony 55:05 Erin Routliffe with the quote of the tournament 57:25 The kits: Coco's is a hit, but the Nike spaghetti straps … please 

    Mercury Rising: Australian Open Preview

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2025 65:30


    And just like that, the 2025 Australian Open is nearly underway. It's the 40th major we've covered as a podcast, and our draw previews are still as prediction-free as always. We touch on a few of the themes to watch out for in Melbourne – Sinner's emotional state, Rybakina's coaching situation, Novak as #7 seed and poisonee – but mostly this is a lighthearted preview with draw breakdowns and our most intriguing first rounds.  GoFundMe: help fund our 2025 season! 3:15 Stories to follow: heavy metals, jumping ants 13:50 Comebacks and withdrawals 18:50 Women's draw analysis: a tough one for Coco 27:40 Women's bottom half: will Iga reverse her luck in Australia? 38:05 Men's draw analysis: the top tier and the middlemen 54:50 Men's bottom half: Djokovic as a #7 seed sounds wrong

    Obsessed

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 66:57


    Welcome to season 11 of The Body Serve! We're catching you up on the barely existent off-season, including the most important Joaos, Max Purcell turning himself in, and Jenson Broosky's brave statement about autism. Even though one of us rejects any “2025” tennis that occurs before January 1, 2025, we talk through the season's early results, including the United Cup fracas, the Opelka and Nishikori comebacks, and the shifting Big 4 allegiances due to the Murravic pairing. We also take on the decidedly more serious situation with Elena Rybakina's former and would-be current coach, Stefano Vukov, who is currently under investigation by the WTA. Finally, we end with our 2025 breakout picks and a game that James was entirely unprepared for. Happy 2025! 1:05 GoFundMe update 4:05 First week results: Reilly, Kei, the pairing from hell, plus the top tier of the WTA smashes their first week 14:00 United Cup: the “drama” is honestly not that serious 23:30 Rybakina, Vukov, WTA safeguarding, and the childishness of “I told you so” 31:25 Max Purcell turns himself in for an anti-doping oopsie 35:55 Kyrgios' obsession + Osaka's allegiance to him (aka: I knew things would get rocky when he came for the nepo baby) 40:45 Jenson Brooksby tells the world that he has autism spectrum disorder 44:50 The Year of the Joao: Reis da Silva comes out as gay + Fonseca wins Next Gen Finals 50:15 Our breakout picks for 2025 54:50 James plays a game! Play along at home  

    Adiós a Todos

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2024 78:27


    We never knew how much we'd miss “hola a todos” until it turned into an adiós. Rafael Nadal Parera ended his tennis career at this year's Davis Cup, leaving with with 22 major singles titles, a Career Golden Slam, every clay record you can think of, and a litany of quotable moments. We've been Rafa fans since the early days, when they said he was a dirtballer whose body would force him into retirement in his 30s. But it turned out Rafa was nothing if not adaptable -- a rational thinker whose love for the game made him a global superstar and helped build two of the sport's most enduring rivalries. In this episode, we're less interested in a chronological retelling of his career than complicating some of the cliches about him and talking about our favorite moments, Rafa's inimitable Rafa-isms, and what made Nadal an athlete like no other.     1:55 How we became fans 4:45 It's not about stats, but here are some stats 10:00 Adaptability: the key to understanding Rafa as an athlete? 12:55 A quick career recap - the notable eras 32:35 Rafa as sufferer  37:30 Fedal & Rafole: the cliches eventually fell away 43:45 Rafa as sex symbol  52:05 (Not) talking about the GOAT conversation 62:25 Our favorite Rafa moments: the 2022 Australian Open was a gift 65:40 Rafa-isms : if if if …

    Sinners and Ain'ts: 2024 ATP Wrap

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 63:02


    Finally our 2024 season is coming to a close! Although bonus December content is coming soon, we finish regular coverage by wrapping the ATP season: it was basically the proof that Jannik Sinner's late-2023 rise was for real, and that he and Carlos have taken the reins of the (mostly) post-Big 4 ATP. Just like the women's wrap, we'll take you through the events of the 2024 season, evaluate our picks for 2024 breakout players, and choose our ATP Award winners. We finish up with your memorable/funny/enraging moments (“do you want to change the lady?,” Indian Wells bee attack) and the many players saying goodbye to the sport.  GoFundMe   3:10 Where were we at the beginning of 2024? 10:30 Starting in Australia: Sinner risen 16:30 Clay: Rafa's brief return, Watergate, and Carlos' apology-fist pump-championship pipeline 22:20 Channel Slam and Novak's white whale 29:20 Rafa's retirement at Davis Cup 37:55 Off-court “drama”  41:55 Our 2024 breakout players + thoughts on the ATP Awards 50:00 What will you remember? Bees. 53:25 Moments that pissed you off / made you laugh (sometimes both) 57:55 A ton of retirements this year, even beyond the big names

    Receipts! Proof! Timeline! Screenshots!

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2024 49:45


    We were soooo close to wrapping this season, but we'll always change the schedule for a doping story. The news of Iga Swiatek testing positive for a banned substance provoked shock, confusion, and even resignation among tennis watchers who are, by the day, becoming more versed on the fine details of doping cases. Our immediate questions were: Is the story plausible? Why is the suspension broken into pieces? When should news like this be made public? As always, we like to dive into the report itself, making sure we've got the facts straight before offering any hot takes. Later, we try to answer a few of our own questions, touching on player reactions and the danger of comparing one case to another.  1:35 GoFundMe Update 3:25 Iga Swiatek tests positive for trimetazidine in Cincinnati, gets a 1-month non-consecutive suspension 9:05 A timeline to make sense of things 13:10 Iga's team sends a boatload of evidence to the ITIA 17:30 What's the difference between No Fault or Negligence and No Significant Fault of Negligence? 31:30 Public disclosure: balancing a player's privacy with building transparency and trust  36:05 Tara Moore has a more legitimate beef than most  42:30 Simona said this case is identical to hers (it is not)  

    Bookends: 2024 WTA Wrap

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 69:10


    This year in women's tennis, the top tier took further steps to entrench themselves but the WTA retained its signature depth. Sabalenka, Swiatek, and surprise – Krejcikova – added majors to their hauls; Paolini and Zheng broke out in a big way; and Gauff managed to rewrite her season in the fall. We'll take you through the highlights, the comebacks, the ‘remember whens,' and moments both infuriating and hilarious. As usual, we also choose our WTA Award winners and do a self-assessment on our 2024 WTA breakout picks. Thanks for a great WTA season! 0:55 Launching our crowdfunding campaign! 3:00 The season's major themes: Steadiness at the top (+ Babs!), the Zheng and Paolini breakthroughs, Coco's two seasons, and many comebacks of varying success 12:20 Picture it: Australia, January 2024 17:20 Danielle makes a career-best run, Iga dominates clay 26:25 Babs snatches Wimbledon, Zheng ascendant 33:20 Aryna bookends her year at the US Open 38:30 Our choices for the 2024 WTA Awards 44:10 How did our 2024 breakout picks do? 47:55 Your most memorable moments: our listeners love Jasmine 50:55 Moments that pissed you off and moments that made you laugh: Babs and Qinwen keeping the girlies entertained   64:35 Farewells and farewells for now

    Get a Grip(MD)

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 62:35


    Coco writes a new story to end her year -- beating the bad season allegations, as she said -- by taking out Swiatek, Sabalenka, and finally Zheng Qinwen to win the WTA Finals. (Barbie K tried to shake the table, as usual.) In Turin, Jannik Sinner showed that anything you can do, he can do better. He won his first year-end title and notched a 70-win season, the first since 2016. After that, we talk about the retirement of legendary umpire Carlos Bernardes, Frances Tiafoe's big fine, Jon Wertheim's hot mic incident, and more. 0:30 Housekeeping: a transition to BlueSky? 6:40 Coco beats the bad season allegations! 19:55 Barbora Krejcikova will f*** it up if you invite her (respectfully) 24:45 ATP Finals: starting with the group photo 29:55 Nice job, Taylor! But Sinner does it better 41:35 #NameTheTennisPlayer is back! 45:15 Umpire Carlos Bernardes retires from tennis 48:00 Wertheim's hot mic moment  53:15 Tiafoe fined $120,000 for tirade 

    And Another Thing

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2024 62:20


    The top women descend upon Riyadh, the photoshoot is a smash, and #1 Sabalenka sails into the semis. There are still questions around this business decision, and players have varying success in answering them. Paris, as always, suffers from late-season malaise, and the ATP Finals qualifiers start to firm up (almost), but we wonder about the value of grinding it out this late in the season. Plus, lot of et ceteras, including: Dev Patel is the next Zendaya(!), and off-court coaching is no longer a trial but still a tribulation (heh).  0:30 And another thing about Sinner 2:55 Some meta-commentary on the show and getting older and less stan-oriented  8:15 The WTA Finals looks: great job everybody! 16:10 Players answer inevitable questions on Saudi Arabia, some better than others 26:35 If a tree falls in Paris 38:10 ATP Finals qualifications: not many scenarios are left 44:55 WTA results: Shnaider wins #4 of the year and Somnez enters the top 100  47:05 Sloane on protecting your peace 52:20 Et ceteras: Diego Forlan to play pro tennis, the incomparable Dev Patel to make a tennis movie 57:20 Off-court coaching is now the law

    Washed

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 57:31


    These October episodes are always all over the place. The tours are sputtering toward a finish as players are vying for the final spots in the year-end tournaments or securing their ranking for next season. We talk about the Six Kings Slam, its strange and corny happenings, and the Saudi efforts to diversify their economy with sports and entertainment. We go through some recent results -- Dasha back in the top 10! -- plus we discuss the Hall of Fame vote that inducted Sharapova, peruse the slightly confusing WTA ranking rules, and honor Dominic Thiem's great career.  1:00 Does Saudi Arabia even need to sportswash at this point?  12:20 Results: Stan isn't going, Dasha back at #9, second titles for Draper and Mpetshi  18:35 What's left this season, and who's in the running for an ATP Finals spot? 25:15 Danielle Collins is in fact not retiring this year 31:20 Sharapova inducted into the Hall of Fame: a test for voters  42:45 Dominic Thiem retires 48:10 Aryna back at #1: arguments over ranking math

    Million Dollar Babies

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 64:02


    Autumn is supposed to be relatively quiet in tennis, no? Well, in the past week or so, Rafa announced his retirement, CAS released the full decision on Simona Halep's doping case, WADA appealed Jannik Sinner's No Fault or Negligence ruling to CAS, and one of the most successful coaching pairings of the decade ended. We'll take you through some key points of the Halep case, including how and why her suspension was so drastically reduced, and some learnings that might help us better understand the Sinner case. We cover the wave of cranky baby behavior in Shanghai, including Frances' outburst and how it reads in comparison to similar behavior from his colleagues. Plus, Sabalenka nears no. 1 again, Coco resets, and why the continued whispers about Zheng's personality aren't sitting right with us. 2:05 Rafa says ‘Adiós a todos' 8:20 CAS finally releases the full decision on the Halep case 23:05 WADA appeals the Sinner decision - what have we learned from the Halep case and others? 32:15 It's pissy cranky season 40:50 A few WTA players play stupid games, win stupid prizes  43:55 Why is Qinwen becoming public enemy no. 1?  52:30 Coco said “what crisis?” 55:25 Iga splits with Wiktorowski

    In the Arena

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2024 68:32


    Welcome to part two of our mailbag! We're kicking things off with our review of Serena in the Arena (at long last). We can't help but compare some of the things we've said about Serena's career over the years with how Serena described those events in her own words. Like you all, we noticed a few notable omissions from the series, and a few things that were conveniently glossed over. Spoiler: we enjoyed it. We spend the rest of the episodes sifting through the remainder of your submissions. Hope y'all enjoy!  00:52 Serena in the Arena, at last  22:54 How would we schedule the tennis calendar?     35:02 James grinds his Madrid axe, goes to bat for USO Series 40:25 Giving some grace to non-English speakers in pressers 45:47 The tennis opinion we disagree on most 52:51 Ramblings on the where we see the sport in the next few years 59:30 The prerequisite update on our Bravo TV watching habits

    Gatekeeping Tennis

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2024 72:22


    Tennis is a famously exclusive sport. So which forces and institutions determine who gets access? Who's guarding the gates, and what's the criteria for entry? In this episode, which is co-produced by Sheriece Matias Dick, we start to explore the barriers to entering tennis, the various paths into the sport, and how the gatekeeping institutions of tennis have jockeyed for power through the profound economic and cultural changes of the past 140 years. After exploring a few players' journeys into pro tennis, we look into the founding ethos of the sport -- “gentlemanly amateurism” -- and how that obsession with status permeated the sport even as it became more accessible to working class people. Finally, we land in the present day, where the seat of power has shifted from aristocratic patrons to the corporate sponsor, with their own standards of conduct, inclusion, and ‘class.' 0:30 What is gatekeeping and how does it relate to tennis? 9:40 Various routes to becoming a pro tennis player 12:25 Comparing Tiafoe and Fritz 23:05 Tennis' “working class champions”: various paths to the pro level 30:20 The financial barriers for kids entering tennis 36:50 Tennis as an activity for the leisure class 41:45 Code of etiquette: a surprisingly durable way to police the gate and perform class status  48:30 The Open Era democratizes tennis, sort of 51:45 The new tennis economy: broadcasting rights, sponsorships, and the invention of the branded tennis celebrity 57:35 Connors, McEnroe, and their very American “class struggle” 65:00 From patron to sponsor

    It's Not Right But It's OK

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2024 56:55


    It's the first day of fall, the players are burnt out, and instead of following Laver Cup we're doing a mailbag. Your questions gave us enough to yap about over two separate episodes, which we'll release over the next few weeks in addition to something else we've been cooking. We talk about Naomi's surprising coaching changeup; trying to find joy in a sport after it's presented you a tough ethical dilemma; Coco and Brad's split; our favorite players who never really jumped off; and a lot more. 01:55 Naomi's coaching change 08:40 ‘Coco crisis' or out of control expectations? 14:30 How would you conduct your social media profiles if you were a famous tennis player? 20:30 Facing an ethical dilemma in following men's tennis 35:05 Vee as coach? 41:45 Our walk-out music  44:50 Who are some players late in their careers who you thought would break into the top but never really did? Who were you excited to follow but they didn't reach their full potential?

    The Sins of Our Fathers

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2024 90:41


    The final major of the year is over and the champions are the same as in January: Aryna Sabalenka stakes her claim as hardcourt queen while Jannik Sinner dominates mere days after being cleared in an anti-doping case. We recap some of our highlights from week two, which had a ton of potential but didn't deliver many (any?) classics. We dig into why disliking billionaires is actually totally fine; conflicts of interest and their sometimes humorous results; online mean girl/mean boy behavior from some famous commentators; and more observations from the site. We finish up with a look at commentator Nick Kyrgios and the complacency that led broadcasters, journalists, and commentators to excuse his misogyny; plus the ongoing lawsuit over Ben Rothenberg's reporting on the Zverev abuse allegations.       0:35 Not the most brilliant three weeks of tennis in history but OK! 3:00 The women's final was fun! Aryna Sabalenka bookends her year with hardcourt Slams 7:35 Billionaires, they're just like us! 14:45 Notable week two matches: Navarro d. Badosa; Zheng d. Vekic; Aryna evolving into the most consistent Slam player on tour 19:00 Rennae cooks coach/commentator Brad Gilbert on air, and why that's totally fine  26:55 An unseasoned final  30:50 The American narrative + Frances Tiafoe getting so close again 44:50 Penko a first-time Slam doubles winner; Taylor/Katka, Mladenovic/Zhang, D. Young 52:10 “Little grim reapers” and a few more observations from the grounds 63:40 ESPN commentators discover player name pronunciations and immediately get mean about it 71:10 Nick Kyrgios, misogyny, and the insider hypocrisy that protects him 79:45 Ben Rothenberg appeals a lawsuit from Alexander Zverev + its broader implications for journalism

    Cornrow USO

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2024 81:16


    Jonathan is back from New York after attending the first three days of the US Open. James quizzes him on the record crowds, the heat, where to find the frozen Honey Deuce, the tennis, and his advice for navigating the grounds. We chat about Naomi's divisive kit, Adidas' misstep, and of course the cornrow epidemic. Right, and there was tennis being played, too – Novak & Carlos crash out, the men's draw could see a real breakthrough (or not), and Paolini and Gauff win for Slam consistency this year.    1:50 The crowds: eased by free movement during matches 11:10 Experiences from the grounds: the heat, Taylor Townsend, Ngounoue/Tien 19:55 Searching for the frozen Honey Deuce 28:55 A Manhattan girlie now  30:55 It's called fashion: Ruffles and bows 39:50 The screaming follicles 42:50 First week highlights: Tiafoe d. Shelton, Muchova reminds everyone what she can do 54:30 Alcaraz and Djokovic both out before the second week 60:20 Women's draw chugs along as top seeds remain 72:37 Men's draw: even with the upheaval, the title could still go to the world #1

    Multiple Things: US Open Preview

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2024 71:33


    The US Open is around the corner, but you know what we really want to talk about: the news of Jannik Sinner's positive doping tests, the lifted suspensions, and the hearing that cleared his name five months later, all before we heard a single peep on the subject. We take you through the facts of the case, the questions around transparency and the perception of fairness, and the privilege of having the means to mount a case and a spokesperson like Darren Cahill on your side. We end with our US Open draw previews: Sabalenka in great position, OsakaPenko, a soft landing for Novak, a tricky quarter for Carlos and a test for Iga. 2:25 But first, the Cincy results 4:10 Yevgeny, calm down 7:05 Frances' middle finger 11:05 Sinner v. ITIA: the facts 23:10 What does No Fault or Negligence mean? 33:30 “One-billionth of a gram” + the privilege of great PR 47:50 Women's draw preview: a quartet of cursed women's 1st rounds 59:25 Men's draw preview: Jannik, Carlos, and Daniil will have to battle it out on the top half

    Pon De Replay

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2024 71:26


    We asked for questions and you sent us so many great ones, many of which cover some of the major topics o' the day, including the recent rule enforcement controversies and the groundswell of support for video replay. (Basically, video replay needs to happen and it will happen, but it won't fix everything!) Beyond just the topical, we've got Olympics memories, favorite cake, a few great Coco questions, and the contradiction of having fewer and fewer opinions in a hot take-driven medium. Let's have some fun before the US Open gets underway next week! 01:30 Which non-Slam event would you have liked to attend?  06:30 Jamaican sprinting and our all-time dream 4x100 relay team 12:20 “What is the most objectively polarizing tennis topic that you have zero opinion on?” 20:25 Video replay: yes, we need it but it won't fix everything 28:20 The FAA-Draper incident that launched a thousand opinions 38:40 Cleansing the palate from the above question … Favorite cake and favorite episodes (of our own) 42:00 The WTA matching ATP's prize money: a moving target? 48:00 Toronto vs Cincinnati 52:00 “Coco crisis” or just alarmism? 62:05 WAGs and HABs 67:00 Favorite Olympics moments

    Daddy Lessons

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2024 76:12


    Since we last spoke, the entire Olympic tennis tournament and the Canadian Open came and went. Our coverage isn't comprehensive but more of a riff on the most interesting bits to us. We devote a good chunk of time to the tennis world's incursions into the “gender controversy” involving Olympic gold medalist Imane Khelif, including ugly, often defamatory statements by tennis legends and one current player (the latter being the only one to retract). We bounce over to Canada for some disjointed thoughts on the National Bank Open and finally touch on the end of an era, the dissolution of the stormy Stefanos-Apostolos working relationship.    01:15 The Jamaican Olympic tragedy 11:00 Tennis at the Olympics: Novak, Zheng, Nadalcaraz  23:00 The myth of the badly behaved American trio (it's not a trio) 33:25 Andy Murray's last dance 34:54 Tennis covers itself in shame during the Imane Khelif “gender controversy” 51:35 Policing women's bodies is not liberation, it's more of the same 56:25 Random Canadian Open thoughts  67:30 Shapovalov defaulted 70:35 Stef and Dad break up

    GOATs on a Boat (Cheek to Cheek)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2024 55:12


    We're celebrating our 350th episode - thanks to all of you for sticking around and pushing us forward for all these years! On this episode, we're sharing thoughts on the Olympics opening ceremony and the spotlight on tennis royalty; the Olympics tennis draws, rocked by withdrawals and the unique Olympic qualification rules; and the post-Wimbledon clay/grass season. Rafa reached the Bastad final plus, in Hamburg, Arthur Fils matched That Guy's energy, saved 21/22 break points, and snatched the title in front of a hostile crowd (and opponent). 0:30 A milestone! 3:15 Back on clay: Shnaider's very good year, Rafa plays a few epics in Bastad 9:40 Newport and the ATP's hygiene problem 19:10 Hamburg: underarm serves and the tears of a clown 26:50 Tennis Channel debuts a Zverev brother podcast … because why wouldn't they 28:55 Update from Halep, but where is the CAS report? 31:30 Olympics opening ceremony: Booty siblings together again! 45:00 Olympic tennis: retirement fatigue + late withdrawals are wreaking havoc on the already weird draws

    I Love Good News! Wimbledon Wrap

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 62:26


    So rarely does a championship weekend feel this great. The widely adored Babs Krejcikova has done it again, this time winning the Wimbledon title amidst an injury-plagued year. It's her 12th major title across all disciplines. Carlos Alcaraz is now the youngest male Channel Slam winner, sweeping past 7-time champion Djokovic in a rematch of last year's final. In more good news, Taylor Townsend claims her first major title and Sinikova and Hsieh add to their impressive resumes. Plus, we chat about some extraneous stuff, as usual, like Medvedev's near-default, Djokovic's lecture to the crowd, and the “4 the girls” controversy.  2:55 This time, the tougher roads resulted in titles 7:40 Babs is a big match player 24:00 The men's tournament: where's the rest of the field? 26:50 Men's final: all Carlos 37:25 Fritz, Riddle, and That Guy: 4 the girls? 44:55 I know all the tricks 53:15 Medvedev narrowly avoids a default in the semis 56:50 Doubles: Townsend is now a Slam winner! Siniakova & Hsieh add to their historic hauls

    Eternal Sunshine of the Astonished Mind

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2024 67:31


    We made it to Middle Sunday at Wimbledon! (Well, not all of us.) The bottom half of the women's draw is guaranteed to see a surprising finalist; in the top half, slightly more order prevails, even after the dismissals of Swiatek and Jabeur. The men's draw is proceeding mostly as expected on the top half, while the bottom has seen the rapid rise of Perricard, the precarious state of Djokovic's repaired knee, and a slightly spicy beef between Taylor Fritz and Arthur Rinderknech. We also witnessed the last of Andy Murray at Wimbledon, featuring a moving tribute, a singles withdrawal, and mother Judy getting into a self-inflicted internet scrape. 1:00 Early upsets set up a very interesting and unexpected women's bottom half 10:10 Navarro knocks out Gauff  18:55 Iga and Ons out within 20 minutes of each other  29:50 The return of Caroline Wozniacki, Esq. 35:50 Andy Murray's last dance at Wimbledon 41:10 AstonishGate 47:25 Stefanos was just here for the *filmmaking*, not the tradwife content 50:40 Have a nice flight home  53:25 Men's results: top half going to form, bottom's a little messy

    Wimbledon Sister

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2024 58:29


    The year's third major is upon us as we face the first Williams-less Wimbledon in 28 years . Novak is back from knee surgery and sheltered from world #1 Sinner and defending champion Alcaraz, who share a balanced but tricky top half. Iga's draw has done her no favors, but some of the grass stalwarts are questionable, including Rybakina, Vondrousova, and the injured Sabalenka. And buckle up, because early on we'll be treated to the Your Behavior Is Terrible classic, featuring Steve Carell and Lil' Wayne's favorite tennis player. 0:35 The end of the Williams Wimbledon Era 3:20 This week's results: Dasha, Shnaider, Tabilo, T. Fritz 9:20 Injury updates: Andy Murray intent on playing, Sabalenka dealing with shoulder problem 20:00 Men's draw: Sinner's tough draw, a potential Paul Rudd matchup  32:15 Men's bottom half: Djokovic, Hubert, de Minaur + a messy third quarter  39:35 Women's draw: Iga in peril or does the draw not matter?  50:15 Women's bottom half hinges on Sabalenka's health

    This Is Going to Ruin the Tour

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2024 49:44


    Grass season is well underway -- almost over, actually -- and we've got British players coming out of hibernation, a tennis power couple winning again, the new ATP #1 switching surfaces with ease, and basically all the top WTA grass contenders out with injury or illness in Berlin. Elsewhere, Carlos is unhappy with the ATP's latest rule experiment and a commentator is unhappy with a problem he just made up. We also cover Tsitsipas' bizarre tradwife posting and the Olympic qualifications; and finally, it wouldn't be a Slam without wild card drama. 1:55 Grass titlists: Draper, tennis' actual power couple, and another birthday humiliation 7:10 FOMO in Berlin until all those retirements … 12:30 Castle's totally unprovoked rant on pronunciation 14:10 Why are you messing with the shot clock rules during an actual tournament? 17:40 Unfortunately yes, we're still talking about wild cards  22:20 A bunch of Americans say thank you, next to Olympics  29:25 Andy Murray not out yet  34:00 Tsitsipas shares weird tradwife fantasy 41:45 Thoughts on the Federer documentary

    Waiting to Exhale

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 71:44


    Iga Swiatek further cements her position as the highly feared queen of Roland Garros and Carlos Alcaraz completes a “Surface Slam” amid injury problems and less than ideal preparation. The years-long ordeal surrounding domestic violence allegations and criminal charges against Zverev has been resolved, at least legally, but the tennis community will continue to reckon with its comprehensive failure in their handling of it. We've also got doubles news, WTA CEO announcement, and more takeaways from the tournament like umpire headcams (did they get headcam premium pay?).   2:50 Alcaraz wins his first French title, that other guy loses another Slam final up 2 sets to 1 8:05 Zverev assault case has been settled 13:40 The sport has utterly failed in its handling of domestic violence  22:15 Carlos & Jannik in ascendance, Novak out with meniscus tear  32:55 Iga thoroughly dominates the field post-Naomi  41:20 Coco Gauff wins her first Slam doubles title - and Siniakova her 8th! 45:45 WTA announces a new CEO  47:00 Tournament et ceteras: first up, the umpire head cams 49:05 The Djokovic/Jockovic vowel shift  53:30 Danielle Collins addresses the incredulity about her impending retirement 61:10 PTPA announces additional funds raised for its commercial arm, Winners Alliance

    Teetotaled at Roland Garros

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 81:35


    It's been a rainy slog through the first week of Roland Garros. The weather has wreaked chaos on scheduling, the tournament banned alcohol on Philippe Chatrier because the fans didn't know how to act, and the night session has no women (but who would want it anyway?). We analyze the draw as it stands and take you through the highlights and lowlights: Rafa may or may not have played his last match here, Swiatek-Osaka put on a clinic, Djokovic's fire got lit at 2am on a Sunday, and Dimitrov completed his collection of Slam quarterfinals.  1:55 Did Rafa play his last match at Roland Garros? Not 100% 7:05 Zverev goes to court for intimate partner violence, his colleagues remain (at best) indifferent 12:35 Musetti awakens the Djokovic beast 21:15 Rublev is upset as his on-court behavior gets worse  27:00 Looking ahead to the men's quarters 32:20 Iga & Naomi throw in a classic, Naomi's performance inspires optimism 42:35 Upsets: Sakkari, Collins, Ostapenko 46:50 Looking ahead to the women's quarters 60:25 Rybakina vs the press: the brief journey from drama to indifference 68:00 Nonstop rain + weird scheduling = misery 72:50 Roland Garros enters its Prohibition era

    We Are In Paris

    Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2024 55:25


    Roland Garros approaches, and the women's draw has a heavy favorite in Iga Swiatek plus a few major contenders. In contrast, the men's tour seems in a temporary state of disarray, as Djokovic enters without momentum and Sinner and Alcaraz are dealing with injuries. What's worse, the 14-time champion, the (possibly) retiring Rafa Nadal, draws a man who starts his domestic violence trial days after their match. As usual, no predictions here but lots of chatter about this clay season and who's primed to show out. And what's a major without a little wild card drama?  0:50 Wild card drama is constant but a good chance to talk about maternity leave policy 9:00 Rafa draws That Guy 13:15 Men's draw analysis: what to expect from Djokovic and the walking wounded? 21:20 Men's draw: the tricky third quarter 28:05 Women's draw: it's Iga's world  35:40 Women's draw bottom half: opportunity knocks 47:00 Fedal goes mountaineering 

    Watergate

    Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 43:59


    Halfway through Rome and it's all peritonsillar abscesses and water bottles knocking down GOATs and Italian stars retiring and fleeing their home country amidst myriad legal problems. You know, the usual.  0:35 Andrey does not have angina 3:25 Djokovic gets hit in the head by a falling water bottle 9:45 Camila Giorgi retired and lamming it 18:55 Rafa says there's a tiny, tiny chance this isn't the end 23:35 Qinwen says no to drama 25:30 More retirement talk: Dominic and Diego 31:45 So how does one qualify for the Olympics? 38:35 How will we know if the extended Masters tournaments are successful?

    Doing The Best I Can With What I GOT

    Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2024 90:22


    Madrid stretched nearly two weeks and few of the top men survived without injury. Felix Auger-Aliassime landed in the final after three walkovers/retirements but it was a very ill Andrey Rublev who snatched the title. Iga Swiatek won Madrid for the first time (be scared). Aryna Sabalenka and Ons Jabeur provided lots of food for thought -- in very different ways -- on women's sports and continuing inequities. Plus, we're bringing you our thoughts on Luca Guadagnino's long awaited queer tennis drama Challengers (aka the crowning of Zendaya as a true movie star), and we answer some listener questions! 1:40 Women save the day (after Aryna steps in it) 14:30 More of Madrid women's draw shining bright 18:25 Ons Jabeur makes a statement about women's sports + Feliciano Lopez's change of tone 25:30 Never stay for your farewell ceremony 30:00 Shirtgate: the height of idgaf-ness  36:35 Men's draw ravaged by injuries but Andrey overcomes 45:55 Cornet is retiring, Tsitsidosa is breaking up 47:50 Our thoughts on Challengers 65:15 What's the first thing you'd change if you were in charge of the WTA/ATP merger? 73:45 Players who've taken us on journeys of like and dislike (or apathy or indifference or standom, etc.) … 

    Whatever Happens

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 73:18


    It's time to play catch-up with the early results of the European clay swing: Tsitsipas wins his 3rd Monte Carlo title, Casper takes revenge the following week in Barcelona, and Elena Rybakina slays Iga in Stuttgart for her third title of the year. We also talk about Rafa's return to tennis in Barcelona and Holger Rune's commitment to remaining messy on social media even after signing with IMG. In off-court stuff: Muguruza retires, the WTA announces their year-end championships in Saudi Arabia, Keith Lee comes to Toronto (yes, there are one or two sneaks). We finish the episode with our thoughts on Beyoncé's Cowboy Carter, the “country” record that smashes genre and takes us to school.  2:50 Stef takes his 3rd MC title + a Holger Rune dramatic reading  9:05 What happen-ed in Barcelona happen-ed: Rafa's return, Casper's triumph 18:55 Rybakina drives off with Stuttgart title (or will once she gets her license)   22:25 Sloane back in the winner's circle 27:30 Live your life: Garbiñe Muguruza ends her HoF career 32:55 Saudi Arabia announcement + becoming an LGBTQ poster child   39:45 Pop culture et ceteras: Challengers, Keith Lee in Toronto, Mariah in Vegas 54:20 Cowboy Carter!

    Charleston Renaiissance

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 70:57


    We've just returned from an amazing experience at the Credit One Charleston Open, a tournament that's been hugely important to women's tennis and continues to be a favorite among players and fans. We do our best to place Charleston in the context of its host city's complex history and explore the tournament's role in helping to develop women's tennis. Danielle Collins was unquestionably the main attraction of the tournament -- winning her second straight title with the loss of one set. We also chat about watching TBS faves Dasha Kasatkina and Taylor Townsend, Vika Azarenka, Jessie Pegula, and Sloane Stephens on the unique Har-Tru green clay. Plus, some tips on attending and our review of the signature cocktail.    00:52 We

    Miami Requiiem

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 60:52


    Danielle Collins, you will always be famous. The 30-year-old charisma machine – she of 2 NCAA titles and an unorthodox journey through tennis – wins her biggest title in the final year of her career. On the men's side, everybody's fave Grigor Dimitrov beat three top 10 players but fell against the final one, the near-unbeatable Jannik Sinner. Plus, we have more tales from our time at the Miami Open, including one particularly impassioned rant and the key to why Casper Ruud is not beating the Karen allegations.   03:30 Danielle Collins, the woman you are 09:48 She's still retiring, so stop asking 15:24 Jannik Sinner is the best (*right now) 18:25 Brother Grigor 24:53 Watching Andy Murray + his devastating injury 29:30 Not an impromptu quiz! 31:17 A nightmare on site …  42:40 What's the tournament director there for if not to field complaints? 47:43 Extras: Thiem injury, Leylah, Novak-Goran split 53:21 The USTA sexual abuse case will go to jury trial + the failed attempt to bar Pam Shriver from testifying  

    The Bees Are Back In Town

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2024 44:58


    For the first time, we're coming to you from Miami Gardens, Florida! Before recapping Indian Wells, we share our first impressions of the Miami Open site and some of the tennis we got to see early on: Halep's first match back from her suspension, Azarenka-Stearns (with an appearance by early Berry Gordy's son RedFoo), Ostapenko lighting up Court 1, and more. Alcaraz defends his Indian Wells title -- snapping a title-less stretch going back to Wimbledon -- and Iga regains her title while losing a mere handful of games. Later on, we talk about the competing proposals that aim to overhaul mostly everything about tennis (Premier vs. PIF). 0:35 Miami Open: Penko-Siegemund, Vika-Peyton (and why RedFoo is here) 9:35 Simona's return and Woz's take heard round the world: “It wasn't a clearance” 18:48 Minding Our Own Business  22:20 Belatedly wrapping Indian Wells 27:07  Non-problematic beef 29:41 Unnecessary beef 32:28 Miss Beswick strikes again 35:28:Tennis headed for fundamental change: Premier Tour vs. Saudi PIF bid  

    Contaminated With Questions

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 61:15


    On March 5, the Court of Arbitration for Sport rendered its decision on the Simona Halep appeal: the doping was not intentional and the suspension was reduced to 9 months, time long since served. It's the welcome end to a saga that has dragged on and shaken trust in the sport's anti-doping institutions. But, we're left with ever more questions: Why were the conclusions of the ITIA and CAS so starkly different? What of the biological passport results? What took so long? Why are tennis players often so successful at CAS? Aside from the Halep news, we talk about the early happenings at Indian Wells, the cancellation of Netflix's Break Point, the ATP's annual awkward International Women's Day video, and more.  01:40 CAS accepts Simona's contamination defense and throws out biological passport charge  07:50 Why are the conclusions of ITIA and CAS so vastly different? 15:00 Comparisons to Sharapova, the question of “innocence”  25:00 So where are the “real” dopers? 35:30 Indian Wells: withdrawals, Sinner's win streak, Kerber-Woz revival 45:15 Break Point is over: what went wrong? 50:40 Ruby amends his apology, thanks to Sofya Tartakova 51:50 A (very) slight improvement in the ATP's Women's Day video!

    You Cannot Be Serious

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2024 65:22


    Rublev's default from Dubai generated tons of discourse this week, and we devote quite a bit of time to it: the facts, the question of proportionality (of both Rublev's actions and the umpire's decision), and why player reactions aren't the final word. We also recap the end of the lead-up to Indian Wells, with several players showing off the best tennis of their lives. Plus, Murray's retirement talk; the ATP's partnership with Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund; and the suspension of a low-ranked player for cannabis and how WADA decides to ban a substance. 2:15 Quick results recap: de Minaur, Boulter, Yuan, Humbert, Baez  8:30 The Rublev Default 13:10 The Act of (non)Contrition 25:35 Proportionality, in a few senses 34:45 Andy Murray talks about the end 38:40 #TheNetflixSlam: it was a bit tacky and very American, but overall a huge win for the sport 46:00 ATP partners with PIF 50:55 A 2-year suspension for weed? Also an opportunity for some nerdy anti-doping discussion

    Pills and Potions

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2024 44:19


    February concludes with another first-time winner at the WTA 1000 level, Jordan Thompson winning 3 matches in one night to double in Los Cabos, and a bunch of hatchers and snatchers in Doha and Rio. We're also talking about the Coco-umpire incident in Dubai, Holger Rune rehiring Patrick Mouratoglou but retaining his reckless social media brand, and the quagmire of ethics breaches with the influx of betting companies into tennis institutions.  1:40 Jasmine Paolini wins Dubai + Kalinskaya's fantastic run 7:40 Thompson wins Los Cabos singles and doubles 12:05 Hatching and snatching in South America 17:50 Andy Murray wins his 500th hard court match 21:15 Coco vs. an obstinate (and wrong) umpire 27:25 Holger is back with Patrick: how to fail up in tennis 37:50 James Blake sanctioned under the sport's betting sponsorship rules; but why can tournaments and other institutions have betting sponsors?

    RIP OHB

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2024 53:40


    We're catching up with the tennis tours as they wind through Transylvania, South America, the US, and the Middle East. Iga Swiatek threepeats in Doha, Rybakina racks up more wins, Pliskova surges, and Sinner wins his first tournament off becoming a Slam winner. Meanwhile, Ostapenko still hasn't lost a match to anyone but Azarenka. We've got updates on the high profile doping suspensions: Brooksby gets some clemency from the ITIA, and Halep pleads her case to the CAS and sues the supplement company (hey, Scarborough!). Plus: the last one-hander in the top 10 goes out, and major coaching shakeups at a strange time of the season.  3:20 Iga threepeats in Doha 8:00 The state of Naomi's return from mat leave  16:45 Rybakina wins Abu Dhabi, Kasatkina slams the scheduling 19:30 Penko and the aborted racquet shake 24:30 Sinner keeps winning, other men's results  31:40 The death of the one-handed backhand 36:30 Doping updates: Brooksby's suspension reduced, Simona Halep makes her case at CAS and sues the supplement company 41:20 Coaching breakups: Sakkari and Tom Hill; Holger and everybody

    Fuming: February Mailbag

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2024 70:05


    The Body Serve is back with what's become a February tradition, an off-topic mailbag/pop culture episode. Fair warning to Sw*fties to proceed with caution through a few of the early segments (timestamps below). As we all switch modes from Australian Open to the global February tennis schedule, we offer our highlights and the broader themes raised by the Grammys with a massive dose of deja vu; we answer your questions, both tennis-related and not; we take on the idea of “tarnishing” a legacy by continuing to play past your prime; and chat randomly about the Naomi memoir, We Are the World, and The Traitors (spoilers abound).  1:00 Grammys: the Swift of it all 10:00 The broader problem: the Grammys' failure to recognize Black women 21:20 Sone actual highlights from the Grammys 30:15 Memoirs 41:25 Will tennis ever change its schedule due to climate change? 43:50 Who will be the next first-time Slam winners? 46:05 Why do they keep protecting that guy? The sunk cost fallacy 48:45 Traitors: spoilers ahead for all versions 55:45 Best-of-5 for women + court speeds 61:00 Ideal tennis dinner guests, the evolution of tennis kits 65:05 Andy Murray and the idea of “tarnishing” one's legacy

    Dreaming More Than Ever: AusOpen Wrap

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2024 66:22


    The 2024 Australian Open wrapped with Aryna Sabalenka defending her title and Jannik Sinner snapping both Djokovic's dominance and Medvedev's almost inexhaustible energy to win his first major title. Amidst increasing coverage of the abuse charges against him, Zverev comes dangerously close to reaching a Djokovic-less final but Daniil says ‘calma.' In good news, Zheng Qinwen breaks out even earlier than expected, Hsieh Su-Wei wins the third and fourth Slam titles of her return to tennis, and Rohan Bopanna reaches #1 at age 43.    01:25 Sabalenka defends her Australian title without much trouble 13:50 Shakey shake! Coco's run 19:05 Jannik Sinner's patience and smarts help him win his first major title  27:00 Daniil Medvedev finds the poetry in losing 30:40 The strangest Djokovic semifinal 35:10 Calma: Medvedev stops the Zverev momentum 42:00 The coverage of the abuse allegations against Zverev reach a peak  49:15 Doubles! Bopanna at #1, Hsieh's continued doubles dominance  56:20 Et ceteras: record attendance doesn't always make a pleasant experience; a few more fashion notes

    Swallowed Whole: Australian Open Week One

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 62:18


    We've reached the quarterfinals of the Australian Open, where the women's draw has swallowed up all but 4 seeded players. Amidst the chaos, we've still got the defending champion, the US Open champion, and a number of players who've been expected to break out for a while. On the men's side, only seeded players have made the quarters. We chat a bit about the surprises (Borges, Cazaux) and whether anyone will stop Novak from getting his 11th title. We also talk about the kits we liked (Coco and Grigor ftw); the Sports Illustrated layoffs; and, in light of so many mothers playing this Australian Open, we answer a listener question about maternity and paternity leave.  4:05 Men's quarters - Djokovic rounding into form 16:25 Women's draw: some would say carnage, we would say chill  28:40 Noskova d. #1 Swiatek  33:10 The fashions: are the fashions in the room with us? 37:45 Eight mothers in the AO draw: what are the tours doing on mat/pat leave? 50:45 Sports Illustrated lays off all editorial staff 57:00 Andre and Steffi present … Simona?

    In The Blinkova(n) Eye

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 67:42


    Six days into the Australian Open and most of the comeback kids are gone (except for Anisimova). On day five, chaos reigned down in Melbourne: Rybakina is gone after losing the longest tiebreak in Slam history, Medvedev scrapes through at 3:30 am, Swiatek survives a tussle with Danielle Collins, and seeds Pegula, Rune, and Kasatkina exit. The news of Zverev's trial date and his election to the Players Council converge to dominate coverage during week one; players flail in press conferences and the ATP appears inert. Finally, we take a look at Nadal's surprising(?) new role as ambassador to Saudi tennis. 02:39 Anisimova leads the way & other comebacks 14:52 Iga v Danielle  20:36 Danielle announces her final year on tour  23:40 Rybakina, further upsets, and other notable moments  34:12 Players get wrapped up in the Zverev case  44:40 What does a good answer to Zverev questions look like for players? 52:18 Speaking of rotting, Gimelstob is back  54:02 Rafael Nadal: Ambassador or Sportswasher?   65:06 Some sad tennis news to end the episode 

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