Two weeks before the Australian Open, Ivo Karlovic showed that miles per hour can make up for miles on the odometer. The 35-year-old owns one of tennis’ fastest serves, a shot nearly impossible to defend if struck optimally. Novak Djokovic, the world’s top-ranked player and best returner of serve, was ultimately overpowered by Karlovic and his signature shot in Doha.
Feliciano Lopez, who also owns a lethal serve, is another thirty-something that’s relied heavily on the point’s opening shot throughout his career. He’s reached the fourth round or better at Wimbledon—the Grand Slam tournament where the serve matters most—six times, first in 2002 and most recently last year. When the left-handed Spaniard lunges to swat an airborne ball, he appears to consume the court in front of him. This split-second of motion is Lopez’s best chance to win the point, by far.
After that fraction of time, however, Lopez can be beaten more readily. And it appeared that Denis Kudla, an American ranked 123rd, would be the latest player to undo the flame-throwing No. 12 seed when he had three match points while serving at 6-5 in the fifth set. Lopez couldn’t even use his serve to try and escape peril—which made his eventual 3-6, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2, 10-8 victory that much more impressive.
Lopez turned his tournament around thanks to one shot, which in my opinion is one of the most underrated shots in the sport: His slice backhand. You almost never see him come over his traditional one-hander, a la Grigor Dimitrov or Richard Gasquet. I feel like I’ve seen Rafael Nadal hit as many one-handed backhands as Lopez. Rather, he opts for a stinging slice, which by nature stays low but lands deep due to skill. It’s a beautiful shot to watch, as arresting as the more celebrated backhands of Dimitrov or Gasquet: