We measure athletes by how they perform in their sport’s biggest events. That goes double for tennis players. In this game, when it comes to securing your place in the history books, you have to triumph at the Grand Slams.
For the current crop of ATPers who are still trying to scale those Olympian heights, though, minor tournaments can mean just as much as the majors. To get to the top of the rankings, you must win week in and week out; to establish an edge over the tour’s rank and file, you must beat them on a regular basis. Just ask the guys in the Big Four: Yes, they try to peak for the Slams, but you rarely see them throw a match away at any event. The best are the best, everywhere they go.
February is a month of mostly minor events. With the Australian Open and a round of Davis Cup out of the way, these are the weeks when we begin to see who might be in it for the long haul in 2017. After Sunday, it looks more likely than ever that Grigor Dimitrov, who won in Sofia, and Alexander Zverev, who won in Montpellier, will be forces to be reckoned with sooner rather than later.
Zverev got the lion’s share of the celebratory hype for his second career title. This isn’t surprising: He’s new, he’s 19 and he has been touted as a future No. 1 by all the right people. More important, unlike the 25-year-old Dimitrov, who was once touted as a future No. 1, the mop-topped, gold-chain-sporting German has yet to reveal his weaknesses. It’s still possible for us to believe he doesn’t have any.