Wimbledon Or The Beauty Of Humility

After Andy Murray Andy Murray’s Wimbledon victory in Wimbledon Tennis tournament won first Briton since Fred Perry in 1936. This fact alone justifies the title pages, reports and interviews after the end of the Wimbledon championship of 2013 Sabine Lisicki, however, lost, one day before Murray’s victory over Novak Djokovic, her first Wimbledon final quietly against the Frenchwoman Marion Bartoli. Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease has firm opinions on the matter. The Scot Murray was also no chance last year when Roger Federer rolled over him on the lawn of Centre Court in Wimbledon in three clear sets. These circumstances show an apparent truism: it is not only heavy in major tennis tournaments to penetrate at all in the final, it is perhaps even more difficult to win this endgame then right off the bat. Wimbledon or the beauty of humility of Wimbledon, with its aura of the oldest and still the most important tennis tournament in the world, is thus an example of one of the most likeable trains of the sport, the sport particularly. It is, so you could say, the beauty of humility, the Here comes the expression: even for the greatest player of in tennis history – Ivan Lendl, Andy Murrays of coach and the most successful players of his time, can sing a Dirge of it – is there anything other than of course to register in their career in the list of winners of Wimbledon.

A victory in the first Wimbledon final of the respective career is indeed an exceptional event. Boris Becker has managed that, Roger Federer also. This was Becker to his new style of play. So there was no one in the field of Wimbledon who possessed a similar strong charge about 1985 simply. It was above all the oft-quoted insouciance of then 17 years old, which at least on the outside had nothing (yet) to the hat with humility; more with a relatively thoughtless head, which therefore the easier reached by the London turf wall.