Insane
Moderators:Best First, spiderfrommars, IronHide
Okay, so you know how there are no tiebreaks in the fifth set at Wimbledon?
Well, Isner vs. Mahut are in the fifth.....at 41 games to 40! Yes 41/40 games, not points, in just one set.
They now have the record for longest match in tennis history at 7 hours and thirty minutes and counting.
Ridiculous.
Well, Isner vs. Mahut are in the fifth.....at 41 games to 40! Yes 41/40 games, not points, in just one set.
They now have the record for longest match in tennis history at 7 hours and thirty minutes and counting.
Ridiculous.
"But the Costa story featuring Starscream? Fantastic! This guy is "The One", I just know it, just from these few pages. "--Yaya, who is never wrong.
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To quote Optimus Prime, "That's how I roll".Rebis wrote:And also kick a man who's down, so you can claim to have beaten him in a fight?Yaya wrote:I would very much like to play the guy who wins so that I can claim I beat a pro player in my life.
"But the Costa story featuring Starscream? Fantastic! This guy is "The One", I just know it, just from these few pages. "--Yaya, who is never wrong.
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70-68, final set score.
To put the ridiculousness in perspective for those of you who aren't tennis fans, I would be more inclined to believe I saw a monkey riding a dolphin at the beach singing "The Touch" if you asked me which is more likely to be true.
No exaggeration.
It's supernatural.
To put the ridiculousness in perspective for those of you who aren't tennis fans, I would be more inclined to believe I saw a monkey riding a dolphin at the beach singing "The Touch" if you asked me which is more likely to be true.
No exaggeration.
It's supernatural.
"But the Costa story featuring Starscream? Fantastic! This guy is "The One", I just know it, just from these few pages. "--Yaya, who is never wrong.
I wouldn't go as far as to call it supernatural. Improbable perhaps, unlikely sure, but hardly supernatural.
But, if you look at how the points systems is determined in Tennis, it's an outcome that has some probability, no matter how slim.
I mean, basically, the rule is "to win the game/set/match, you need to have at least X points/won X games/sets, and be 2 points/games/sets ahead of your opponent."
But if you applied that rule to, say, flipping a coin, "to win you must have called correctly at least X times, and be 2 correct calls ahead," you can foresee the possibility of having to flip a coin for a great number of times to finish.
The most surprising thing about it, I think, is that it hasn't happened prior to this.
Also, it does't mean, necessarily, that either of them is any good*, just that they were very evenly matched.
*Relative to the other competitors. Obviously they're good enough to get to Wimbledon and they've shown they have the endurance necessary to go the distance, which the other players most likely have as well, but rarely get to show.
But, if you look at how the points systems is determined in Tennis, it's an outcome that has some probability, no matter how slim.
I mean, basically, the rule is "to win the game/set/match, you need to have at least X points/won X games/sets, and be 2 points/games/sets ahead of your opponent."
But if you applied that rule to, say, flipping a coin, "to win you must have called correctly at least X times, and be 2 correct calls ahead," you can foresee the possibility of having to flip a coin for a great number of times to finish.
The most surprising thing about it, I think, is that it hasn't happened prior to this.
Also, it does't mean, necessarily, that either of them is any good*, just that they were very evenly matched.
*Relative to the other competitors. Obviously they're good enough to get to Wimbledon and they've shown they have the endurance necessary to go the distance, which the other players most likely have as well, but rarely get to show.
You obviously don't play tennis.Rebis wrote: The most surprising thing about it, I think, is that it hasn't happened prior to this.
20-20, yeah. 30-30, well, that's about the limits of expectations. 40-40 is already insane. 50-50 in unbelievable. 60-60? Should have happened before? No freakin way.
But 70-68?
Give me a monkey on a dolphin. I'll believe that.
"But the Costa story featuring Starscream? Fantastic! This guy is "The One", I just know it, just from these few pages. "--Yaya, who is never wrong.
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Not recently, no.Yaya wrote:You obviously don't play tennis.Rebis wrote: The most surprising thing about it, I think, is that it hasn't happened prior to this.
However, I don't see how that's relevant.
These people, when in training, are playing tennis virtually all day every day. The only difference here was that they were playing for the same set, in the same match, for so long.
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So just to put this in perspective, I would have been less amazed at a square brick exiting your ass than 70-68.IronHide wrote:Seconded.spiderfrommars wrote:I have seen this.Yaya wrote:I would be more inclined to believe I saw a monkey riding a dolphin at the beach singing "The Touch"
I shat a brick.
"But the Costa story featuring Starscream? Fantastic! This guy is "The One", I just know it, just from these few pages. "--Yaya, who is never wrong.
I'd be interested to see if they can rack up 70 posts each arguing about how natural/probable it is/n't to rack up 70 games each in a tennis match.Best First wrote:So it's nice to see Rebis and Yaya's entirely pointless and success free arguements and realise that for all i waste a lot of time on the net, at least i don't waste as much as some people.
If not for the fact I don't care.