Butthurt white guys, an Asian virgin and an angry lesbian walk into a bar...

Lithose

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Had someone tell me she'd love to watch Novak play Serena so she could see the look on his face when Serena destroys him. I had to politely tell her than neither Serena or her sister were capable of beating a man ranked at 203rd in the world, never mind a top 5. Some people are completely delusional about these things
Yep, he actually dropped down to 360, I believe a few weeks later, he himself joked about it and said the only reason he was 203 was due to the ranks not being adjusted yet (He said he'd play them again when they revised their numbers to top 350). But beyond that, he smoke and drank before and during the game and didn't train at all--in addition he said he took 50% off his serve, because he didn't just want to Ace them out. (He had people telling him he should smoke them, but he wanted to have fun and not be a bully).

Interview below

WILLIAMS SISTERS DISCOVER MEN ARE BETTER PLAYERS

MELBOURNE -- Venus and Serena Williams discovered they're no match for the men on the ATP tennis tour, at least not yet.

In an impromptu 'Battle of the Sexes' at the Australian Open yesterday, first Serena, then Venus challenged No 203 Karsten Braasch to a set apiece, and he beat them both.

Serena fell 6-1, Venus 6-2. They played as intensely as they could, while Braasch performed with gentlemanly restraint.

"It was extremely hard," said the 16-year-old Serena. "I didn't know it would be that hard. I hit shots that would have been winners on the women's tour and he got to them easily."

That didn't stop her from boasting that "this time next year I'll beat him. I have to pump some weight . . . I have to work hard to be on the men's tour."

Venus, 17, wasn't about to concede too much either, especially since she broke Braasch's serve once.

"I can beat men in the 300s and up," she said. "He thought we couldn't get a point. He didn't think we could play. We showed him we could."

Asked if she might not want to take on players on the senior tour, or retired men as Billie-Jean King did against 1939 Wimbledon champion Bobby Riggs in their ballyhooed 'Battle of the Sexes' in 1973, Venus shook her beaded head.

"I'm going for the young guns," she said.

Braasch smiled at their claims.

"Against anyone in the top 500, no chance," Braasch said, "because I was playing like 600 today."

The sister act played Braasch on Court 12 in the boondocks of the Australian Open complex. A few hundred fans and players who wandered by witnessed the event along with a crowd of media. No umpire, no linesmen, no ball boys, no scoreboard. And no prize money or bets. Only pride was at stake.

It all started a few days ago when the Williams sisters wandered into the ATP tour office at the Australian Open and boldly claimed they could beat any of the men ranked 200 or above. The bespectacled Braasch, a German who has sunk in the rankings after reaching 38 in 1994, happened to be in the office and took up the challenge.

Venus was still in the tournament at the time so a match was set between Serena and Braasch for Sunday. Rain postponed that until yesterday and with the sun shining Serena and Braasch showed up ready to defend the honour of their sexes.

At least that's how Serena saw it. For Braasch, it was a joke. He never even considered the possibility he might be ridiculed by the other men players if he lost.

"Everyone knew that there's no chance for them," he said. "They were talking to me, that I should go out and beat them by as much as possible. They said make it 24 points and go off the court."

He played, he said, for fun, "because tennis doesn't have to be serious, especially when you're out of the tournament." Braasch lost last week in the singles and doubles.

When Riggs lost to King at the Houston Astrodome, there was a crowd of more than 30 000 -- the biggest in tennis history. That nationally televised exhibition, four months after Riggs' 'Mother's Day Massacre' of Margaret Court, did more to establish women's tennis than any other match or tournament.

The Williams sisters, in their way, are bringing new life to the women's tour, even if they couldn't beat Braasch. Venus reached the final of the US Open and the quarters here. Serena has beaten three top 10 players since turning pro a few months ago. Each has the personality and flash to make the sport more popular than ever.

Braasch, a left-handed junk ball expert with a convoluted service motion, won the first five games against Serena. He ran her dizzy all over the court, showing her a befuddling assortment of spins.

He could have hit harder if he wanted, taken her out of points sooner, but as her unofficial coach, Nick Bollettieri, noted at courtside, "He's being kind to her."

Venus, who had just changed into jeans after losing in the women's quarter-finals to Lindsay Davenport, showed up at Court 12 late and saw her sister getting trounced.

"I'd definitely take this guy on," she said. When Braasch held at love to 5-0, Venus' competitiveness got the better of her.

"Maybe I should go get dressed," she said to Bollettieri. "What do you think, Nick?"

"Go for it," he answered.

Venus raced across Melbourne Park, her multi-coloured beads flying among the surprised fans. She changed quickly and raced right back, arriving out of breath just as Serena won her only game when Braasch netted a backhand after a couple of deuces.

The small crowd roared for Serena, but Braasch closed out the set with an ace a few moments later.

As Serena and Braasch shook hands, Venus entered the court and issued her own challenge to Braasch.

Venus had as little success as Serena when the match got under way. She lost her first service game at love, managed only one point on Braasch's serve and dropped her next serve.

But after going down 4-0, Venus held serve at love as Braasch hit several errors.

Perhaps boredom was setting in because Braasch then lost his own serve to 4-2 when Venus cracked a sizzling forehand past him on her second break point.

Braasch wasn't about to let the set get away. He stepped up his pace a bit, overpowered Venus on her serve and closed out the match with an ace.

"I took at least 50 per cent off my serve," Braasch said.

"I came out with a few hard ones, but not too much because then it's not fun anymore and it was supposed to be fun." -- Sapa-AP

Venus was on a talk show about a decade later talking about it; and after she had matured some she admitted flat out she wouldn't want to play against men, that it simply wouldn't be competitive.

Wife and I are pretty big into tennis, she was a state champion and played throughout college, her coach was even trying to get her to go pro. Her brothers all played too, but no where near her skill level. Yet she could still play against them and they would be really difficult for her to put down because of how dominating they are in terms of court presence and serve power, shots that could easily score vs another woman a man can run down and return, and the service power isn't even in the same league. They all flat out admitted she's a lot more skilled, but they because of how hard they can hit the ball and how fast they can move, the games wind up about even.

A man of equal skill really playing hard against a woman would be a game consisting of aces and broken serves, it wouldn't be fun to watch. People don't realize but Tennis actually relies a lot of physical prowess, someone who is stronger/taller with better stride length does a lot better.
 

Xequecal

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It's the same with every sport. Everyone always wants to claim that the top women can compete with the men but it's just not true.
The funny thing is its not just sports. There's basically zero women in the top tier of basically any competition that actually allows men to play, even non physical ones.
 

Adebisi

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1012576_1080719838661521_2282387283706474365_n.jpg
 

Caliane

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the sad part of this shit.... I don't know jack shit about tennis. I can't name any male tennis players. I can name anna kournikova, and the williams sisters. Which attests to media special treatment..
But then, morning news talking about this. And even this article, all focused on the guys comments, and peoples reactions to it. Williams reaction, etc.

not once was THIS mentioned.

973 million
viewers for Men's 2015 ATP tour
395 million
for Women's 2015 WTA events and finals
Look how far into THIS article you have to go to even find this.
In 2015, the Wimbledon men's final attracted a peak audience of 9.2 million viewers, compared with 4.3 million for the women's final.
At the US Open, the men's final drew 3.3 million viewers, compared with 1.6 million for the women's final
So.. Despite massive favoritism in media, mens tennis has double the audience of womens. And these guys comments are totally correct.
 

Haast

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Adebisi

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One of L.R.'s clear memories was simply, and demonstrably, wrong.
She testified at length about Mr. Ghomeshi's bright yellow Volkswagen "Love
Bug" or "Disney car". This was a significant factor in her impression that Mr.
Ghomeshi was a "charming" and nice person. However, I find as a fact that Mr.
Ghomeshi did not acquire the Volkswagen Beetle that she described until seven
months after the event she was remembering.
ouch