Hello readers,
I'd like to introduce Jimmy Mosqueda, a new contributor to DtL! He'll be periodically penning previews + wrap-ups of tennis' major tourneys for us. So, without further ado, heeeere's Jimmy:
Another 
Sony Ericsson Open has come and gone, complete with the usual assortment of upsets, off-court antics, 
on-court antics, and one 
seriously hideous dress. This tournament is supposed to be about the actual tennis, but you wouldn’t know that this year with the abhorred handling of the broadcast by 
Fox Sports Network, which left even the professionals 
struggling to take a peek at a match or two. But that's all fine and dandy, because what was happening off the court was just as interesting, if not more so, than what occurred on it. A look back:
 Part 1 – The Men’s Side
Part 1 – The Men’s Side
Perhaps the biggest story of the tournament was 
Andy Roddick. On the heels of his continued 
charity work, 
Roddick seemingly completed his transformation from the bad boy of the 
ATP tour to elder statesmen with his 
engagement to model Brooklyn Decker. And, what do you know, that lit a fire under 
A-Rod as he managed to 
defeat Roger Federer in the quarterfinals, his first win over 
Fed in almost five years! So he slays the beast and he gets the girl? I’m so jealous. Expect a baby announcement soon, if only to bet 
Federer to the punch.
Speaking of 
Federer, how many more “flukes” are we going to allow before we call a spade a spade? He lost in the semis at both the 
Australian Open and 
Indian Wells, now he falls in the quarters to 
A-Rod, whom he has basically owned ever since they started playing against each other. And I’m not sure how much longer the mono excuse is going to hold up. How did 
he get mono anyway? I thought only college students majoring in face-sucking get that?! The season started shaky for 
Fed down under and now it appears he’s sinking lower and lower.
In other 
ATP news, who can forget this indelible image 
Mikhail Youzhny’s bloody face after smacking himself repeatedly with his racquet during his match against 
Nicolas Almagro? Prior to this, 
Youzhny was best known for his cute if 
slightly sinister military-style salute (a remnant of his childhood days spent in Soviet youth programs?). I know coaches always tell their players to get their heads in the game, but this is ridiculous (
ZING!). At the very least, 
Youzhny’s profile certainly increased tenfold after the incident, which is more than his consistent yet unspectacular game will ever do for him.
Speaking of consistency, 
Nikolay Davydenko entered the tournament ranked #4 in the world. I’m not quite sure how he has achieved that ranking since I honestly cannot recall the last major tournament he won - but now I can because he just won this one! 
Davydenko played Dream Killer at the 2008 
SEO, taking out rising Serbian 
Janko Tipsarevic in the quarters (those Serbs are everywhere!), ending 
A-Rod’s fairy-tale like run in the semis, and crushing 
Nadal in the finals. Both 
Roddick and 
Nadal were coming off big wins against 
Federer and 
Blake and are no strangers to winning big tournaments, which makes 
Davydenko’s triumph all the more surprising. Perhaps now he can put those 
match-fixing scandals behind him. And if he betted on himself to win the tourney, well than more power to him.
Of course there were so many happenings during the tournament that I didn’t get to. But if the last two weeks have taught us anything, is that the 
ATP tour is swiftly becoming a free-for-all. You know things are crazy when the men’s game is even less predictable than the women’s. If you had told me at the beginning of the year that 
Federer and 
Nadal would still be without a tournament title in April, I would have scoffed. But now here we are, and we haven’t even entered clay court season!
Stay tuned for 
Part II of my review of the 
Sony Ericsson Open, where I'll turn my attention to the ladies...
*VIA 
DOWNTHELINETENNIS.COM
(image via AP Photo/Alan Diaz)             
        
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