The second serve returns wasn't just a thing in this match. Nishsesh did that to everyone in that tournament and won the title. He's insane. That first set was legit top 100 tennis imo.
Out of curiosity @karue; why not take a step right/left and show the wide kick/slice serve? Total rec hacker here but wouldn’t that open up the court and make it harder for him to attack that second so abusively?
You know what I noticed about his second serve return...except the fact that he was in the court trying to get it early ? ... doing a higher bounce serve made him send the return in the net ...or idk...you should try to variate next time idk
Not a lot of players talk about this situation and losing a close set like this "deflates" you internally. Inspirational as always, man. Love the video as always and good luck for the next tournament. - Munish, TW
It sure can deflate a player losing a close set. However, the trick to combat this is to not actually try to push even harder in the second set and just chill back into the playing style that nearly won the set. Way to many players at the lower levels either totally fall apart or try way to hard and end up making lots of mistakes which results in them losing the set. From a psychology point of view its all about building up your wins during the game so that you have a strong platform to build up that motivation to win the next set. For example, in this match with Nishsesh killing the second serve the win could be to make him at least a few times have some trouble returning the second serve. So, let say you know there is a good chance he will kill the return why not then either hit a first serve sometime as the second serve to try and break his winning on this serve. All that's sometimes needed is to make someone think twice about something and they can make a mistake. Now I know a tennis player will say I cant do that but why not. At the end of the day it all comes down to psychology and the player who thinks the least during a match mostly plays better and has better reactions because thinking actually takes time and time is something a tennis player is short on. A human when thinking will take at least 100th of a second to get that thought into action and in tennis the ball goes from one side of the court to the other in 600milliseconds. so, thinking a lot can cause a lot of issues in tennis that why the new stats that players are getting on tour will be a game changer ones they figure out how to use it right.
@@Rodrigorodriguez20241well I don't usually give advice for free and not to lower ranked players. 😂 As an elite performance psychologist I am interested in how more players on the lower ranking are using UA-cam to fund their pro tennis journey. It's part of some research I am working on. So, am I qualified to give unsolicited advice on a UA-cam channel 🤔 yes I am and the term coach is often used but funny enough only by tennis players. It really interesting watching these players UA-cam channels over Last 6 months. Why do this well its to try to understand what differences not solely skill related between top 20 players and players outside 100 are factors in someone making it to top 100 or not. 98% of all tennis pros never make it to the top. So, my part of this research was to follow players who have a tennis UA-cam channel and look at that. Finished it now.
I really appreciate that you complement your opponents. Being competitive doesn't mean hating our opponents. It shouldn't poison our love of watching and playing against great tennis players.
I was there in Tiburon for your first round match. You looked solid and even with Basavareddy (and other recent losses) it seems you're right at that level and if you keep grinding you'll break through any time now. Thanks for sharing your journey and can't wait to see how far it goes!
I was at the Basavareddy match but didn't get a chance to say hello. Still really fun to watch you play in person. Nishesh ended up winning the tournament something like 61 61. Hope going down to a Stanford guy didn't add to the loss. Also watched your early matches on the ATP broadcast. The announcer had a lot of nice things to say about you, maybe a future guest on the channel? Good luck getting to Australia.
I coached a young man who played in the Tiburon challenger twice and played on that main court both times. Bas did to your serve what you do to most people, and the game (at the highest level) is about serve and return. You're playing so well right now, Karue. I'm most impressed with your ability to maximize your game, especially at your age.
Karue reminds me of Fucsovics, he has very similar movements and style. Fucso could have been top 20 easily if he had skipped the 5 year party phase in his early 20s, which required a bodybuilder physique (which hinders his game) and a bit of booze 🤣. Can Karue make the top 100-150 in your opinion? I think so..
@@curiousgeorge6921 He's not "old" but he's also not young. He's also perfecting himself at a much older age than almost anyone else on the tour. I give him a lot of credit for that.
I wanted to go out and watch you that week but it was sold out. Kinda cool that Challenger events sell out. Although I wonder if it was in no small part because of your popularity. The tv commentators mentioned your channel and your fans often.
Your level in the first set was so high! It is so gratifying to see how much your game has improved since earlier in the year. This is the first match where it was clear that you need to improve your second serve as you have done with your forehand and first serve. And the fitness to maintain that high level for hours at a time. But I know, given everything you have achieved this year, that you do have the runway to make that improvement. I’m glad you made the comparison between Nishesh and Novak. That’s exactly what I thought when I saw the highlights of this match just after it was played. I rooted for you in the match, but he has now become one of my favorite players too.
I've never found it a weakness to compliment another player. I actually think it's a strength. I never wanted to beat a crappy player. i wanted to beat someone who was really, really good. Then it was a real accomplishment, and more fun! Keep being you, sir!!
I love how real and raw you are. No shame in getting smoked in the second. Would’ve been the other way around if you would’ve taken the first. Just continue to be an inspiration to us mate.
Hey, Karue. I’m very excited to see you play drommondvile this year. I will be there for sure to play and watch your match’s. Looking forward to see you! Ps, I have a good chance to play qualifying, it would be a dream to set up a hit with you! Congratulations on your journey, extremely impressive what you have done 👏
Wow didn't realize Nishesh is playing so well. Really enjoying see your rise and your analysis. You can absolutely beat him next time. Your ball striking ability to be aggressive is very very good. Let's get you to Australia!
Oh man, you were in my No. CA neighborhood! Sorry I missed the opportunity to come watch you.. always enjoy your humbleness and your play by play commentary. Keep going KS!… those legs are looking like a V8 HEMi engine.. keep working hard! God bless.
Hey Karue, I've been watching you for several years now and It is amazing how good you can keep things simple and have amazing results with it. As a tennis coach I would say you could explode that non attacking shots your opponents make, you can take time away by beeing 1ms faster, that would make you a top 100, I'm so sure. Keep up the good work! I want to see you battle in slams, you can do it!
Great game, you've got the skills. Once you get your conditioning up to outlast your opponents i think you'll definitely dominate top 100. Keep up the content Karue. Doing great!!
I saw at least 6 points in that first set where you hit an amazing shot and stayed back. He retrieved the ball and the point continued. He recognized immediately when he hit a good shot then followed it in (ex. see game him serving 5-5 his 2 approach shots to your BH.) Your baseline game is incredible with the side to side accuracy + depth and the short angles thrown in. Capitalize on those strengths and come forward more. I noticed your energy plummet after evening it up at 5-5, saving 3 set points. He then held easily to go up 6-5. When you saved those set points, he was vulnerable that next game where you made two unforced errors returning. He showed you his nerves at 4-5 with his two missed returns. This match was decided the last two games of the first set. Tiny margins at this level. Fun to watch 👍
Hi, Karue: Love your positive review of Basavareddy. You gave him a tough match. BTW: Who was a tougher match for you: Basavareddy or Learner Tien? Both of these young players look exceptionally tough. Keep up the good work, btw! I can see your fitness getting better and better. Great scrambling!
Nishesh and Learner are two up and comers that you've faced. These guys have major game. Your top level is good enough to hang Karue. The difference is playing when you don't have your A game.
Totally unrelated about the match, but I see some similarity with one of my all-time favorites, David Nalbandian, in your baseline strokes, Karue. Both enjoyable to watch for sure.
totally agree with the comment about congratulating your opponent on a good shot and how you just like to see good tennis. You're right, doesn't mean you can't beat them, just fun to play a good point either way.
This is amazing... Theres no modern movement or modern swing, BUT what Karue does possess is great court positioning, shot selection, and confidence...I wasnt a believer, at first, and thought this mission was a waste of time and money, but I have been proven wrong, big time.
LFG Karue, you are still on track to get to AO. What are your thoughts on TennisUnleashed's video where he analyzes (and has suggestions for) your forehand?
JUst watched to 5-5. Super high level. Nishesh is a cut above in terms of his neutral rally ball. He hits deep with good pace and puts his opponnent under pressure already. A good number of times Karue hit a bit shorter than him on a neutral ball and then Nishesh would start dictating the point. I didnt see anyone else do that to Karue. Usually his shorter rally balls are still ok as the other player cant do much with it. They cant hit back with quality often enough.
Losing a grueling 7-5 or 6-6 tiebreaker is mentally taxing and we see that all the time at the highest levels. But realize winning the second set will be just as demoralizing for him and we're back to even in the third. Easier said than done but that's the mental in this sport.
Head up high! You played so good and I completely understand the mental fatigue effect after putting so much effort and focus into something but you have a wall on the other side of the net. Now, in hindsight and after analyzing your and his performance, did you think of a solution that could possiby hurt him? His tactics seemed quite predictable, left-right-left-right and so on, just to make you run and wear you out physically. Exactly like Djokovic. Maybe mixing in some different shots - slice, short balls to make him run forward, heavy angle balls, long top spin balls to push him back, going more to the net and not give him the opportunity/time to act. He was glued to the baseline and dictated the game from there, took the ball early too and they seemed to come straight into his comfort zone time and again. His returns were superb though and it’s difficult to face a guy like that, could slower and sliced serves maybe been a way to disturb him? He appeared not to like going forward that much, he hugged the baseline and didn’t budge from there. I wonder how his net game is and what would’ve happened if he had to play more from the service lines?
Great tennis man regardless.. from both sides but his decision making at age 19 is more impressive than eveything else imo, going down the line only when he can hit a winner is hard to see from guys at this age.
Torcendo muito para você conseguir ir pro quali! Assisti você aqui em Curitiba contra o Mateus, derrota amarga, mas com certeza isso trouxe boas lições rumo ao AO25. Pena que não consegui tirar uma foto com você, pois não queria tirar seu momento de concentração pré-jogo haha
I think playing that type of player is super tricky. He is like the ultimate pusher except he hits quality shots instead of junk balls. You feel like they're a brick wall and not even trying their best (because they dont go for shots down the line)
Karue, on the topic of pressure points, how do I create those moments more often. The sense of pressure comes when I have more to lose on the line, like going into playoffs, sectionals, etc - rated 4.0 USTA. But those moments are far and few due to time constraint.
This is good example of the importante of mental strength and fighting spirit. You can't just "give up" after losing the first set. Some people are better then others with that, but has to be practiced as much as physical fitness. May be shaving that mustache might help :)
hahah I am. It is not a lot of lifting I am just kinda thick hahah not that skinny genetic plus I am older now and spent the last 5 years not working out that much
@KaruesellHQ i had to grind the gym like crazy to gain a bit of weight, being 35. I play tennis since I was 5, the gym protects my joints lol. Abraços de sp!!
Interesting to see the player's point of view during a match....IT IS easier looking at it from outside...playing the actual game and being in the heat of it imo you "miss" some things ...like you said during the comment/reaction video of the match ... it's funny for me (especially in the ladies side) that they don't "see" obvious stuff in their opponents defense, habbits, strong hits/weak hits but I know it's hard...hell i've seen players cry on the court or (and let's not repeat that one) hitting their heads with the racket to the point of drawing actual blood *caugh* Youzhny *caugh*
idk, guess when he gave you those off balance slow high shots after you got him out of position it would have been best to attack the ball and take more time away from him. Seems like that won you the most points doing that from these clips anyway.
Hit a bigger second serve or try different things on the second serve. Double fault or lose the point anyway. Be like G. Perricard. 129 mph average second serve.
I think that's the difference between the 200 and the rest of the field. You can't deflate and get discouraged after losing one set. Maybe talking to a sports psychologist would help?
I don’t think you should compare a top 200 player (borderline) to one of the greatest players of all time. No disrespect at all, great player, but the big 3 are masters of the sport
You can recognize similarities between players whether they are top 5 or top 200. Let's see where this 19 yo peaks in the future. Seems to have at least top 50 talent based on where he is today.
Nishesh has a top 10 djokovic-esque ball striking and returning . His serve and touch game needs to improve for him to reach the very top . best American talent of his generation
Nishesh practiced with the top guys at the tour finals in Turin last year and his returns and ball striking held up well against the elite like medvedev and alcaraz as well. Nishesh is going right to the top
Already 19 ... at 17 years 7month Shang Juncheng played Australian open second round .. so dont hype him that much ... at his same age Shang won Atp 250 ... i m not comparing him with Alcaraz or any top 10 players
The second serve returns wasn't just a thing in this match. Nishsesh did that to everyone in that tournament and won the title. He's insane. That first set was legit top 100 tennis imo.
yep he clocked everybody’s second serve that week hahah
Out of curiosity @karue; why not take a step right/left and show the wide kick/slice serve? Total rec hacker here but wouldn’t that open up the court and make it harder for him to attack that second so abusively?
You know what I noticed about his second serve return...except the fact that he was in the court trying to get it early ? ... doing a higher bounce serve made him send the return in the net ...or idk...you should try to variate next time idk
Not a lot of players talk about this situation and losing a close set like this "deflates" you internally. Inspirational as always, man. Love the video as always and good luck for the next tournament. - Munish, TW
It sure can deflate a player losing a close set. However, the trick to combat this is to not actually try to push even harder in the second set and just chill back into the playing style that nearly won the set. Way to many players at the lower levels either totally fall apart or try way to hard and end up making lots of mistakes which results in them losing the set. From a psychology point of view its all about building up your wins during the game so that you have a strong platform to build up that motivation to win the next set. For example, in this match with Nishsesh killing the second serve the win could be to make him at least a few times have some trouble returning the second serve. So, let say you know there is a good chance he will kill the return why not then either hit a first serve sometime as the second serve to try and break his winning on this serve. All that's sometimes needed is to make someone think twice about something and they can make a mistake. Now I know a tennis player will say I cant do that but why not. At the end of the day it all comes down to psychology and the player who thinks the least during a match mostly plays better and has better reactions because thinking actually takes time and time is something a tennis player is short on. A human when thinking will take at least 100th of a second to get that thought into action and in tennis the ball goes from one side of the court to the other in 600milliseconds. so, thinking a lot can cause a lot of issues in tennis that why the new stats that players are getting on tour will be a game changer ones they figure out how to use it right.
@@darraghhowleyrelaxation6689 lol thanks Coach. Good to know you’re giving top 300 in the world pros advice. 😂
@@Rodrigorodriguez20241well I don't usually give advice for free and not to lower ranked players. 😂 As an elite performance psychologist I am interested in how more players on the lower ranking are using UA-cam to fund their pro tennis journey. It's part of some research I am working on.
So, am I qualified to give unsolicited advice on a UA-cam channel 🤔 yes I am and the term coach is often used but funny enough only by tennis players.
It really interesting watching these players UA-cam channels over Last 6 months.
Why do this well its to try to understand what differences not solely skill related between top 20 players and players outside 100 are factors in someone making it to top 100 or not.
98% of all tennis pros never make it to the top.
So, my part of this research was to follow players who have a tennis UA-cam channel and look at that.
Finished it now.
@@Rodrigorodriguez20241 lucky so that I well qualified and have the experience to give such advice. 😃
@@Rodrigorodriguez20241 do you think Rafa Nadal's uncle was qualified to coach him? He probably couldn't win a point from Nadal in a match.
I really appreciate that you complement your opponents. Being competitive doesn't mean hating our opponents. It shouldn't poison our love of watching and playing against great tennis players.
Thank you. I’ve never been that way, I can appreciate some good ball
I was there in Tiburon for your first round match. You looked solid and even with Basavareddy (and other recent losses) it seems you're right at that level and if you keep grinding you'll break through any time now. Thanks for sharing your journey and can't wait to see how far it goes!
Lots of humility and transparency here with your analysis on this match .We really appreciate it !
Really transparent to not show the 2nd set
I was at the Basavareddy match but didn't get a chance to say hello. Still really fun to watch you play in person. Nishesh ended up winning the tournament something like 61 61. Hope going down to a Stanford guy didn't add to the loss. Also watched your early matches on the ATP broadcast. The announcer had a lot of nice things to say about you, maybe a future guest on the channel? Good luck getting to Australia.
I coached a young man who played in the Tiburon challenger twice and played on that main court both times. Bas did to your serve what you do to most people, and the game (at the highest level) is about serve and return. You're playing so well right now, Karue. I'm most impressed with your ability to maximize your game, especially at your age.
yes it is all about serve and return
Karue reminds me of Fucsovics, he has very similar movements and style. Fucso could have been top 20 easily if he had skipped the 5 year party phase in his early 20s, which required a bodybuilder physique (which hinders his game) and a bit of booze 🤣.
Can Karue make the top 100-150 in your opinion? I think so..
He is young not old at all
@@curiousgeorge6921 He's not "old" but he's also not young. He's also perfecting himself at a much older age than almost anyone else on the tour. I give him a lot of credit for that.
@ he has always been playing just not in tour thats it and yes all pros deserve respect
I wanted to go out and watch you that week but it was sold out. Kinda cool that Challenger events sell out. Although I wonder if it was in no small part because of your popularity. The tv commentators mentioned your channel and your fans often.
Your level in the first set was so high! It is so gratifying to see how much your game has improved since earlier in the year.
This is the first match where it was clear that you need to improve your second serve as you have done with your forehand and first serve. And the fitness to maintain that high level for hours at a time. But I know, given everything you have achieved this year, that you do have the runway to make that improvement.
I’m glad you made the comparison between Nishesh and Novak. That’s exactly what I thought when I saw the highlights of this match just after it was played. I rooted for you in the match, but he has now become one of my favorite players too.
I've never found it a weakness to compliment another player. I actually think it's a strength. I never wanted to beat a crappy player. i wanted to beat someone who was really, really good. Then it was a real accomplishment, and more fun! Keep being you, sir!!
I love how real and raw you are. No shame in getting smoked in the second. Would’ve been the other way around if you would’ve taken the first. Just continue to be an inspiration to us mate.
Hahah thank you. Part of the sport. Going to get smoked on occasion
was really fun watching you play last month...win or loose, I could tell you were having the most fun out there!
Thanks for making this series . It's hard to find anything more entertaning than this in youtube .
Hey, Karue. I’m very excited to see you play drommondvile this year. I will be there for sure to play and watch your match’s. Looking forward to see you!
Ps, I have a good chance to play qualifying, it would be a dream to set up a hit with you! Congratulations on your journey, extremely impressive what you have done 👏
How did you find out Karue was playing there?
see you there
@@dpadron I can see the list since I’m playing it
Just google "entry list challenger" -> click 'schedule' -> fill in the name of the player you're looking 4
I was a ball boy at one of basavaredy's matches in chicago 75 challenger a few months ago. Really fun to watch
I honestly feel like i've been a ball boy for you as well lol
Loved to see the extra little clips on the before match warm up and practice!
Really nice match ! Well done mate ! Such a joy to watch… both of you are so talented!
Thanks for watching!
Wow didn't realize Nishesh is playing so well. Really enjoying see your rise and your analysis. You can absolutely beat him next time. Your ball striking ability to be aggressive is very very good. Let's get you to Australia!
Good try. Love that your partner in life and the fur kid are there to support you all the way. Cheers to that
always good to have them
Keep going Karue! We're rooting for you!
Fantastic performance Karue. The guy was like a machine, so few unforced errors yet you were right in there. Well done.
next time you play him serve like a 3.5 level soft serve on the first serve I bet he will blast the ball long
😂
Hope you had a good trip mate. Enjoyed the analysis.
Oh man, you were in my No. CA neighborhood! Sorry I missed the opportunity to come watch you.. always enjoy your humbleness and your play by play commentary. Keep going KS!… those legs are looking like a V8 HEMi engine.. keep working hard! God bless.
You're one of the best now and you are playing the best. Can't win them all and it was close! that's crazy, you're heading to greatness!
Hey Karue, I've been watching you for several years now and It is amazing how good you can keep things simple and have amazing results with it. As a tennis coach I would say you could explode that non attacking shots your opponents make, you can take time away by beeing 1ms faster, that would make you a top 100, I'm so sure.
Keep up the good work! I want to see you battle in slams, you can do it!
Nishesh is a beast. Been following him for a long time and was super excited to see how you’d do against him.
hey Karue! Really excited to watch your matches! Thank you for your content!
What is the string bed you are using? and tension?
K-POP 60LBS - toroline.com/collections/my-tennis-hq
Great game, you've got the skills. Once you get your conditioning up to outlast your opponents i think you'll definitely dominate top 100. Keep up the content Karue. Doing great!!
I’ll have a better chance haha
I saw at least 6 points in that first set where you hit an amazing shot and stayed back. He retrieved the ball and the point continued. He recognized immediately when he hit a good shot then followed it in (ex. see game him serving 5-5 his 2 approach shots to your BH.)
Your baseline game is incredible with the side to side accuracy + depth and the short angles thrown in. Capitalize on those strengths and come forward more.
I noticed your energy plummet after evening it up at 5-5, saving 3 set points. He then held easily to go up 6-5. When you saved those set points, he was vulnerable that next game where you made two unforced errors returning. He showed you his nerves at 4-5 with his two missed returns.
This match was decided the last two games of the first set. Tiny margins at this level. Fun to watch 👍
Hi, Karue: Love your positive review of Basavareddy. You gave him a tough match. BTW: Who was a tougher match for you: Basavareddy or Learner Tien? Both of these young players look exceptionally tough. Keep up the good work, btw! I can see your fitness getting better and better. Great scrambling!
vamos por maisss!!👏🏻
really impressed with your movement!!
thank you
Dude your court coverage is nuts
Hope to see you at the AO!
Nishesh and Learner are two up and comers that you've faced. These guys have major game. Your top level is good enough to hang Karue. The difference is playing when you don't have your A game.
Nishesh has a much higher ceiling than learner . Learner is like a taller nishioka
@@tbbt1777 Nishioka currently #64. That's still impressive.
both very impressive players
@cozyslor it is
@@cozyslor nishioka is different guy .. he is already 28 and very impressive for a 170cm person
Totally unrelated about the match, but I see some similarity with one of my all-time favorites, David Nalbandian, in your baseline strokes, Karue. Both enjoyable to watch for sure.
totally agree with the comment about congratulating your opponent on a good shot and how you just like to see good tennis. You're right, doesn't mean you can't beat them, just fun to play a good point either way.
This is amazing... Theres no modern movement or modern swing, BUT what Karue does possess is great court positioning, shot selection, and confidence...I wasnt a believer, at first, and thought this mission was a waste of time and money, but I have been proven wrong, big time.
You’re a total inspiration. Nothing else to say.
Haha thank you. Not really trying to inspire, just want to play ball but I am glad it is getting people to play more!
LFG Karue, you are still on track to get to AO. What are your thoughts on TennisUnleashed's video where he analyzes (and has suggestions for) your forehand?
Lajal played amazing first round in knoxville
JUst watched to 5-5. Super high level. Nishesh is a cut above in terms of his neutral rally ball. He hits deep with good pace and puts his opponnent under pressure already. A good number of times Karue hit a bit shorter than him on a neutral ball and then Nishesh would start dictating the point. I didnt see anyone else do that to Karue. Usually his shorter rally balls are still ok as the other player cant do much with it. They cant hit back with quality often enough.
Losing a grueling 7-5 or 6-6 tiebreaker is mentally taxing and we see that all the time at the highest levels. But realize winning the second set will be just as demoralizing for him and we're back to even in the third. Easier said than done but that's the mental in this sport.
Head up high! You played so good and I completely understand the mental fatigue effect after putting so much effort and focus into something but you have a wall on the other side of the net. Now, in hindsight and after analyzing your and his performance, did you think of a solution that could possiby hurt him? His tactics seemed quite predictable, left-right-left-right and so on, just to make you run and wear you out physically. Exactly like Djokovic. Maybe mixing in some different shots - slice, short balls to make him run forward, heavy angle balls, long top spin balls to push him back, going more to the net and not give him the opportunity/time to act. He was glued to the baseline and dictated the game from there, took the ball early too and they seemed to come straight into his comfort zone time and again. His returns were superb though and it’s difficult to face a guy like that, could slower and sliced serves maybe been a way to disturb him? He appeared not to like going forward that much, he hugged the baseline and didn’t budge from there. I wonder how his net game is and what would’ve happened if he had to play more from the service lines?
Incredible level mate!
thank you
Nice one handed backhand at 02:46
Before playing Challengers,is the only way to get points on ATP playing futures?
Great tennis man regardless.. from both sides but his decision making at age 19 is more impressive than eveything else imo, going down the line only when he can hit a winner is hard to see from guys at this age.
Have you watched tennisunleashed's analysis of your match? Thoughts on his recommendations?
tip flip
the level in this match is SOOOOOO good
Torcendo muito para você conseguir ir pro quali! Assisti você aqui em Curitiba contra o Mateus, derrota amarga, mas com certeza isso trouxe boas lições rumo ao AO25. Pena que não consegui tirar uma foto com você, pois não queria tirar seu momento de concentração pré-jogo haha
I think playing that type of player is super tricky. He is like the ultimate pusher except he hits quality shots instead of junk balls. You feel like they're a brick wall and not even trying their best (because they dont go for shots down the line)
Karue, on the topic of pressure points, how do I create those moments more often. The sense of pressure comes when I have more to lose on the line, like going into playoffs, sectionals, etc - rated 4.0 USTA. But those moments are far and few due to time constraint.
Figure out ways to add pressure to practice (play for something, no matter how small it is)
@@KaruesellHQ I appreciate the response! Will do just that
Jogão! Alto nível
Karue is the true rising star
He is Indian Nole. Does he use a Head Prestige?
Prestige yes
This is good example of the importante of mental strength and fighting spirit. You can't just "give up" after losing the first set. Some people are better then others with that, but has to be practiced as much as physical fitness. May be shaving that mustache might help :)
😴
lesgooo karueeee!!
You think this guy will be top 100?
He's already almost there. He's top 50 at minimum.
Top 10 talent if he improves his serve and touch game . Dude has insane ball striking and return . Best American talent of his generation
EZ top 100.
He will be top 100. Not sure what’s the ceiling but high floor
Tennis is a tough sport. Good luck going forward 👍
It is! Thank you
would be curious to hear what Nishesh needs to do to get into the top 100
Nothing.for top 10,needs to improve his serve
I have seen nishesh's return against alcaraz and sinner at tour finals last year and it held up great . Karue you did great
Yonex AD Accel on your feet?
Saying this as a big fan - isn't Karue very 'big' (strong) for a tennis player? Is there a lot of weight lifting going on or just genetics?
hahah I am. It is not a lot of lifting I am just kinda thick hahah not that skinny genetic plus I am older now and spent the last 5 years not working out that much
@KaruesellHQ i had to grind the gym like crazy to gain a bit of weight, being 35. I play tennis since I was 5, the gym protects my joints lol. Abraços de sp!!
Are you coming to Drummondville challenger karu?
yes sir
Second serve return was top 50 action
Damn bro u played so well.Though loss
see you next year in vegas.....i hope you play there again 2025......
Have a good week
What happened to Gui?
Cataloo moon
Interesting to see the player's point of view during a match....IT IS easier looking at it from outside...playing the actual game and being in the heat of it imo you "miss" some things ...like you said during the comment/reaction video of the match ... it's funny for me (especially in the ladies side) that they don't "see" obvious stuff in their opponents defense, habbits, strong hits/weak hits but I know it's hard...hell i've seen players cry on the court or (and let's not repeat that one) hitting their heads with the racket to the point of drawing actual blood *caugh* Youzhny *caugh*
idk, guess when he gave you those off balance slow high shots after you got him out of position it would have been best to attack the ball and take more time away from him. Seems like that won you the most points doing that from these clips anyway.
Hit a bigger second serve or try different things on the second serve. Double fault or lose the point anyway. Be like G. Perricard. 129 mph average second serve.
Prestige players will always have my respect you can’t deny it’s true for all of us hahha
prestige players do it on hard mode!
@ 🤣🤣 OGs
Pffff show the second set man
Basically, his style is, "pusher style"😂
⚡️⚡️⚡️
7-5, 6-0 is the Final Score
LFG
IMAGINE Sell vs Kyrgios Australian open 2025
would be wild
👏👏👏✌
Quick answer is, no
I think that's the difference between the 200 and the rest of the field. You can't deflate and get discouraged after losing one set. Maybe talking to a sports psychologist would help?
that's a good idea
Pretty sure he mentioned that he does use a sports psychologist.
I don’t think you should compare a top 200 player (borderline) to one of the greatest players of all time. No disrespect at all, great player, but the big 3 are masters of the sport
You can recognize similarities between players whether they are top 5 or top 200. Let's see where this 19 yo peaks in the future. Seems to have at least top 50 talent based on where he is today.
He tanked
What?
first
First like 😂
Nishesh has a top 10 djokovic-esque ball striking and returning . His serve and touch game needs to improve for him to reach the very top . best American talent of his generation
Nishesh practiced with the top guys at the tour finals in Turin last year and his returns and ball striking held up well against the elite like medvedev and alcaraz as well. Nishesh is going right to the top
Already 19 ... at 17 years 7month Shang Juncheng played Australian open second round .. so dont hype him that much ... at his same age Shang won Atp 250 ... i m not comparing him with Alcaraz or any top 10 players
Nishesh spizziri match was so dominant from the nishesh
I felt the same as well. Nishesh is a 8 cm shorter Novak. If he can improve his first serve . He is a top 10 talent
Karue,are you friends with nishesh ?