The Associated PressRoddick scrambles against Tomas Berdych on Sunday.
The  talk started over the weekend and continued on through Monday, getting  louder and louder.
Andy Roddick is back! people said. He's  going to make a run at the French Open! This is his year for Wimbledon!  
Every tennis fan in the U.S. -- certainly every one that I  know -- is excited about Andy  Roddick. No, not Andy Roddick. The new Andy Roddick. He’s  moving like Fred Astaire, they say. Watch that footwork! He’s playing smart  tennis, shocking Rafa by being aggressive, putting the double-whammy on  Berdych by slicing his backhand and looping his forehand.
That Coach Stefanki  is a genius!
Roddick is indeed playing very well. He earned the  Masters title in Miami.
But come on. Now that we've had a day to  celebrate the good old U.S. of A., we need to take a step back. Andy’s  not going to make a run at Roland Garros. And when Wimbledon rolls  around, he goes solidly in the Dark Horse category -- no more than that.  The Big Four has not become the Big Five, and when it does, it’ll be  because Juan Martin del Potro is healthy and motivated again.
Don't  get me wrong. Roddick deserves credit for making the most of what he’s  got. He deserves credit for putting his head down and gutting out  serious results long after he realized he simply wasn’t ever going to  get back to No. 1 in the world.
Well done, Andy.
But  winning Miami does not portend bigger things to come. Let's face it, the  new Andy Roddick isn't really all that different from the old Andy  Roddick. Yes, he's a little quicker, but he's still not as quick as  Roger Federer or Rafael Nadal or Novak Djokovic. And yes, he's playing  smarter, but did Andy really need Larry Stefanki to tell him he  shouldn't play heavy-topspin backcourt tennis against Nadal or Federer  or Nikolay Davydenko?
Stefanki believes that his charge, who  turns 28 in September, can  have a late career like Andre Agassi. That's not going to happen.  Roddick is willing to work every bit as hard as Agassi, but he simply  doesn't have the same level of talent. The new Roddick is still not a  serious threat to Federer or Nadal when they're at their best.  (Remember, just two weeks ago, an in-the-zone Roddick  lost to Ivan Ljubicic.)
But that doesn't mean there's no  hope at all. Roddick remains a threat to take advantage of an opening.  Until he’s 31 or 32, he’s going to be a dangerous dark horse in three of  the four majors each year. With more hard work, and a little bit of  luck, his draw will open up at Wimbledon one day and he’ll get that  second major title.
It’s not the career he imagined when he won  the U.S. Open right after turning 21 and triumphantly hosted “Saturday  Night Live.” But nobody’s perfect.
source :oregonlive.com