The Lendl–McEnroe rivalry was a tennis rivalry between Ivan Lendl and John McEnroe, who met in 36 matches between 1980 and 1992.[1][2] Their head-to-head is 21–15, favoring Lendl. It is one of the most notable tennis rivalries of the Open Era.[3] Their most memorable match was the 1984 French Open final, when Lendl came from two sets down to win the championship,[3] which McEnroe considered his worst loss.[4]
McEnroe, although capable of holding his own from the back court against most players, struggled against Lendl. Thus he would use every opportunity to get to the net and take time away from Lendl, who was not the fastest mover and had loopier racket swings—which on faster surfaces did not serve him as well as on clay.
McEnroe served a variety of spins, speed and placements to keep Lendl guessing and adjusting. Lendl, on the other hand, had a simpler game plan: serve hard enough to keep McEnroe back from the net, and then pound away with his powerful topspin groundstrokes.
Both pushed each other to evolve—McEnroe adopted the Max200G racket to improve on his power, whereas Lendl hired a nutritionist, fitness advisor and Tony Roche as his coach to improve his known weaknesses: second serve, backhand and volleys.
Lendl 21 – McEnroe 15
Lendl–McEnroe (16–11)