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Thanks for taking the time to answer specifically the questions I asked. Seems like some arguments were maybe directed towards an audience that might hold more negative views about Gauzy's career than my actual post intended. Don't appreciate having views misattributed to me, but part of that is my fault for being unclear and using vague terms. At the very least I learned more about Gauzy in this discussion.1. Because the last 2-3 years isn't much of his career, especially for someone who was a notable junior. And our arguments didn't rest on the entirety of his career, our arguments were trying to understand how one got to the idea that much of his career was the last few years. So what we wanted was something that showed us how this argument was not simply recency bias run amok.
2. Because "close" games are common in TT and we were trying to understand what made Gauzy different from players like Anders Lind. Kiril Gerassimenko, Kofi Niwa, Anton Kallberg, who have all had lots of close matches with the Chinese and other top ranked players and often lost.
3. Because we are not convinced that you have come close to making the argument of much of his career for someone who was already a known quantity in 2011. His adult career is at least 12 years. I believe he was already French champion in 2015. You haven't even seriously made the case that the last 2-3 years qualify has much of his career. In the end while the discussion is partly semantic, I don't even think you have really bridged the gap on substance. If there was some attempt to show that Gauzy had these losses in a lot of his 13 plus year career or even 9 year drinking age in the USA career, maybe this would have been less of an issue. But there hasn't been any serious attempt before Tony's posts to show that there is a familiarity with Gauzy as a talented junior and young national champion and that the results he is having now are typical of many parts (or much) of his career. I might have missed these attempts so I will happily read them if they are pointed out to me.
If 2 years is a great amount of anyone's professional career, feel free to take that route. People would struggle to consider 2 years a great amount of Felix Lebruns career and he is only 18!
From my knowledge of other sports, however, I actually would argue that even 2 years is a 'great amount' of time in the career of a professional athlete, especially in a sport where people retire sometimes at age 25 and only spend a few years playing at the top level. But I'll let you and Tony argue that point since you guys have watched this sport for decades and these are the things I'm still learning about it.