I saw it and agree it was very good, but it reinforced my dislike of Connors. He's one of the greatest tennis players of all time, but an enormous ******* to this day. I thought the most fascinating part was that he and Krickstein (the kid he beat in the monumental five-setter in 1991) were close friends at the time; Krickstein looked to Connors as somewhat of a mentor; that match basically destroyed Krickstein's promising career while making millions of dollars for Connors; yet to this day Connors has never spoken to him. Not to say that Connors should apologize for winning - he shouldn't - but it would show common decency to reach out and show a little empathy for a friend. But Connors lacks common decency, which is a pretty standard description of him from anyone who has ever interacted with him. But still, his 1991 U.S. Open run was amazing.