Tag: Roger Federer

  • Nature’s Eternal Wonder

    Nature’s Eternal Wonder

    Valencia Youzhny

    Basel, Final

    (1) Del Potro d. (3) Federer, 7-6(3), 2-6, 6-4

    Roger Federer this afternoon enjoyed the unusual sensation of entering Basel’s St. Jakobshalle as the underdog, although perhaps “enjoyed” isn’t the word. In truth he probably enjoyed it about as much as the Swiss crowd, which for the better part of a decade had been sustained on easy brilliance, but must now seek additional nourishment in hope, a notoriously fickle dietary supplement. It has been that kind of season, and in Juan Martin del Potro he was facing a fine player who has transformed himself into a fearsome contender on every surface, roofed or not.

    Last year in Basel Federer performed about as patchily as he has this year, and eventually fell to del Potro in a reasonable three-set final. At that time he was the world No. 1, and all the commentary centred on his doomed bid to retain his ranking until the end of the year. His return to No. 1 had been masterful, and apparently entailed visiting an unusual number of dispiriting losses on del Potro, indeed rather more than seemed necessary. As a consequence, Federer was still the strong favourite for last year’s final. This year he certainly wasn’t. Before the final, he hadn’t defeated another member of the Top 10 since the quarterfinal of the Australian Open, and was now ranked lower than del Potro. After the final, both those facts are still true. The interest this year lies in wondering whether he will qualify for the World Tour Finals, an event he has won six times. Sky Sports’ resident math-whiz Barry Cowan has run the sums, and reassured us that Federer will be there. Even so, it has, to put it mildly, been a horrible season.

    Even that is misleading, though, since the concept of a single season in professional tennis is mostly meaningless. The suggestion that Federer is having a bad season glosses over the reality that he has been playing quite poorly for much longer than that. In fact, though I might be courting a measure of disapproval by saying so, I don’t think he has looked truly impressive since last year’s Olympics. This may seem a contentious point, given that soon after the Games he claimed the Cincinnati Masters without dropping serve, bagelling Novak Djokovic in the final. To the already potent mixture of injury and slumping form, one cannot help but add the question of desire. Overall, his hunger no doubt remains as undiminished as he insists when asked, but at those crucial moments in important matches when every choice must be razor sharp and execution flawless, his instinct lately seems blunted, the old audacity dulled. Perhaps it is merely an issue of confidence, the least tangible casualty of injury and prolonged poor form, and always the last to recover.

    Still, Federer looked amply committed today, and wasn’t all that far from winning, and far from sanguine when he didn’t. It was a decent final, and tangentially diverting for how the shape of the whole match was thoughtfully captured in the first set, the way a tree’s form is reprised in each leaf, or the entire idiocy of pop culture is present in a single Kardashian. Nature’s wonder truly is eternal. Anyway, both players looked good early, before del Potro broke and moved ahead, but was broken back to love as he served for the first set. They reached a tiebreak, and Federer’s level plummeted while the Argentine’s didn’t. Federer stormed back in the second, as del Potro conducted an ill-conceived experiment to ascertain how well he’d do without a first serve. Not very well, it turned out.

    Having satisfied himself of this, he set about proving the corollary in the third set, winning sixteen of the seventeen first serves he put into play. On the slick Basel court, this rendered him all but unbreakable. If only Federer had been. Alas, the key moment came early in the set, as Federer forwent several chances of maintaining his second set momentum, and was laboriously broken. His only opportunity to break back came immediately, but del Potro held steady when it counted. The rest of the match turned out to be a long coda. Del Potro, afterwards, was ecstatic. Look for him in Paris, and London. Look for Federer, too.

    [divider]

    Valencia, Final

    Youzhny d. (1) Ferrer, 6-3, 7-5

    Mikhail Youzhny won’t feature in London, although by claiming the title in Valencia a short while later he has reinserted himself back into the Top 20, displacing a few others, and settling at No. 15. Ferrer, meanwhile, will be in London, since despite losing today he remains comfortable at world No. 3. I cannot help but think this lofty position does not reflect his current form.

    Unlike Federer, the last twelve months have been the finest of Ferrer’s career, including a maiden Masters title, a Roland Garros final, and a career-high ranking. Again I’ll court perversity, this time by arguing that Ferrer has achieved these results in spite of his form and not because of it. If anything this renders his achievement greater still, although I also suspect he has enjoyed a healthy slice of luck, which at the right dosage is hard to gainsay. Consider this: he won the Bercy title last year without playing a match in which he was not the clear favourite, which is a pretty unlikely scenario when you think about it. He reached the Australian Open semifinal only by the grace of Nicolas Almagro’s brain, while the Jo-Wilfried Tsonga whom Ferrer encountered in the Roland Garros semifinal was a mere shade of the majestic Frenchman who’d trounced Federer the round before. A similar case can be made for Ferrer’s run to the Miami final. I’m not one of those who take pleasure in deriding Ferrer. He’s likeable, is rightly commended for the extent to which he maximises his gifts, and all any player can do is take advantage of situations that fall his way. But I do think he was a much better player last year.

    That being said, I also thought he would beat Youzhny in the Valencia final. For all that victories over Almagro shouldn’t be considered a form guide for anything – even allowing for the degree to which match-ups between compatriots can go haywire – it seemed that Ferrer’s inherent advantages over Youzhny would only be rendered overwhelming by the environment. People euphemistically call Basel Federer’s court, but Valencia really is Ferrer’s court. He co-owns the event, which is staged in the Agora, an attractively stylised bone-cathedral that helps it feel like a novelty level from Topspin 4. One presumes Ferrer’s interests are at least partly responsible for the chemical miracle of Valencia’s surface, so far the world’s most successful attempt at rendering molasses into so striking a shade of cobalt. Unlike Stockholm where the court rewards excellent value for shots, a fact Grigor Dimitrov eventually exploited by hitting a few of his in, the Valencia surface is notoriously difficult to penetrate. Like Ferrer, this court is built for retrieval. For an aggressive yet self-destructive player like Youzhny, whose passage through the draw had mostly entailed outlasting even flakier men than himself, it was a tough proposition.

    However, while I maintain that there’s more that can go wrong with an attacking game than a defensive one, Ferrer this year is living proof that inherently defensive tennis still requires more than a pair of legs. He remains as quick as ever, but his retrieving lately has been nowhere near as accomplished as one might expect. Youzhny was superb, bold from the very beginning, from all parts of the court, varied in his approach, and fearless when pressed. Once he finds his groove there are few players more attractive, although his recurrent issue is that he can be de-grooved so readily by a really tenacious opponent. Often the one extra shot is one too many, but today Ferrer only sporadically forced the Russian to come up with it.

    There was a brief period in the second set when it felt like Ferrer would tear the match away. Youzhny could barely win a point, the local crowd found its voice as their man pulled ahead. But Ferrer’s momentum mysteriously flagged, and a poor service game saw him repeatedly out-rallied and broken back. Soon he was broken again, and Youzhny stepped up to serve for the title, after spending a precious minute pre-visualising it under his towel at the changeover. I cannot say whether it went as he’d planned, but it went as well as he could have hoped. His backhand up the line is unorthodox and beautiful, and today it was instrumental. The last point was thus an appropriate summary: Youzhny launched an attack, Ferrer scrambled desperately, and finally managed to get the ball safely up high to the Russian’s single-hander. The Russian, despite many excellent reasons to grow timid, launched a fearless backhand up the line. Ferrer could reach it, but not control it, and that was the match. Youzhny’s smile afterwards as he saluted the Valencia crowd – far more civilised than Madrid’s – was immense, but exceeded easily by that of his coach. Boris Sobkin doesn’t smile often, but it’s always worth the wait.

    Cover Photo (Creative Commons License): Marianne Bevis

  • Del Potro Prevails Again in Basel

    Del Potro Prevails Again in Basel

    JMDP

    In a repeat of last year’s final at the Swiss Indoors Basel 500, Juan Martin Del Potro again denied Roger Federer and his hometown crowd:  7-6(3), 2-6, 6-4.  The win gave the Argentine his fourth title of 2013.  Federer was playing in his eighth consecutive final at his local tournament, his tenth overall, where he has won five titles.

    The match was an entertaining affair, with much good tennis on display.  Del Potro broke in the eighth game of the first set, but Federer broke back immediately, and the set eventually went to a tiebreak, which the Argentine world No. 5 dominated handily.  The Swiss, currently ranked No. 7, broke early in the second and raced through in very fine form.  However, Del Potro returned the favor in the first game of the decider.  Federer nearly broke back in the next game, but Del Potro hung on, and the one break proved to be enough for the win.

    Federer has yet to qualify for the ATP World Tour Finals, and will need to win his second round match in Paris this week to assure his place, in what would be his twelfth consecutive year-end championship tournament.  Juan Martin Del Potro has already qualified.

    [divider]

    Photo credit:  Marianne Bevis (Creative Commons License)

  • Federer, Del Potro, Ferrer and Youzhny Advance to Finals in Basel and Valencia

    Federer, Del Potro, Ferrer and Youzhny Advance to Finals in Basel and Valencia

    Men's final Fed DP Youzhny Ferrer

    Roger Federer, Juan Martin Del Potro, David Ferrer, and Mikhail Youzhny have advanced to the finals of Basel and Valencia.

    In Basel, the Argentine Del Potro beat the Frenchman Edouard Roger-Vasselin in three sets, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2. In the next semifinal, the Swiss Roger Federer won a hard-fought contest against the young Canadian Vasek Pospisil, finally winning in three sets, 6-3, 6-7(3), 7-5.

    In Valencia, the first semifinal was an all-Russian affair, with Mikhail Youzhny knocking out Dmitry Tursunov, 6-2, 6-4. Up next, No. 1 seed David Ferrer, of Spain, beat countryman Nicolas Almagro, 6-2, 6-3, to advance to the final.

    On Sunday, the Basel final will take place not before 14:30 P.M. (local time); the Valencia final is scheduled for not before 16:00 (local time).

  • Valencia and Basel – ATP Latest Scores – Friday, October 25

    Valencia and Basel – ATP Latest Scores – Friday, October 25

    Federer Ferrer 02

    Latest Scores – Friday, October 25

    Basel:

    Roger-Vasselin d Brands — 6-3, 4-6, 6-3
    Pospisil d Dodig — 7-6(11), 6-4
    (3) Federer d (8) Dimitrov — 6-3, 7-6(2)
    (1) Del Potro d Mathieu — 6-4, 6-4

    [divider]

    Valencia:

    (1) Ferrer d (5) Janowicz — 6-4, 4-6, 6-0
    (3) Almagro d (7) Fognini — 7-6(6), 6-2
    Tursunov d Chardy — 6-3, 6-3
    Youzhny d Nieminen — 7-5, 6-7(4), 6-4

    [divider]

    Basel Schedule of Play — Saturday, October 26:

    CENTER COURT — Not Before 14:30

    [1] Juan Martin Del Potro (ARG) v Edouard Roger-Vasselin (FRA)
    [3] Roger Federer (SUI) v Vasek Pospisil (CAN)

    [divider]

    Valencia Schedule of Play — Saturday, October 26

    AGORA — Not Before 16:00

    Dmitry Tursunov (RUS) v Mikhail Youzhny (RUS)

    Not Before 20:00

    [1] David Ferrer (ESP) v [3] Nicolas Almagro (ESP)

  • Valencia and Basel – ATP Latest Scores – Wednesday, October 23

    Valencia and Basel – ATP Latest Scores – Wednesday, October 23

    Federer Ferrer

    Latest Scores – Wednesday, October 23

    Basel:

    (3) Federer d Istomin — 4-6, 6-3, 6-2
    (1) Del Potro d Laaksonen — 6-4, 6-4
    Llodra d (5) Gasquet — 6-4, 6-2
    (8) Dimitrov d Stepanek — 6-3, 6-3
    Mathieu d Kudla — 6-4, 7-5
    Dodig d (6) Nishikori — 6-1, 6-2
    Pospisil d Haase — 6-4, 6-4

    [divider]

    Valencia:

    (1) Ferrer d Monfils — 6-3, 6-2
    (4) Isner d Gulbis — 7-6 (4), 7-6 (2)
    Kohlschreiber d (2) Haas — 3-6, 6-3, 6-3
    Tursunov d Bautista Agut — 6-2, 7-6 (3)
    (7) Fognini d Granollers — 6-3, 6-2
    Chardy d Mayer — 4-6, 7-5, 6-3
    Nieminen d Paire — 6-3, 6-3

    [divider]

    Basel Schedule of Play — Thursday, October 24:

    CENTER COURT — Start 14:00

    Edouard Roger-Vasselin (FRA) v [Q] Tobias Kamke (GER)

    Not Before 16:00

    [Q] Paul-Henri Mathieu (FRA) v Michael Llodra (FRA)

    Not Before 18:00

    [1] Juan Martin Del Potro (ARG) v Marcos Baghdatis (CYP)

    Not Before 20:00

    [8] Grigor Dimitrov (BUL) v [WC] Alexandr Dolgopolov (UKR)

    COURT 2 — Start 14:00

    Vasek Pospisil (CAN) v Ivo Karlovic (CRO)

    Not Before 16:00

    Lukasz Kubot (POL) v Daniel Brands (GER)

    [divider]

    Valencia Schedule of Play — Thursday, October 24

    AGORA — Start 13:00

    Jeremy Chardy (FRA) v [4] John Isner (USA)

    Mikhail Youzhny (RUS) v Philipp Kohlschreiber (GER)

    [1] David Ferrer (ESP) v Julien Benneteau (FRA)

    Not Before 20:00

    [3] Nicolas Almagro (ESP) v [Q] Michal Przysiezny (POL)

    PISTA 1 — Start 13:00

    [Q] Alejandro Falla (COL) v Jarkko Nieminen (FIN)

    [Q] Joao Sousa (POR) v [5] Jerzy Janowicz (POL)

  • Annacone: Federer Split Was a Mutual Decision

    Annacone: Federer Split Was a Mutual Decision

    Roger Federer and Paul Annacone

    Roger Federer’s coaching split with Paul Annacone has been described as a mutual parting of ways by Annacone in an interview with the newspaper USA Today.

    “After a number of very good, heartfelt, and really thoughtful conversations about what’s best in timing for Roger and also for me,” they concluded it was best to move on, said Annacone. “I think we both feel good about it. I know I do.”

    Annacone still believes 32-year-old Federer has another Major title in him. “I can’t imagine anything other than success coming his way. For me, it’s not a matter of if. It’s a matter of when.”

    [divider]

    Cover Photo: Marianne Bevis, Creative Commons License

  • Federer and Annacone Part Ways

    Federer and Annacone Part Ways

    Roger Federer and coach Paul Annacone have parted ways.  The 32-year-old Swiss superstar revealed the news in a statement posted on his official website.  The break comes after a poor run of form for the world No. 1, including an early exit at the Shanghai Masters to Gail Monfils.

    Federer’s statement on the split:

    After a terrific 3 ½ years working together, Paul and I have decided to move on to the next chapter in our professional lives. When we started together we had a vision of a 3 year plan to win another Grand Slam title and get back to the number #1 ranking. Along with many other goals and great memories, these 2 main goals were achieved. After numerous conversations culminating at the end of our most recent training block, we felt like this was the best time and path for both of us. Paul remains a dear friend, and we both look forward to continuing our friendship. I want to thank Paul for his help and the value he has added to me and my team.

    [divider]
    Talk about the split in the Tennis Frontier Forum

    [divider]

  • Opinion: Federer Should Rehire Coach Peter Lundgren

    Opinion: Federer Should Rehire Coach Peter Lundgren

    OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

    Paul Annacone has been dropped by Roger Federer as his coach.

    Clearly, Team Federer needs a change in chemistry.

    Perhaps a good choice to replace Annacone would be former coach Peter Lundgren, who was able to spark the best out of Federer during his early years on the ATP World Tour.

    Lundgren is a jovial, fun-loving sort of person who also has a proven track record of knowing how to maximize a player’s talent.

    Lundgren and Federer had a special chemistry, as former ATP player, opponent, and sometime practice partner Attila Savolt remarked about Roger for my book “Facing Federer.”

    “He was very friendly at practice. With Lundgren, they would always be laughing, relaxed, always in a very good mood. It was a nice energy around them, even on the practice court. They don’t take it so serious. They were joking around, they were very relaxed, really enjoying time together. I really thought that they really fit together very well.

    “I think also Lundgren was an effect on him. He’s a very open guy, very relaxed, very nice guy too. I found that they really fit together. There was always a smile on both of their faces.”

    Could Peter Lundgren be the missing piece of the puzzle? Could Peter Lundgren be the guy to kindle the Federer fire once again? Could Peter Lundgren be the guy to make tennis fun again for Roger?

    Lundgren is likely available right now. He worked with Francesca Schiavone at the US Open this year but the Italian was bombed out in the first round by eventual champion Serena Williams.

    [divider]

    Talk about the split in the Tennis Frontier Forum

  • Monfils Stuns Federer in Shanghai

    Monfils Stuns Federer in Shanghai

    Gael Monfils

    Gael Monfils recorded only his second career victory over former world No. 1 Roger Federer to progress to the quarterfinals of the Shanghai Masters.  The Frenchman prevailed 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-3 in just over two hours.

    Federer pushed the match to a third set coming back from 3-5 down in the second set to break Monfils and take the eventual tiebreak.

    Monfils was not to be denied, breaking Federer again in the fourth game of the deciding set. It proved to be crucial, as the remainder of the match went with serve.

    Monfils will now meet the winner of Novak Djokovic and Fabio Fognini in the next round.

    Federer will now have increased concerns about qualifying for the World Tour Finals following a poor run of form.

    [divider]

    Discuss the Shanghai Masters with fellow tennis fans in the Tennis Frontier Forum.

    [divider]

    Photo: Christian Mesiano, Creative Commons

  • Facing Federer: Dominik Hrbaty’s Take

    Facing Federer: Dominik Hrbaty’s Take

    Scoop Malinowski, who contributes to the Tennis Frontier, has released his new book “Facing Federer“.

    Here is the third of three excerpts:

    Dominik Hrbaty

    “Roger is different. He’s the new generation. He was comparable to Marcelo Rios, very talented, he has great hands, but the difference was Roger had the big serve, big return. He could make winners out of anything basically. And even out of defense. And Roger is just one of a kind. It’s always a special feeling to play Roger or any No. 1 in the world. Because he’s the best player in the world and you want to be at your best. If you can beat him you become a part of the history of tennis. Because you don’t often meet a No. 1 in the world. And if you beat him, everybody says Wow, congratulations. You make the news. All the friends suddenly text you. It’s just such a good feeling. Also you can do it for yourself because you can prove that your own tennis can play against the top player in the world. And this is the point of tennis. If you can prove, not only to yourself, but also to the other people that you are learned on the level, you’re really playing at the top. And people are looking to you, that you are the one that can play tennis.”

    Question: What was your most memorable match against Federer?

    Dominik Hrbaty: “Probably in Cincinnati when I beat him as the No. 1 in the world. But there was also one in Wimbledon that was our last meeting. Because it was after my surgery, I didn’t play well and this was the only time that he beat me. Because I beat him two times before. We were very good friends with Roger and he was always joking about when he was going to beat me. And in Wimbledon, that match, we sit on the bench together, which is very unusual. On the last changeover I came over and sat with him. And I told him, ‘Roger, finally you beat me. So this is the day.’ And we had a good laugh. It’s not only about competition, sports and tennis is about friendship and also about, you know, making the thing that you will remember for the rest of your life.”

    2000 Paris Masters, Round of 64, Hrbaty: 4-6, 6-2, 6-2
    2004 Cincinnati Masters, Round of 64, Hrbaty: 1-6, 7-6, 6-4
    2008 Wimbledon, Round of 128, Federer: 3-6, 2-6, 2-6

    The first “Facing Federer” excerpt was with Dmitry Tursunov.

    The second “Facing Federer” excerpt was with Gilles Muller.

    You can purchase the whole book at Amazon:

    [divider]

    Discuss with fellow tennis fans on the Tennis Frontier message boards.

    [divider]

    Cover Photo: Carine06 (Creative Commons License)