Tag: Roger Federer

  • Strong Believers

    Strong Believers

    Western & Southern Open, ATP Third Round

    [1] Novak Djokovic def. [Q] David Goffin 6-2, 6-0
    [5] Roger Federer def. [11] Tommy Haas 1-6, 7-5, 6-3
    [2] Andy Murray def. Julien Benneteau 6-2, 6-2
    [4] Rafael Nadal def. Grigor Dimitrov 6-2, 5-7, 6-2

    ESPN, Inc., formerly the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network Rulers of the Universe, has a way of making its fellow cable network, The Tennis Channel, look like it has the earnings potential of an independent bookseller—an independent used-bookstore with a leaky roof and a big CD section. I could watch Cincinnati tennis on two different ESPN stations today, while the Tennis Channel was stuck re-airing the Kooyong Classic from 2004. But, I could watch ESPN today, because today was a happy work-at-home paperwork-day. (This is a special kind of day, similar to a holiday. Sadly, it is also a type of day that has become all too rare in recent months.)

    Aside from making the Tennis Channel feel bad about itself, ESPN also has a way of reminding American tennis fans exactly how unimportant their sport-of-choice is in the grand scheme of chosen sports. Today they managed it by regulating Rafael Nadal and Grigor Dimitrov to ESPN3, an online stream, while airing Little League on television. Yes, a 1000-level ATP tournament contested on U.S. soil (specifically in the Western & Southern portion of the U.S.) took a back seat to eight-year-olds standing in a meadow chewing bubble gum. A match featuring one of the best players in tennis history versus the only active player on tour to be nicknamed after one of the other best players in tennis history was shunted aside by actual baby athletes.

    But I digress. Hmm. Why was I telling you about the ESPN programming schedule? Oh yes, for metaphorical purposes! And I’ll come to those in a moment, I promise. Everybody loves a metaphor. But first, since I’m on the subject of ESPN, I want to say a few words about ESPN commentator, Darren Cahill.

    In fact, you can consider this post my formal petition for Darren Cahill to take full coaching responsibility for Marion Bartoli’s post-retirement commentary career. Because, really, with Cahill in the booth, the video stream is almost optional. It isn’t simply that Darren Cahill mostly confines his commentary to the match at hand; it’s that his comments are so sensible. Indeed, when he has nothing sensible to say, he seems to say nothing at all. (Psychotherapists love this trait in their sportscasters.)

    For instance, during set one of Roger Federer’s three-set victory over Tommy Haas, Cahill wasted little time in the usual speculation about whether Roger was actually Federer, or if this Roger might not be an imitation version of the Swiss who had never learned to play tennis. Instead, he commented that Federer was more than typically nervous, rushing himself into poor decisions, mostly involving losing points at the net. Cahill also noted that Tommy Haas’s court position on the return was taking the out-wide serve from Roger forcing him into uncomfortable choices, and that Haas’s returns—flat and hard, down the middle of the court—were the best strategy to draw errors from Papa Fed.

    At some point in the middle of Nadal/Dimitrov match— the point when the Bulgarian ran down a drop shot, hit a winner, and then jumped into the air with glee—Darren Cahill chortled warmly, saying, “Goodness me, he’s fun to watch.” With Cahill in the ESPN booth, it’s also fun to listen.

    OK. That turned out to be an official second digression, which might be some type of digressive record, if such records were tracked. (I tried to keep track once, but I kept getting distracted.) So, without further ado, the metaphorical section of the post, wherein I compare the Big Four—defined herein as Djokovic, Nadal, Murray and Federer*— to ESPN, or perhaps Amazon.com, and their opponents to a cross between the Tennis Channel and various indie booksellers.

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    Novak Djokovic d. David Goffin 6-2, 6-0

    The first men’s match on Center Court today was Novak Djokovic versus David Goffin. During Djokovic’s match, morning-time for me, I listened to my voicemail, ate a bagel, and blinked, twice. By the time I’d finished, it was all over. The second set took approximately five minutes and Goffin won exactly zero games. Djokovic, on the other hand, won six. Every time I had the opportunity to glance at my monitor I was treated to the sight of a blonde Belgian standing roughly fifty feet behind the baseline, and lunging in the general direction of a tennis ball.

    Goffin made his way to the third round via a 6-1, 6-1 win over Mackenzie McDonald, who is the first non-ranked ATP player to qualify for the main draw in Cincinnati. Ever. Mackenzie hails from Piedmont, California, an American hill-town so wealthy that it seceded from its surrounding city-state, which is a rough-and-tumble place called Oakland. Piedmont has a very tidy set of public courts. It is doubtful Mackenzie makes much use of them. In the second round, David Goffin bested last week’s Rogers Cup semifinalist Vasek Pospisil, 7-5, 1-6, 7-6. Neither of these victories offers exquisite insight into Goffin’s current form. Nor did today’s loss. Djokovic didn’t let him near the tennis ball. The Serb is looking fearsome.

    Djokovic has never won the Western & Southern Open. Conquering Mason, Ohio, would make him the only ATP player to win all nine of the Masters titles. I Googled No. 9 and it turns out to be – according to the internet’s most reputable numerology sites — “the number of destiny.” Wikipedia also defines nine as the number that follows eight and precedes ten. Make of that what you will.

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    Roger Federer d. Tommy Haas 1-6, 7-5, 6-3

    Given that Federer spent a goodly portion of his third round match looking as if he were concerned that sustained rallies might damage his antique tennis racquet, you might be surprised that I’ve listed him among the metaphorically ESPN-esque players of the day. But—and I think I’m right about this—part of the reason Federer was able to come back and win the match from 1-6, 1-3 down is precisely because he is Roger Federer, or RF, Inc., for short. No matter how low the RF stock plunges, there is always a chance that his opponents will remember that they are up against a 17-time slam champion. (Sometimes, there is even opportunity for Federer to remember this, too, especially when he’s not wearing his special “warming shirt” and is therefore capable of hitting serves.)

    In Tommy Haas’s case, he must have also been aware of his 3-11 (now 3-12) career head-to-head against Federer. A tennis fan doesn’t need a numerology site to tell her that numbers like that can get in a player’s head. Nonetheless, the German got off to a stellar start, and looked as if he could continue being outstanding all day. Meanwhile, Federer proceeded to go from OK, to distinctly not OK, to much worse than that. By the end of the first set even his serve had abandoned him, protesting its owner’s wild net-rushing ways.

    But, midway through the second set the Cincinnati fans got to witness one of the marvels of today’s interdependent tennis economy. At very nearly the same moment in time, Federer began to produce his money shots, while Tommy’s currency took a sudden nosedive. Haas started his descent by re-gifting an early break back to Roger, leveling the set at 4-4. Federer consolidated, making one small fist pump in the process. Haas then gave away three straight points, which turned out to be set points, so he changed his mind and took them back. The set was still level at 5-5, but the momentum now rested with Federer.

    By the time the No. 5 seed closed out the match—an excellent drop shot to bring up match point, and a forehand winner to end it—Roger Federer looked like he had some measure of his aura back. (If you looked closely, you could even see it, shimmering in the Cincy sun — a pretty cornflower blue.) After the match, Federer was quoted as saying he is a “strong believer” he’s on the right path. Should Federer lose in the quarters, there’s still no proving him wrong. Even the most vintage version of Roger Federer could be excused for losing to Rafael Nadal at his most passionate™.

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    Andy Murray d. Julien Benneteau 6-2, 6-2

    OK, I admit I did not see one ball of Murray’s win over Julien Benneteau. (I had to do some actual work today.) Andy Murray had to do some work, too — exactly one hour, nine minutes, and two seconds’ worth. Since I have no observations to make about this match, I’ll guess (blogger prerogative): the Scot is much improved this week from last. He is also the reigning Wimbledon Champion and the defending US Open Champion. He is a factor, whether he is happy about it or not.

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    Rafael Nadal d. Grigor Dimitrov 6-2, 5-7, 6-2

    Nadal’s three-set defeat of Grigor Dimitrov was an exciting match, or might have been if I weren’t watching it while also trying to cook dinner for four. It is not easy being a Rafa fan, chopping vegetables, and watching a 6-2, 5-3 lead slip entirely away. In such moments one needs to be especially careful not to accidentally include small pieces of oneself in with the chopped kale and beans. (It’s what people like to eat in Northern California, I swear.)

    At some point during the first set, Darren Cahill said (sensibly), that, under pressure, Grigor Dimitrov had a tendency to abandon a winning strategy. As if Dimitrov knew he was being discussed, he demonstrated the truth of Cahill’s observation by gaining a hard-fought advantage in a long rally and proceeding to back it up by backing up, way up—deep into Goffin territory—losing the point because he couldn’t track down an inside-out forehand from Nadal. Case in point.

    However, when the Bulgarian made a mighty last stand, which came, as last stands will do, near the end of the second set, it turned out to be Nadal who abandoned his winning strategy. Instead of aggressively going for winners off his forehand, backhand, serves, and volleys, he mostly did not go for winners off all those same shots. When he did, he missed. Grigor, meanwhile, became good fun to watch.

    Fortunately for Rafa, he is, at the moment, well in touch with his trademark inner-passion for the game. As with Federer, you can see it in his aura, which shines bright yellow, and looks not unlike an incandescent tennis ball in the shape of a T-shirt. Even at night, the brilliant glow helps Rafa find anything from a moth resting its wings on the service-line to an aggressive baseline strategy. Having located his strategy Rafael Nadal, being Rafael Nadal, broke to open the third set. There were close games and see-saw moments in Set No. 3, but Nadal never relinquished the break. Why should he? He’s Rafa.

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    At the beginning of Roger Federer’s match he was pronounced by many (many times over) to appear “not at all like Federer.” By the time he won, his play was dubbed “vintage Federer.” True Federer. (Though he was still far from full-flow-Federer, which is even truer than truth.) It fascinates me how often top players are defined as playing “like themselves.” It isn’t just linguistic laziness, or I don’t think it is. The technique is descriptive. If you tell me Djokovic was playing like Djokovic, I don’t picture baseline errors. No, I think it’s to do with how frequently the Big Four are able to channel their best selves, which — and this applies to all of us — is the truest version of the self. I am a strong believer in that.

    And because I’ve used up my entire allotment of words, including half my allowance for next week, I’ll end with mentioning players who deserved more mention: John Isner, Dmitry Tursunov, Juan Martin del Potro, and Tomas Berdych. Each man won a match today, and tomorrow they play Novak Djokovic, each other, and Andy Murray, respectively. I wish every one of them strong belief. I also wish tomorrow were another special stay-at-home-paper-work-day. So I could watch.

    *The Top Four (as opposed to the Big Four) includes Djokovic, Murray, Nadal, and David Ferrer, who is having a terrible time moving around tennis courts lately. I have to think it’s at least partly due to the damage done to his ankle at Wimbledon. The Spaniard tried so hard to give his second round match away to Ryan Harrison, but the American refused to take it. (Respect for his elders, and whatnot.) As a consequence, David Ferrer has now been Tursunoved twice this season. But it’s worth noting that last time he lost to the Russian was in Barcelona, mere weeks before he reached the French Open final.

  • Reliably Inspirational

    Reliably Inspirational

    A fine third day at the Cincinnati Masters yielded the best selection of professional men’s tennis matches in months. As ever in North America this wondrous congregation of talent was witnessed by a formidable array of half-empty stands. Even by the night-match, which featured Roger Federer, the stadium appeared barely two-thirds full. For some reason, Americans collectively find it hard to get excited by a tennis tournament until the later rounds, an apathy shared by their main television networks. CBS doesn’t even show up to the US Open until the last weekend, which it then more or less ruins for everyone. It won’t grace Cincinnati until the last Sunday, while even ESPN won’t trouble itself until Thursday. In the meantime there’s the redoubtable Tennis Channel, as ever a mixed blessing. On the one hand live coverage is hard to fault. On the other hand there’s Justin Gimelstob.

    It could be that the long decades of dominance have taught the American sporting public to assume that their countrymen will always feature in the later stages. Why trouble yourself earlier? We Australians long ago learned to cease making such assumptions. If we want to see our compatriots, we tune in early, preferably for qualifying. Now that there are no American men inside the top twenty, it might be wise for them to do the same. Of course, it could be that from my current vantage, precisely one Pacific Ocean and half a continent away, I’m totally misreading it and Cincinnati’s stands are actually jam-packed. Perhaps it’s merely a trick of the telecast: as well as adding twenty pounds, the camera subtracts a thousand spectators.

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    Dimitrov d. Baker, 6-3, 6-2

    CBS and ESPN viewers certainly won’t catch any sight of the reliably inspirational Brian Baker, who today went down easily to Grigor Dimitrov. This is a shame, since he’s worth watching and hasn’t been spotted in months. Having cruelly fallen in the second round of this year’s Australian Open – on a day of sustained carnage his injury was at once the worst and the least surprising – Baker was away from professional tennis for almost seven months. Numerically-gifted readers will note that this is the same amount of time that Rafael Nadal missed. Baker’s absence generated considerably less interest. Of course, Baker being absent from the men’s tour is hardly remarkable; it has been one of the constants of professional tennis for the last decade, like top four domination, or the microwave radiation that saturates the cosmos. The anomaly wasn’t that Baker was away, but that he had – and has – returned.

    Naturally, I’m pleased he has, since I enjoy the way he plays: at his best slightly reminiscent of Nikolay Davydenko in a way that Davydenko himself rarely is anymore. Beyond that, though, I enjoy the way Baker encourages me in my fantasy that he’s a club player on history’s greatest roll. The truth of the matter is decidedly different, if not completely opposite – he is a talented pro who has had to do everything the hardest way, and whose body boasts only slightly less metal than Wolverine’s. But I still experience a slight thrill every time he puts away a simple volley. Good for him, I think, knowing I might well have duffed it into the back fence.

    Sadly today he missed too many simple volleys against Grigor Dimitrov, along with just about everything else. It was probably to be expected. Given his modest earnings over the years, it’s not as though he could afford authentic adamantium for his metal joints. He was compelled to go with cheaper base metals. Rust was thus inevitable. As is often the case it doesn’t cause a consistent loss of quality so much as wildly oscillating inconsistency. Baker comfortably saw off Denis Istomin yesterday, but might not have today given the chance. Instead he faced Dimitrov, for whom the phrase “wildly oscillating inconsistency” might well have been coined. Still, he was on his game today, and looked a clear class above his opponent. Baker will get better. For now it’s just a pleasure to see him back, and a pleasant surprise to see he still boasts a full complement of limbs. His matches are only ever one mishap away from recreating the Omaha Beach scene from Saving Private Ryan.

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    (3) Ferrer d. Harrison, 7-6(5), 3-6, 6-4

    Speaking of Private Ryan, or at any rate Senior Cadet Ryan, Harrison managed to lose his nineteenth straight match to a top ten opponent a short while later, against a curiously vulnerable David Ferrer. The Spaniard’s lofty ranking was only apparent from the number next to his name, and not from the quality of his play. The Spaniard has been injured for some time, and has barely looked himself since Roland Garros. If ever Harrison was going to beat him, it was today. Still, the American might take some solace from getting so close: he led by a break in the third set, and was briefly magnificent in breaking back late in the match. One doubts whether he will be consoled by that, however, since he continues to give a strong impression that he hates losing far too much to find it merely instructive. The game in which Harrison was broken back in the final set featured an ace clocked at 152 mph, as they measure such things in the Cayman Islands, or 244 kph as measured elsewhere. If this was an accurate reading, then it would be the seventh fastest serve of all time. But I doubt whether it was an accurate reading. The serve even had topspin on it.

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    (5) Federer d. Kohlschreiber, 6-3, 7-6(7)

    Roger Federer rounded out the schedule by defeating Philipp Kohlschreiber for the seventh time, so far without a loss. Neither man appeared to be brimming with confidence, and based on their combined unforced error of sixty-five they had every reason not to be. Federer thoughtfully commemorated each of his previous six victories over Kohlschreiber with a squandered break point early in the first set: performance art of the very highest order, as Robbie Koenig might say. But he mostly served well himself, and broke in Kohlschreiber’s next game. Even if Federer somehow defends his Cincinnati title, he won’t be reprising last year’s heroic effort, in which he took the event without ever dropping serve. He gifted a non-crucial break away in the second set, a favour the ever-courteous German repaid immediately. They went back to scrappy holds. Mercifully this couldn’t continue indefinitely, and the tiebreak came around. A match that had been defined mostly by forehand errors thus found its apotheosis. Federer led by 5-2, then saved a set point at 7-8 with an out serve. He finally took the match on his second match point, ironically with a forehand that landed in, a development so miraculous in the circumstances than Kohlschreiber could merely stare at it, dumbfounded.

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    In other news, Feliciano Lopez won his first Masters level match this year, over Kei Nishikori. Milos Raonic, the first Canadian player ever to enter the top ten, nearly became the first top ten player to lose to Jack Sock. Mikhail Youzhny and Ernest Gulbis turned up dressed identically, a deplorable faux pas that left the crowd aghast. All twenty-five of them.

  • Back to the Future! Roger reverts to his old racquet and wins in Cincinnati.

    Back to the Future! Roger reverts to his old racquet and wins in Cincinnati.

    Five-time winner of the Cincinnati Masters event, Roger Federer proceeded into the third round of the Western & Southern Open by defeating Philipp Kohlschreiber in straight sets (6/3 7/6).

    Federer had been testing a new 98-square-inch head racquet following an early Wimbledon exit, but reverted to his usual 90-square-inch Wilson for his opening match against Kohlschreiber.

    “I’m going to do more racquet testing when I have, again, some more time after the US Open. I was playing for a month with the black one, but it’s a prototype. At the end, I just felt like, you know what, right now I feel like I need to simplify everything and just play with what I know best,” stated Federer in the post-match interview.

    The former world number 1 and 17-time major winner also announced he’d got through the match without any back pain. He has been suffering from recurrent back spasms during the year.

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    Discuss the Cincinnati Open with fellow tennis fans in our discussion forum.

  • Jack Kramer Explains Federer’s Fade

    Jack Kramer Explains Federer’s Fade

    Jack Kramer’s “The Game” with Frank Deford is one of the finest tennis books you’ll ever lay your hands on. Jack Kramer was a grand master of the sport, winning everything there was to win. With that kind of tennis success comes an expertise that only a select few can acquire.

    Kramer, now deceased for several years, could analyze and breakdown any match, any player, the mental side of the sport in a way that educates the reader.

    Discussing Stan Smith and his sudden rapid decline from the top, Kramer’s description seemed to also fit the current Federer situation…

    “When you reach a certain plateau in tennis, you do almost everything automatically,” wrote Kramer. “I would hit down the line at a certain moment without really knowing that I had made a choice and carried it out. When things start to go bad for a player, the first thing he loses is that spontaneity. He starts to think a little, which is bad enough, but then he starts to overthink. That’s what happened to (Stan) Smith. And then after a certain number of losses, he couldn’t march about with that air of confidence. Listen, let me assure you that you play better as Number l because most players cannot forget that fact, and thus they play worse. Once Stan was an ex-champion, the others wanted him all the more – which made it that much more difficult for him.”

    Kramer added some more thoughts: “He was reaching the peak of his career; he was still only 26, Number l in the world. And I think it is possible to speculate that had he played that (boycotted) Wimbledon, had he won it – which was the best guess – he might not have declined so spectacularly in the years that followed. The week after (boycotted) Wimbledon there were two tournaments on the continent, and the one at Gstaad in Switzerland had a much stronger field. So we asked Stan if he would switch to the other tournament, at Bastad, Sweden. As always, he promptly agreed to help. The tournament there was played on clay – hardly Smith’s favorite surface – but he won, which gives a pretty good hint that he was primed for Wimbledon.

    “But then he came back home from Wimbledon as an ex-champion, somehow he had lost the ability to win. Smith didn’t win another tournament for something like two years. It was not like he collapsed overnight though. A whole year later in the semifinals at Wimbledon ’74, he was serving for the match against Rosewall, up two sets to love, when he completely fell apart. That was the last nail in the coffin. That and Connors. He couldn’t stand Connors, and that made it all the worse that he couldn’t beat him.”

    Maybe Federer losing to Djokovic at the U.S. Open, with the two match points was one of the final nails in the coffin, though Federer did rebound, unlike Smith, to win Wimbledon last year.

    We’ll never know for sure the exact roots of a great champion’s decline. But it sure makes for an interesting discussion, where every pundit and fan, even an expert like Jack Kramer, has an idea.

    “first thing he loses is that spontaneity”

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    Discuss this and more on the tennis community message boards.

  • Two Spoilers (From: Neue Zurcher Zeitung)

    Two Spoilers (From: Neue Zurcher Zeitung)

    In Gstaad, Roger Federer falls victim to Daniel Brands – and his back. Ten days before the start of the US Hardcourt season. His participation in Montreal is at risk.

    The surprise about the commitment was big, the enthusiasm about his return was bigger. But the real party didn’t last long: After 65 minutes, Roger Federer’s return to the court, on which his professional career started in 1998, was already history. At least for this year. The almost 32-year old from Basel lost his first match against Daniel Brands 3-6, 4-6. In the end, what remained was a disappointed Federer, a bewildered audience, and a lot of question marks.

    Brands dominated

    Brands is, mainly because of his hard serve, an uncomfortable opponent. At Roland Garros, the 25-year-old German took a set from the eventual winner Rafael Nadal. Federer himself also dropped a set in their first meeting last week in Hamburg. But this time, the German was not just uncomfortable (as an opponent), but also the better player. With 11 aces and 78 percent first serves, he made good on his reputation as a great server. All the while, he also regularly scored points from rallies.

    Federer had five break points, but couldn’t break the German’s serve. In his first return to the Berner Oberland in nine years, he played like a normal player. The magic of earlier days, when he used to find a way to win even when his game wasn’t clicking and his opponents were getting the better of him, seems gone.

    Brands, ranked #55, didn’t even have to grow beyond his skills. He appeared surprised himself after the match about how he got to this victory. However, there is a reason for Federer’s pale appearance: The back pain, which had troubled him in March in Indian Wells, is back. Last week in Hamburg it already bothered him. “This week, it got a little better each day. I only made the definitive decision to play today after the warm-up.”

    At least regarding this match, the effort wasn’t worth it. Federer is making an effort not to give too much relevance to the ailment. From the start, his back was his weakness. “Before, the pain used to come, and then disappear rather quickly. Now, it isn’t worse, but it stays around longer.” Certain wear, says Federer, is normal after a career like his. He’s trying to get the problems under control with specific back training. After Indian Wells, he couldn’t train the way he wanted for almost seven weeks. But in Roland Garros and Wimbledon, he says the problems didn’t bother him.

    Hardcourt season in danger

    A week from Monday (Aug. 25th), Federer plans to join the American hardcourt season in Montreal Hartplatz-Saison zu starten. Within a month, the tournaments in Cincinnati and the US Open follow. Federer has 1,720 points to defend there. At the least, his start in Montreal is in danger. “I’ll take three, four days and consult with my team. Then, we will see.”

    It’s also clear that Federer can only find his way back to self-assurance when he’s fully healthy. Every additional loss scratches his self-esteem and boosts his opponents’, who now see a chance against him. Brands is by far not the only one of the lower-ranked players who now enter the court assured that they aren’t without a chance against Federer.

    –Guest translated by johnsteinbeck

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    Click here to discuss “Two Spoilers” with fellow tennis fans in our discussion forum.

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    Translated from: “Two Spoilers” (Neue Zurcher Zeitung, July 25, 2013)

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  • Branded! Federer loses to Brands at Swiss Open

    Branded! Federer loses to Brands at Swiss Open

    Roger Federer suffered a shocking loss today at the Credit Agricole Suisse Open, losing to the German Daniel Brands, 6-3, 6-4, in just over an hour.

    It was the 17-time Grand Slam champion’s second loss in the last two weeks to someone ranked outside the Top 50, having lost to the Argentinian Federico Delbonis last week in Hamburg.

    While some write the loss off to the Swiss star still adjusting to a new racquet, others see it as a sign of deeper troubles.

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    Click here to discuss the Gstaad tournament.

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  • Hamburg, Bogota, Båstad, Bad Gastein: ATP & WTA Results – Saturday, July 20

    Hamburg, Bogota, Båstad, Bad Gastein: ATP & WTA Results – Saturday, July 20

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    Click here to discuss the Bet-At-Home Hamburg tournament.

    Click here to discuss the Claro Open Colombia Bogota tournament.

    Click here to discuss the Collector Swedish Open Båstad tournament.

    Click here to discuss the Nurnberger Gastein Ladies Bad Gastein tournament.

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    Bet-At-Home German Tennis Championships – Hamburg, Germany

    F Delbonis defeats (1) R Federer — 7-6(7), 7-6(4)
    (12) F Fognini defeats (3) N Almagro — 6-4, 7-6(1)

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    Claro Open Colombia – Bogota, Colombia

    I Karlovic defeats (2) K Anderson — 6-4, 6-7(4), 6-3
    A Falla defeats V Pospisil — 6-7(4), 6-3, 6-4

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    Collector Swedish Open – Båstad, Sweden

    (1) Serena Williams (USA) d (3) Klara Zakopalova (CZE) — 6-0, 6-4
    (8) Johanna Larsson (SWE) d Flavia Pennetta (ITA) — 2-6, 6-3, 6-4

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    Nurnberger Gastein Ladies – Bad Gastein, Austria

    Andrea Hlavackova (CZE) d Elina Svitolina (UKR) — 7-5, 6(1)-7, 6-4
    Yvonne Meusburger (AUT) d (8) Karin Knapp (ITA) — 6-4, 6-3

  • Roger Federer Beaten by Argentinian Qualifier Federico Delbonis in Hamburg

    Roger Federer Beaten by Argentinian Qualifier Federico Delbonis in Hamburg

    Federico Delbonis, a qualifier from Argentina, beat Roger Federer in the semifinals of the Bet-at-Home Open, in Hamburg, Germany, this afternoon, 7-6(7), 7-6(4).  It was their first encounter.

    Federer, who recently switched to a new racquet after a shocking second-round loss at Wimbledon, and since dropped in the rankings to No. 5, was looking to gain some momentum this week, as well as ranking points, on his road to the US Open.

    It will be Delbonis’ first ATP final. He will play the Italian Fabio Fognini, who beat Nicolas Almagro, of Spain, 6-4, 7-6(1) in their semifinal.

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    Click here to discuss the Federer/Delbonis match with fellow tennis fans in our discussion forum.

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  • Hamburg, Bogota, Båstad, Bad Gastein: ATP & WTA Results – Friday, July 19

    Hamburg, Bogota, Båstad, Bad Gastein: ATP & WTA Results – Friday, July 19

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    Click here to discuss the ATP men’s tournaments.

    Click here to discuss the WTA women’s tournaments.

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    Bet-At-Home German Tennis Championships – Hamburg, Germany

    (12) F Fognini defeats (2) T Haas — 6-2, 6-4
    (1) R Federer defeats F Mayer — 7-6(4), 3-6, 7-5
    (3) N Almagro defeats (5) J Monaco — 4-6, 6-0, 63
    F Delbonis defeats (14) F Verdasco — 6-7(5), 7-6(8), 6-4

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    Claro Open Colombia – Bogota, Colombia

    I Karlovic defeats (5) A Mannarino — 7-6(5), 7-6(3)
    (2) K Anderson defeats (6) S Giraldo — 6-3, 6-3
    Vasek Pospisil defeats Matteo Viola — 3-6, 6-3, 6-2
    Alejandro Falla defeats (1) Janko Tipsarevic — 3-6, 6-2, 6-3

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    Collector Swedish Open – Båstad, Sweden

    (3) Klara Zakopalova (CZE) d Richel Hogenkamp (NED) — 6-2, 6-3
    (8) Johanna Larsson (SWE) d Mathilde Johansson (FRA) — 6-1, 6-2
    (1) Serena Williams (USA) d (5) Lourdes Dominguez Lino (ESP) — 6-1, 6-1
    Flavia Pennetta (ITA) d Virginie Razzano (FRA) — 6-1, 6-3

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    Nurnberger Gastein Ladies – Bad Gastein, Austria

    Elina Svitolina (UKR) d Patricia Mayr-Achleitner (AUT) — 6-3, 6-0
    Yvonne Meusburger (AUT) d Arantxa Rus (NED) — 6-1, 7-6(1)
    Andrea Hlavackova (CZE) d Lisa-Maria Moser (AUT) — 6-3, 7-6(4)
    (8) Karin Knapp (ITA) d (2) Annika Beck (GER) — 6-0, 6-1

  • Hamburg, Bogota, Båstad, Bad Gastein: ATP & WTA Results – Thursday, July 18

    Hamburg, Bogota, Båstad, Bad Gastein: ATP & WTA Results – Thursday, July 18

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    Click here to discuss the ATP men’s tournaments.

    Click here to discuss the WTA women’s tournaments.

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    Bet-At-Home German Tennis Championships – Hamburg, Germany

    (1) R Federer defeats J Hajek — 6-4, 6-3
    F Mayer defeats (11) F Lopez — 7-6(1), 6-2
    (2) T Haas defeats C Berlocq — 6-2, 6-4
    (3) N Almagro defeats G Garcia-Lopez — 6-2, 6-3
    (5) J Monaco defeats (9) B Paire — 6-3, 2-6, 6-2
    F Delbonis defeats D Tursunov — 6-4, 6-3
    (14) F Verdasco defeats (4) J Janowicz — 7-5, 4-0
    (12) F Fognini defeats M Granollers — 6-2, 6-4

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    Claro Open Colombia – Bogota, Colombia

    V Pospisil defeats J Duckworth — 7-5, 3-6, 7-5
    M Viola defeats (4) E Roger-Vasselin — 6-3, 7-5
    A Falla defeats M Ebden — 7-6(1), 6-1
    (1) J Tipsarevic defeats R Bemelmans — 6-4, 7-5

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    Collector Swedish Open – Båstad, Sweden

    (1) Serena Williams (USA) d Anna Tatishvili (GEO) — 6-2, 6-3
    Richel Hogenkamp (NED) d (6) Lesia Tsurenko (UKR) — 6-1, 2-6, 6-3
    Mathilde Johansson (FRA) d Andrea Gamiz (VEN) — 7-5, 6-2
    Flavia Pennetta (ITA) d (2) Simona Halep (ROU) — 4-6, 7-5, 2-0

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    Nurnberger Gastein Ladies – Bad Gastein, Austria

    Patricia Mayr-Achleitner (AUT) d Petra Martic (CRO) — 6-4, 6-4
    Elina Svitolina (UKR) d (6) Chanelle Scheepers (RSA) — 7-5, 1-6, 6-1
    Arantxa Rus (NED) d Estrella Cabeza Candela (ESP) — 5-7, 7-5, 6-3
    Yvonne Meusburger (AUT) d (3) Irina-Camelia Begu (ROU) — 6-3, 6-3
    (2) Annika Beck (GER) d Mandy Minella (LUX) — 2-6, 6-4, 6-4