Showing posts with label Roger_fed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roger_fed. Show all posts

Wednesday, 16 October 2013

Federer Splits with Annacone

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Seventeen-time Grand Slam champion Roger Federer has ended his partnership with American Paul Annacone, his coach for more than three years.

The pair teamed up in July 2010 and since then Federer has won 13 titles, including Wimbledon in 2012.

However, the 32-year-old Swiss slipped to seventh in the world this week, his lowest ranking since October 2002.

"After numerous conversations, we felt like this was the best time and path for both of us," said Federer.

Federer added that when they started working together they aimed to win another Grand Slam and regain the world number one slot, both of which have been achieved.

The Swiss spent three months at the top of the rankings from July 2012 in the wake of his win at the All England Club.

"Paul remains a dear friend," Federer added.

Severin Luthi, who shared coaching duties with Annacone, attended the Shanghai Masters with Federer, where he was beaten in the third round by Gael Monfils on Thursday.


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Thursday, 25 July 2013

Brands Gives Federer Swill Roll

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Roger Federer's poor run of form continued as he lost to world number 55 Daniel Brands at the Swiss Open.

The top seed was beaten 6-3 6-4 in just over an hour in the second round by the big-hitting German in Gstaad.

Federer, 31, who lost in the second round at Wimbledon, has been trying out a larger, more powerful racquet frame.

But last week he lost to Argentine qualifier Federico Delbonis, the world number 114, in the semi-finals of the German Tennis Championships in Hamburg.

Brands, 26, hit 11 aces past Federer as he secured a place in the quarter-finals against Romania's Victor Hanescu.

Switzerland's Federer has now lost to players outside the top 50 in the rankings at his last three tournaments, including his Wimbledon exit, when he was beaten by Ukraine's Sergiy Stakhovsky, who was 116th in the world.


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Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Shared Singles Record Safe - Sampras

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Pete Samprathinks the Wimbledon men's singles record he shares with Roger Federer is safe for the foreseeable future.

"I don't know if someone in the next 10 years will be able to win five or six Wimbledons," the retired tennis great said during a conference call Monday leading to next month's induction into the Rogers Cup Hall of Fame in Toronto.

Sampras, who will also play in the Rogers Legends Cup, and Federer have both won seven singles titles at the All England Club. Scotland's Andy Murray won his first Wimbledon crown this month.

"This was Andy's time. It was Andy's event to go and get and he did it," Sampras said. "He's definitely the man to beat at the U.S. Open."

Murray is ranked No. 2 behind Novak Djokovic. David Ferrer is No. 3, followed by Rafael Nadal and Federer.

"I think the biggest thing for me is Murray in the past 12 months has just stepped up," Sampras said.

But he doesn't see anyone being able to conquer Wimbledon's grass courts the way he and Federer did.

"Roger and myself, our game on grass was so ... dominant," Sampras said. "I think Murray can win some more and Djokovic, but I don't think that dominant game is out there that's going to win it seven times. But I could be wrong."

Of course, there is always the possibility Federer could add another. After his second-round loss at Wimbledon this year, he switched to a larger-faced racket.

"I don't know where his head's at, whether he's going to stick with it," said Sampras, who switched to a similar racket after he retired.

Sampras says it helped his backhand and made his serve more powerful.

"I wish I would have tried it, at least a little bit on the clay, when I was playing," he said. "It would have helped me a little bit."



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Sunday, 28 October 2012

Del Potro Wins Over Roger in Basel


Juan Martin del Potro held his nerve in a final-set tie-break to beat a dogged Roger Federer 6-4 5-7 7-6 (7-3) in the final of the Swiss Indoors in Basle.

The Argentine, 24, outplayed the world number one in the opening set, breaking in the fifth game to take the lead.

But Federer, seeking a sixth title in his home event, hit back in the second set to level the match.

Del Potro saw off four break points in the decider before taking control in the tie-break to clinch victory.

In the pair's first meeting since the Swiss beat Del Potro 19-17 in August's epic Olympic semi-final at Wimbledon, it was the Argentine who got off to the better start.

The world number eight, who won in Austria the previous week, converted his first break point in the fifth game, using his 6ft 6in frame to patiently pound away from the baseline while waiting for a mistake from the Swiss.

Opportunities for Federer to respond were rare, with the 31-year-old only winning five points on big-hitting Del Potro's serve in an opening set lasting only 34 minutes.

The second was much more keenly contested, although Federer again struggled to find any kind of fluency.

The Swiss could not convert his first break point of the match, in the second game, when Del Potro dug himself out of a hole with a powerful forehand before all but dashing Federer's hopes of a break with a wonderful down-the-line winner.

The defending champion survived three deuces in game five to remain on serve at 3-2 and, in his next service game, conjured up successive aces when questioned at 30-30.

Little drama followed until the 11th game when a stunning forehand cross-court passing shot from Del Potro created the 2009 US Open winner's first break point of the second set.

World Tour Finals

Two of the eight places at the year-end World Tour Finals, which begin on 5 November at London's O2 Arena, remain up for grabs.

The final qualifying event, the Paris Masters, starts on Monday.

Both Federer and Del Potro, who qualified by reaching the quarter-finals in Basle, are assured of their places.

Federer responded immediately with a gorgeous winner of his own to recover to deuce before seeing out the game to lead 6-5.

The local favourite struck first in the tie-break, going a mini-break up at 2-1 when Del Potro netted, and served out to take the second set in 64 minutes.

In the decider, Federer could not take advantage of three break points in the third game, and spurned another opportunity in the seventh.

Serving to take the match into a final-set tie-break, Federer - who had won 13 of their 15 previous meetings - was under pressure at 15-30 but rained down a hat-trick of aces.

However, it only postponed the inevitable, and Del Potro - who won in Vienna last week upon his return from a month out with a wrist injury - converted the first of three championship points in the tie-break.


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Saturday, 27 October 2012

Federer Faces Del Potro in Basel

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World number one Roger Federer beat Paul-Henri Mathieu 7-5 6-4 to reach the final of the Swiss Indoors in Basel.

Federer, a five-time winner of the event, will play Juan Martin del Potro in Sunday's final after the second seed beat Richard Gasquet 6-2 6-2.

Del Potro won in Vienna last week and his only loss on indoor hard courts this season came against Federer in the Rotterdam final in February.

Federer is chasing his sixth title in seven years in his hometown event.

Sunday's final is a rematch of the epic Olympic semi-final at Wimbledon in August, when Federer won the decisive third set 19-17.

Federer has a 13-2 career record against Del Potro, though one of the Argentine's victories came in the 2009 US Open final.

"It was almost perfect today," said Del Potro, who has beaten Gasquet in five of their six meetings, including three times in 2012.

"I was very pleased with my serve. But I still have work to do, I had two double-faults in the second set. If I want to win the title, I can't have that."

Federer said: "I'm excited to see how he is going to come out and play.

"We have had a couple of tough ones, at the French Open and particularly at the Olympics. I had a really hard time breaking his serve. The margins are extremely small."



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Thursday, 6 September 2012

Federer Flushed out by Berdych

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Five-time champion Roger Federer departed Flushing Meadows before the semifinals for the first time since 2003, stunned by the sixth-seeded Berdych 7-6 (1), 6-4, 3-6, 6-3 on Wednesday night.

"I just didn't come up with the goods tonight," Federer said. "It was unfortunate."

His famous forehand was way off for much of the evening: 24 of his 40 unforced errors came off that wing. The 6-foot-5 Berdych, meanwhile, kept pounding serves and groundstrokes right where he wanted them, finishing with a total of 14 aces, 30 winners and only 21 unforced errors.

"There is no better moment than this one so far," said Berdych, who will face Olympic champion Andy Murray in the semifinals Saturday.

It was Berdych's fourth victory in his last seven meetings against 17-time Grand Slam trophy winner Federer, including in the 2010 Wimbledon quarterfinals en route to a runner-up finish to Rafael Nadal at the All England Club.

Federer hadn't competed since Saturday, and he looked rather rusty, particularly for the first two sets Wednesday. The man he was supposed to play in the fourth round Monday, Mardy Fish, withdrew because of a health scare.

In dark sneakers bearing a tiny gold trophy with a black "5" etched on it -- representing his title count at the U.S. Open -- the top-seeded Federer failed in his bid to reach the semifinals in New York for the ninth consecutive year.

He won the championship every year from 2004 through 2008, but his 40-match winning streak at the hard-court major tournament ended with a loss to Juan Martin del Potro in the 2009 final. Federer then was beaten by Novak Djokovic in the semifinals in 2010 and 2011.

This year, Federer took another step backward, bothered by another big hitter.

Berdych absolutely controlled the opening-set tiebreaker, capping it with a 128 mph ace.

And then, quick as can be, he broke to begin the second set, first smacking a superb forehand winner down the line on a full sprint, then watching Federer miss two wild forehands on consecutive points.

Berdych broke again in the third and led 3-1 there before Federer began to find his form, briefly making this interesting. Berdych also hurt himself, showing signs of nerves by double-faulting twice while getting broken to 3-all.

That was part of a stretch in which Federer looked a lot more like, well, Roger Federer, taking four games in a row and 19 of 24 points to take the third set. He ended it with a perfect drop shot, and all of a sudden, the possibility of a ninth career comeback from a two-set deficit seemed possible.

Berdych, after all, had blown such a lead to Federer before, in the fourth round of the 2009 Australian Open.

Not this time, though.

At 2-2 in the fourth, Federer conjured up a terrific cross-court backhand passing winner that left Berdych skidding and stumbling as he tried to change directions while moving toward the net. Berdych dropped his racket as he fell, scraping his fingers along the blue court.

After taking several seconds to compose himself -- and to press a cold water bottle against his hand -- Berdych lost the next point, too, to fall behind love-30, then took the next four points to hold for a 3-2 lead.

And three games later, Berdych smacked a cross-court forehand winner to break Federer and make it 5-3. All Berdych had left to do was hold serve once, and he did it, delivering a 124 mph ace to get to match point, and a 124 mph service winner to convert it.

"When you leave it a little bit on Roger's game, and he starts to go for it, it could be a really big problem," Berdych said. "So I was just trying to get it back, trying to get my rhythm back again, and to stay as close as possible. And finally it was the right moment, right tactics."




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