Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Federer. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Federer. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Ba, 15 tháng 11, 2016

Tim Henman claims Novak Djokovic showed “where he is at mentally” with post-match outburst

Novak Djokovic celebrates winning his round robin match

The Serb lost his cool following questions over his conduct after he hit the ball into the crowd during his victory over Dominic Thiem at the O2.

Tim Henman claimed Novak Djokovic showed “where he is at mentally” with his angry outbursts at the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals.
The world No.2 hit a ball into the crowd in frustration after losing the first set of his opening match – and then petulantly responded to questioning in his press conference.
Former British No.1 Henman was famously disqualified from Wimbledon in 1995 for hitting a ballgirl with a ball in a fit of rage during a doubles match.
And the BBC analyst claimed Djokovic’s mistake wasn’t to lose his temper in the heat of battle – it was his tetchy post-match reaction.
“If it had hit someone then he would be have been disqualified,” Henman said.
“If he had just said, ‘You know, it was a mistake, I shouldn’t have done it. I was lucky I got away with it but it won’t happen again’, the story has gone.
“It is very surprising for a man of his experience but it does emphasis where he is mentally at the moment.”
Djokovic held all four Grand Slam titles after his defeat of Andy Murray at the French Open and led the Scot by more than 8,000 points at the top of the rankings.
Tim Henman during his semi-final match with Pete Sampras
But after a turbulent few months, his 122-week reign as world No.1 ended in Paris and now he needs to better Murray’s result at The O2 to end the year as the top-ranked player.
Murray’s former coach Miles Maclagan said: “He (Djokovic) has been frustrated in the second half of the season. He hasn’t quite been himself. I was shocked with what I saw.
“He’s definitely not himself.”
Novak Djokovic serves
Novak Djokovic shakes hands with Dominic Thiem after defeating him in their round robin match
Djokovic was more like his old self after losing his first ever set to Dominic Thiem and lost only two more games in the match.
He will next face Kei Nishikori on Tuesday after the world No.5 beat US Open champion Stan Wawrinka 6-2 6-3 in only 67 minutes.
And the Swiss said: “Coming into the tournament, Novak wasn’t playing that good. But, again, it’s the World Tour Final. It’s a group qualification to make the semi-final. Novak won the first yesterday. Everything starts from zero.
“It was already an interesting match yesterday, watching Novak playing, winning, finding a better game than I think he played in the last few months.”

More games: friv

Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 8, 2016

Novak Djokovic plays down US Open injury concerns after laboured victory over Jerzy Janowicz

Novak Djokovic takes a break during his victory over Jerzy Janowicz.
In a moment of theatricality you would never see at Wimbledon, Phil Collins opened the first evening session on Arthur Ashe Stadium with two of his best-known songs. After that, the only thing “In The Air Tonight” was a sense of vulnerability about tournament favourite Novak Djokovic.
Djokovic has been plagued by physical pains and “private issues” in the months since his personal epiphany at the French Open, and in last night’s opener against Jerzy Janowicz he showed his hand early by calling the trainer at the second changeover.
A medical time-out ensued, in which the surprising thing was that Djokovic requested treatment on his right elbow rather than the sore left wrist which he had identified as the reason for his absence from Cincinnati a fortnight ago.
Novak Djokovic celebrates after his victory over Jerzy Janowicz at the US Open. 
Novak Djokovic celebrates after his victory over Jerzy Janowicz at the US Open.
Whatever the problem was, it didn’t seem to prevent Djokovic from serving accurately – the key skill that carried him to a 6-3, 5-7, 6-2, 6-1 victory in 2hr 37min. But his all-round game was well short of its usual rhythm and self-assurance, and he dropped the second set via a slew of uncharacteristic errors.
Janowicz is not the most dangerous of opponents at the moment, judging by his world ranking of No. 247 and a record that shows his last ATP-level victory to have come in October. But he still rattled Djokovic with his unpredictable play, which featured numerous drop-shots as well as plenty of all-or-nothing wallops.
Janowicz’s ball-striking was never going to be consistent enough to score a win here, barring a total collapse from his opponent. But Jiri Vesely, the left-handed Czech who beat him in Monte Carlo in April, could prove a more challenging opponent for Djokovic in the second round.
Asked by the on-court interviewer about his medical time-out, Djokovic started by making a joke of the issue. “It was hard to put up a show after Phil Collins,” he replied, “but you know he’s a legend.” He then broke into a verse of “I Can’t Dance” from Genesis’s back catalogue, before finally engaging with the question when it was put to him a second time.
“It’s never easy to play at this level throughout the year,” said Djokovic. “There are periods when you are not feeling 100 per cent but I don’t think it’s necessary to talk about this now. I just take it day by day, and let’s keep on going.
“It was overall a good performance, particularly in the third and fourth sets, even if the first couple of sets were a bit up and down. Jerzy has an unpredictable serve. When the ball is going that speed you just react and pray that you can get it back.”

Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 7, 2016

Novak Djokovic to turn the switch for the hardcourt season

The Serb, 29, cut his ties with tennis for a while following his early-exit at Wimbledon.

During the first half of 2016 season, all the highlights regarding tennis achievements were mostly related toNovak Djokovic. His consistency over the various tournaments whether it was hardcourt (Doha, Australian Open, Indian Wells, Miami), or clay (Monte-Carlo, Madrid, Rome, Roland Garros) brought him lots of trophies and also worldwide recognition. Then, it followed Wimbledon Championships, a syncope that few saw it coming. Still the Serb remains the leader of the ATP ranking in both rankings ( ATP Tour and ATP Race). One thing needs clearing: Djokovic played only big tournaments, namely Masters 1000 and Grand Slam with one sole exception- Doha.

Rio Olympics detour.

There are many players who chose not to play in Rio due to the inappropriate date.The Olympics cuts the American hardcourt season right in two. The organisers tried to please the vast majority by choosing also a hardcourt surface to play on. On top of this Zyka virus remains a major concern. The other days, top players like Milos Raonic or Tomas Berdych officially announced that they`ll not compete in Rio. On the same page is also Simona Halep. Though, Djokovic is expected to make a glorious run in Rio. It might be his best chance to clinch the golden medal in men`s singles. As he is already heading to 30, in 4 years from now, he might be too old to accomplish something big. The Serb`s best result at the Olympics occurred back in 2008 at Beijing when he finished the third winning the bronze medal. For Djokovic, 12 times Grand Slam winner, this fact is rather unsatisfactory.
Djokovic has few things to worry about in the near future.
When it comes to future of the ATP ranking, some majors changes are unlikely to occur throughout this season. Djokovic has around 5000 points ahead of Andy Murray. Still, there is one scenario which might bring in some extra heat. In the late August, the last Grand Slam of the year will catch the attention. Although it sounds unlikely, if Djokovic will suffer one more early exit as at Wimbledon happened andAndy Murray will win the gap will come down to less than 1000 points. Last year, the Serb won at the US Open by beating Roger Federer in the final rubber thus having to defend 2000 points. Murray lost in the 4th round, so the pressure is something easier to fight with.
Overall, Novak Djokovic dominated the past years on the ATP tour like no one did. If Wimbledon was just a syncope, it`s something to be seen over the following months. The Serb has both mental and physical strength to move forward and also to win other Masters ,Majors, gold medals and so on.

Thứ Sáu, 25 tháng 3, 2016

Novak Djokovic, Kyle Edmund and Roger Federer part of a packed schedule at Miami Open

Novak Djokovic begins his title defence against Britain's Kyle Edmund
Novak Djokovic faces Britain's Kyle Edmund and Roger Federer also starts his title challenge on Friday's packed schedule at the Miami Open.
Djokovic, the defending champion, will take on Edmund in the second round, with the match scheduled to take place at midnight, live on Sky Sports.
The 21-year-old secured his first ever match against the world No 1 after a battling three-set win over Jiri Vesely in the first round.
Edmund has shown he can handle the big stage while playing in the Davis Cup
Edmund has shown he can handle the big stage while playing in the Davis Cup
Djokovic retained his trophy at Indian Wells last week, defeating Milos Raonic in straight sets, and has won four of the last five tournaments in Miami.
But Edmund has performed creditably on the big stage before as he extended world No 15 David Goffin to five sets in a battling singles defeat in last year's Davis Cup final. 

Tough comeback for Fed

Roger Federer is fit again after undergoing knee surgery

Roger Federer is fit again after undergoing knee surgery

Federer will make his comeback from a knee injury when he plays a tricky opening match against Juan Martin Del Potro.
The Swiss was forced to undergo surgery after injuring himself while preparing a bath for his daughters, but has quickly returned to fitness.
The 17-time Grand Slam winner will need to be match sharp against Del Potro, a former US open champion, who himself has overcome injury problems.
Federer has 15 wins from his previous 20 matches against Del Potro, but the pair have not shared the court since the world No 3's victory at the 2013 ATP Tour finals.

Best of the rest

Dominic Thiem is one of the sport's upcoming talents

Dominic Thiem is one of the sport's upcoming talents

Seventh seed Tomas Berdych takes on American Rajeev Ram, while eighth-seeded David Ferrer has been pitted against another home hope, qualifier Taylor Fritz.
Exciting youngster Dominic ThiemRichard GasquetMarin Cilic and Goffinare part of a packed schedule in Florida.

Possible upset?

Albert Ramos-Vinolas is a potentially tough foe for Richard Gasquet

Albert Ramos-Vinolas is a potentially tough foe for Richard Gasquet

If Federer is short of fitness then he could struggle at first against Del Potro, but should find a way past the towering Argentine.
Albert Ramos-Vinolas has performed well this year, reaching a tour semi-final, and he claimed an upset win over Nick Kyrgios at Indian Wells.
The Spaniard is capable of pulling off another surprise result against Frenchman Gasquet.

Brit interest

Johanna Konta can follow Heather Watson into the third round

Johanna Konta can follow Heather Watson into the third round

British No 1 Johanna Konta has been drawn against Danka Kovinic in the second round of the women's event.
Konta will be hoping to join Heather Watson, who has already reached the third round with a straight sets win over 20th seeded Sloane Stephens.

Thứ Tư, 6 tháng 1, 2016

Why Djokovic will increase his chokehold on the game

At age 28, top-ranked Novak Djokovic is at the zenith of his powers. He's fresh off a year in which he won three Grand Slam titles, bringing his total to 10 -- more than such stalwarts as Jimmy Connors, John McEnroe, Ivan Lendl and more than his own "supercoach," Boris Becker.
Last year, Djokovic came within one match of sweeping all four Grand Slam singles titles -- a feat that even his WTA counterpart Serena Williams could not match in her own spectacular 2015.
Djokovic has assembled a loyal, low-key, brutally effective support team. He's a dutiful husband and doting dad. His personal life is not only in order, it's in complete harmony with his professional one.
Last year, Djokovic's principal rivals were unable to contain him. Rafael Nadal misplaced his game, while Roger Federer floated like a butterfly and stung like a bee, but never landed a deadly punch as Djokovic increased his chokehold on the ATP game.
Looking ahead to 2016, the question occurs: Where does he go from here? What do you do for an encore after a year in which you all but ran the table, compiling a record of 82-6 with 11 titles?
You do the hardest thing, which is more of the same. And then some.
"Grand Slams and Olympic Games are the priority of the season, but it's a long season, so I can't really predict what's going to happen or guarantee if I am going to win any of the Grand Slams or all four," Djokovic told reporters shortly after he arrived in Qatar to play the ATP Doha event this week. "Of course, I am going to try to win every tournament and every Grand Slam that I play on, that's kind of the mindset that I have."
That's the appropriate mindset, yet even Djokovic doesn't really know what his most basic, elemental attitude will be once the balls start flying with serious intent. And that's the tricky part. A number of great players hit a wall and abruptly stopped winning major titles well before the realities of age and physical wear and tear became factors -- often taking us by complete surprise.
Bjorn Borg famously walked away from the game, an 11-time Grand Slam champ, burned out at the age of 25.
Granted, Borg was an extreme case. His rival John McEnroe played until he was 33, yet he was done as a Grand Slam singles champ by age 25 at the end of 1984.
Not to get us paranoid or anything, but that was a year during which McEnroe gorged much like Djokovic did in 2015; Mac went 82-3 with 13 titles, still the best single-season winning percentage of the Open era.
McEnroe won seven majors (he often skipped the Australian Open), as did Mats Wilander -- another great player whose run as a Grand Slam champ was surprisingly short-lived. Wilander was 24 in 1988, the year he won three majors (he lost only at Wimbledon) and finally secured the No. 1 ranking. But he quickly spiraled down and out of the game.
Stefan Edberg and Boris Becker each won six majors. But Edberg was done winning the big ones at 26, while Becker did almost all of his damage before he turned 24. He did, however, craft a resurgence that paid off with a final singles title when he was 28.
Is it possible Djokovic has spent himself, after having logged two of the greatest years on record (2011 and 2015)?
It's unlikely. If you look at the players whose reign as Grand Slam champs were compressed, only Edberg was reconciled to his role as a top player the way Djokovic is. McEnroe was a rebel, Wilander a free spirit; Becker was a discontented seeker, Borg a prodigy drowning in the quicksand of his own fame.
Djokovic is a rational, well-adjusted man who appears to cherish his place in the world, accepting it as a privilege rather than an entitlement -- or a burden. But just as important, he also has a few serendipitous, built-in circumstances and incentives that should provide him with any spark he may need as 2016 spools out.
You can start with Djokovic's relationship with the Australian Open.
Melbourne Park is usually Djokovic's launching pad. He's won the tournament four of the past five years. To fully appreciate what that means, remember that the one thing the top players all agree upon is that any year when you win a major is automatically a good year.
One reason Djokovic has borne the pressures of his position so well may be because, in winning the Australian Open, he's frequently crossed the biggest item off a player's to-do list a mere month into the new year. This would be a particularly good year for him to repeat that pattern given the twin tasks he faces within roughly sixty days of each other starting (with any luck) in early June.
If there was a silver lining for Djokovic when he lost last season's French Open final to Stan Wawrinka, it's that it left the Serb with a mission for 2016. Winning at Roland Garros remains the outstanding piece of unfinished business on Djokovic's résumé.
In fact, preparation for the French Open -- mental and emotional, if not technical and physical -- is likely to be the major underlying driver in all of Djokovic's activities long before it emerges as the main theme in tennis this spring.
However Djokovic's Parisian quest turns out, he also will have the Olympic Games to play in Rio de Janeiro less than two months (and one Wimbledon title defense) after Roland Garros.
Djokovic makes no secret of his patriotic feelings, but thus far he's won just one Olympic medal for Serbia -- a bronze in singles at the Beijing game in 2008. The tennis in Rio will be played on Djokovic-friendly hard courts, but under an Andy Murray and Roger Federer-friendly best-of-three format.
So the most surprising thing about Djokovic's 2015 is that he's still left himself plenty to do in 2016, and that's probably bad news for his rivals.

Thứ Sáu, 6 tháng 11, 2015

John Isner, Andy Murray, Novak Djokovic among Paris winners

PARIS -- Roger Federer finally cracked under the unrelenting serve of John Isner, losing 7-6 (3), 3-6, 7-6 (5) to the 13th-seeded American in the third round of the Paris Masters on Thursday.
Federer, a 17-time Grand Slam champion, looked as though he might grind out a win, saving all six break points and fighting back from 6-2 down in the decisive tiebreaker. But the Swiss star's resistance ended when Isner -- who had 27 aces -- hit a looping serve to his backhand.
"It's tough going out of a tournament without losing your serve," the third-seeded Federer said.
Fourteen-time major winner Rafael Nadal, seeded seventh, almost followed him through the exit door, saving a match point in a 4-6, 7-6 (6), 6-2 win against 11th-seeded Kevin Anderson of South Africa.
"Very tough match -- he served amazing. I feel very lucky to be through," Nadal said. "This type of match a couple of months ago I would not have had chances to win. In terms of mentality I [am] more calm."
Top-ranked Novak Djokovic was not at his best, either, advancing to the quarterfinals by beating 14th-seeded Gilles Simon 6-3, 7-5.
But Federer's defeat came as a genuine surprise.
Having won his sixth title of the season and 88th of his career at the Swiss Indoors on Sunday, and after racing past Italian Andreas Seppi in just 47 minutes on Wednesday, he was full of confidence.
Federer held a 5-1 record with Isner, beating him in the US Open fourth round this year.
"I thought he did very well today when he needed it," Federer said. "I thought he served great."
Federer briefly needed treatment at the start of the second set because of a sore arm but quickly recovered, insisting "it didn't affect me in the third set and it's not serious."
Isner called it one of the "top five" wins of his career.
"He's an incredible player, obviously. My favorite player and the greatest of all time," Isner said. "It was a huge win for me. I'm very proud."
Isner saved a break point in the fifth game of the third set with a deft backhand volley.
"That arguably saved the match for me," said the 30-year-old, who next faces No. 8 David Ferrer of Spain after he rallied to beat Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov 6-7 (4), 6-1, 6-4.
On Wednesday night, Anderson finished his second-round, three-set match against Austrian Dominic Thiem at 12:26 a.m. after spending 2 hours, 45 minutes on court.
This time he finished just as the clock struck midnight after 2 hours, 27 minutes on court.
But it could have been over quicker.
At 6-5 up in the tiebreak, and with Nadal on second serve, Anderson failed to finish a long rally concluded by Nadal's risky yet brilliant forehand winner into the top left corner.
The Spaniard celebrated with a yell and a fist pump, clinched the set when a rattled Anderson sent a forehand into the net and immediately broke Anderson in the third set before holding for 2-0.
Anderson fought back, however, and Nadal needed to save six break points in a grueling fourth game lasting 12 minutes.
That proved to be the end of Anderson's resistance.
After Nadal broke him again for 5-2 and clinched victory with a crisp forehand winner, the relief was evident as he tilted his head back in relief before shaking hands with the South African.
Nadal next faces No. 4 Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland, who beat Serbian Viktor Troicki 6-4, 7-5.
Earlier, Djokovic extended his winning streak to 19 matches despite dropping his serve five times.
"In sport there are days when you just lose your rhythm. You're trying a bit too much and you lose a bit of confidence," Djokovic said. "It was frustrating. ... It hasn't happened to me for a long time."
The 10-time Grand Slam champion now plays No. 5 Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic, who beat No. 9 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France 6-3, 6-4.
No. 2 Andy Murray had the easiest path to the final eight, routing David Goffin 6-1, 6-0 in a prelude to the Davis Cup final later this month.
Murray, who lost only eight points on his serve and broke the 16th-seeded Belgian five times, opens Friday's quarterfinals against No. 10 Richard Gasquet.
The Frenchman advanced when Kei Nishikori of Japan retired while trailing 7-6 (3), 4-1.

Will Extra Rest Help Roger Federer Dethrone Novak Djokovic at World Tour Finals?

Will Extra Rest Help Roger Federer Dethrone Novak Djokovic at World Tour Finals?
The sluggish courts at Bercy’s Paris Masters are never easy on Roger Federer. For 10 years running, the Swiss arrives behind his luggage after picking up one of the trophies at Basel. No sooner does he rub away the emotional highs of his hometown tournament romp, he must steer through an early French match on adrenaline and take anti-inflammatories for his right arm.
Someone is always to waiting to ambush him, and this time it is bullet-serving John Isner, who took two tiebreakers and the third-round contest.
It's just another loss at Bercy for Federer, but once again the media narrative calls for Federer rest and healing as he sets his sights on London’s bigger WTF finals. “I'm very eager to go to London and get prepared as well as I can, Federer said in ATP World Tour. “I'm in good shape. I'm healthy, so I want that tournament to start.”
Granted, but will that extra rest be enough to knock off King Novak Djokovic for the year’s biggest non-major tournament?

Sequel or Rerun?
Suppose Federer’s 2015 tennis year is an epic film. The legendary hero returns in better shape, has sharper strategies and wields his racket like he can retake Camelot. He runs through battle lines with new angles, and he dismantles his opponents with remarkable efficiency.
Well, almost all of his opponents. The hero cannot get near the castle. There’s this monster that guards the gates, a beast so indestructible that to strike at it only makes it stronger. The more the hero swings, the faster and smarter the monster gets. The monster not only rules Camelot, but all of Europe, the Americas and Asia too.
If the theme is all too familiar, it’s because it couldn’t pass as a sequel to 2014. It’s a restoration and little more. It’s got a sleek trailer, added scenes, necessary cuts and awesome surround sound. The director has taken great pains to brush up the color or improve the digital effects.
No doubt we’ve all seen this movie at three major finals. It’s Federer falling to King Novak at 2014 Wimbledon, 2015 Wimbledon and the 2015 U.S. Open. It’s losing about 1,000 masters battles (OK, exaggeration alert here) outside the haven of Cincinnati, Ohio.
No matter the hype, and no matter how easily Federer rips through the rest of the field, King Novak is there to take the treasured hardware.
Is there anything left?

London Calling
The year-end WTF finals might be more important for Federer than the other seven qualifiers. This is where the Swiss Maestro can steal one great crown from King Novak. This is where he can sound the alarm for 2016 and finally complete that bid for major No. 18, possibly as early as February in Melbourne. If anyone can stop Djokovic from a fourth consecutive year-end championship it’s the legendary Swiss with the breathless waltz for indoor tennis. Right?
Not so fast.
For all of the rest that Federer gets over the next week-and-a-half, he will need a lot more than energetic legs, renewed ambition and spirited vengeance.
He must first hope that Djokovic gets worn down, at least somewhat, by the Bercy final. There has to be a limit to King Novak’s physical and mental reserves, at least in theory. Somebody has to cut him down a notch or two, right?
Well, wasn’t that supposed to happen after King Novak lost at Montreal and Cincinnati during the U.S. Open series? Instead, Djokovic took on New York with a level of battle-hardened toughness that is still astonishing (if you are a tennis fan) and very disconcerting (if you are an ATP pro).
Rest or no rest, Federer must be lights-out. He must not only survive a close match or two at London, but he must peak with his entire game. For all of the nonsense about Federer’s sneak attacks on a server, and for all of the applause that recognizes his versatile greatness, it will still be imperative that Federer finds his best mid-30s tennis zone.
It begins and ends with strong and savvy serving. This will take relentless efficiency, because King Novak is a return master with an offensive edge that might rival the best we’ve ever seen. Federer will need supreme quick-strikes to penetrate Djokovic’s defensive acumen.
That’s just the beginning if he is to trump Djokovic’s laser groundstrokes and supreme intelligence. Federer must play the game as if he’s holding the fast-forward button, because Djokovic sees every tennis detail a few seconds ahead of real time. Federer will have to outthink Djokovic, just to have a chance to counter and find a few lapses in Djokovic’s game—repeat, that’s just the beginning.
Getting extra rest for Federer is nothing but media spin right now, and it’s an optimistic plug for his fans. The reality will be very different two weeks from now, when rest will be the least of his challenges.
King Novak will be ready.

Thứ Bảy, 12 tháng 9, 2015

US Open 2015: Roger Federer & Novak Djokovic set for final

Roger Federer will try to cap a superb run of form with his first major title in three years when he plays Novak Djokovic in Sunday's US Open final.
The Swiss, 34, has not dropped a set since he lost to Djokovic in the Wimbledon final in July and has swept through the draw in New York.
But Djokovic, 28, is on course to win a third Grand Slam of 2015, having only missed out in the French Open final.
The final is scheduled to begin at 21:00 BST, though rain is forecast.

Djokovic expects 'aggressive' Federer

Roger Federer hits a volley
Roger Federer hit 29 winners against Stan Wawrinka
Serena Williams and her pursuit of the calendar Slam dominated the first 12 days of the tournament, but Djokovic is on the verge of bettering her year at the majors.
For the second time in his career, the Serb is within sight of winning three of the four Slams, and for the first time has has reached all four finals.
"Win or lose on Sunday, it still has been so far a great year, my best year alongside 2011," said Djokovic.
"But obviously I'm only thinking about winning that US Open trophy."
Djokovic, who thrashed the defending champion Marin Cilic in the semi-finals, will be up against a man in rare attacking form in Federer.
"I know that he's lately being very aggressive coming to the net, mixing up, and trying to shorten out the points," said Djokovic.
"I think also he improved his speed. His defensive game is better than it was."

Match stats

Djokovic won the US Open in 2011 but has lost four other finals
Victory would give him 10 major titles, one behind Bjorn Borg and Rod Laver
Federer leads their head-to-head 21-20, and 3-2 at the US Open
His last Grand Slam title came at Wimbledon 2012 against Andy Murray

Federer ready for 'shoot-out'

Federer will almost certainly have the backing of most of the 23,000 spectators as he attempts to win his first US Open in seven years, and his first major anywhere in three years.
"I definitely think if there would be more on my side that will give me a lift and extra energy and momentum possibly," said the Swiss, looking for his 18th major title.
Since losing to Djokovic in the Wimbledon final in July, Federer has won the Cincinnati title and reached the final in New York without dropping a set.
He beat Djokovic in the Cincinnati final but has not overcome the Serb at a Grand Slam in three years, despite still edging their head-to-head record 21-20.
"I think it's just a straight shoot-out, and I think that's the cool thing about our rivalry," he said.
"It's very athletic. We can both handle whatever we present to one another, it's very even."

Sneak Attack will be back

Boris Becker
Boris Becker is not a fan of Roger Federer's new return tactic
"No, it's not disrespectful. Pretty simple."
Federer wasted few words in dismissing the suggestion from Boris Becker, Djokovic's coach, that his new tactic of taking service returns unusually early disrespects opponents.
The Swiss began employing the SABR ('Sneak Attack By Roger'), where he moves in while the server tosses the ball and hits his returns almost from the service line, during the American summer.
Djokovic fell victim to it in Cincinnati, and was not keen to discuss the issue after his semi-final win in New York.
"It worked a couple of times," said the Serb. "It's an exciting shot for him. For the player opposite side of the net, not so much. So I have nothing else to say about that."
So will Federer be deploying the SABR on Sunday?
"I will do it some more. No problem."

Chủ Nhật, 2 tháng 8, 2015

The dominance of tennis dads

Serena Williams won't be the only player who will have a calendar-year Grand Slam on the line in New York this summer. Collectively, a group of men will be attempting at the US Open to complete an unprecedented feat: The Daddy Slam.
All three of the men's singles champions at the majors this year -- Novak Djokovic at the Australian Open, Stan Wawrinka at Roland Garros and Djokovic at Wimbledon -- are fathers. Just to illustrate this golden generation is also a generation of breeders, the past two Grand Slam finals have been all-fathers contests, with Djokovic the runner-up in Paris and Roger Federer appearing on the second Sunday in London. The only man to have played in a Grand Slam final this year who isn't a father is the runner-up at the Australian Open, Andy Murray.
Such is the dominance of the dads. At Wimbledon, Djokovic joked that he advised other players to start a family if they wanted to keep up their tennis game, a quip that is almost starting to look like serious advice.
This isn't the first time fathers have won Grand Slams, with Jimmy Connors, Boris Becker and Andre Agassi among the small group of men to have been a Grand Slam champion as a dad. But never before has there been so many Grand Slam-winning fathers all on the scene at the same time, and certainly not putting together a run of titles, as the dads of 2015 have done.
There was a time when some players -- Ivan Lendl among them -- openly wondered whether it was even possible to be a father and a champion tennis player. That wondering has now stopped. Fatherhood certainly hasn't impeded this group. Both of Wawrinka's majors have come after becoming a father, while two of Federer's 17 majors -- the 2010 Australian Open and the 2012 Wimbledon Championships -- were won after the first set of twins was born in the summer of 2009 (the second set arrived last year). Djokovic now has a couple of majors as a father.
One factor behind this could be that the trend in tennis now is for players to have success when they are older, and therefore at a stage in their lives when it is more likely they have become fathers. But this is hugely individual. Who can predict how fatherhood can change the aspirations and demands in the itinerant world of professional tennis players?
Last year, Pete Sampras, who won all 14 of his Grand Slams before his children were born, told ESPN Djokovic would first need to "settle into fatherhood" before he could become truly competitive again. The reality is Djokovic has hardly lost a match since his son, Stefan, was born. This year, Djokovic has lost just three matches, and all three of those have come against tennis fathers, with losses to Ivo Karlovic in the quarterfinal of a tournament in Doha, Federer in the Dubai final and Wawrinka in the French final.
Fatherhood hasn't taken anything away from Djokovic's tennis.
"Life has changed and has changed for the better," Djokovic told ESPN.com. "But my career, and my professional approach has stayed as it was before I became a father. Thankfully, I have a wife who supports me and understands me, and I have people around me who live the dream with me, who sacrifice a lot for me to be where I am, and I'm grateful for that. We're a great team."
Before becoming a father, Djokovic sought the advice of Federer, who travels the world with his family (and who has earned Sampras' admiration for the way he has done that and remained so focused). And Djokovic has no doubt also spoken to his coach, Boris Becker, who won one of his six majors as a father. Djokovic's wife and child typically accompany the world No. 1 at the biggest events.
Being a parent of a young child can be exhausting. For Djokovic, though, it appears to be quite the opposite, saying fatherhood gives him energy.
"Knowing that you're giving your love and your time to your baby, your child, that gives you a freshness in the mind. Being a father actually gives me more energy than it takes away."