Federer now King of clay

– Roger Federer finally won the French Open crown  becoming in the process the sixth person to win Grand Slam tournaments on four different surfaces and
equalling Pete Sampras’s record of 14 major titles

PARIS, (Reuters) – As Roger Federer watched the yellow ball spin into the other side of the net, he sank to his  knees, covered his face and knew that the French Open trophy was  his at last.

It was meant to be Federer’s day and not even a court  intruder, gusting winds or rain showers could stop the Swiss  from sweeping past Sweden’s Robin Soderling 6-1 7-6 6-4 to achieve sporting greatness.

After burying the 23rd seed in one hour 55 minutes, Federer  held his arms aloft and looked up to the sky as he became only the sixth man to complete a career grand slam. The triumph also gave him a record-equalling 14th major crown.

With so much at stake, it was little wonder that Federer  started weeping the moment Soderling paddled that final forehand  into the net, ending one of the most nerve-jangling weeks in the 27-year-old’s career.

The contest was not a classic but the tension was still  palpable as 15,000 soggy fans cheered Federer’s winners, groaned at his mistakes and applauded his spectacular shots. When it was finally all over, they exploded into a roar of deafening cheers to salute their new claycourt king.

Fittingly, Andre Agassi, the last man to achieve the career  grand slam, was on hand to welcome the newest member of the  select club and gave Federer a hug before handing over the  trophy.

“It is a magical moment,” a drenched Federer told the crowd  after holding up the Musketeers’ Cup high above his head before  planting a kiss on to its gleaming surface.

“It might be the greatest victory of my career. It takes  away so much pressure. Now, I can play in peace for the rest of  my career. Nobody will never tell me again that I have not won  Roland Garros,” added Federer, who won the title at his 11th  attempt.

DARK CLOUD

Never have truer words been spoken as not winning the  claycourt major had been a dark cloud on Federer’s otherwise  impeccable horizon.
While the oodles of talent that runs through Federer’s veins  helped him to capture 13 grand slam titles at Wimbledon,  Flushing Meadows and Melbourne Park, it was never enough in the  heartland of claycourt tennis.

If there was ever a place he needed divine intervention, it  was in Paris and Soderling turned out to be the Swiss’s lucky  charm when he got rid of Federer’s tormentor, four-times  champion Rafael Nadal, in the fourth round.

The Swede, who lists Gladiator as his favourite film, had  slayed four seeds to reach his first grand slam final but he  stuck to the script and played only a bit part, allowing Federer  to seal his standing as the greatest racket-swinger of all time.

All the ifs and buts that had hung over his career through  three final losses to Nadal at Roland Garros disappeared like  puffs of baseline dust.
In fact the major drama provided yesterday was by an  interloper who jumped on to the court from the stands as  Soderling was serving at 2-1 down in the second set.
Wearing a red Swiss shirt and carrying a red and blue flag,  he made a beeline for Federer and tried to put a hat on his  head.
The startled world number two backed away and the man ran around court and jumped over the net before he was rugby tackled by burly security guards.
The intruder was on court for only 18 seconds but he had  done enough to rattle Federer, who promptly lost three points in a row.
Luckily they were not on his serve and the rhythmic chants  of “Ro-ger!, Ro-ger!, Ro-ger!” spurred him to resume normal  service.
Soderling kept in touch with Federer in the second set but  in the tiebreak, he did not get a look in.

On his four service points, Federer fired a 206 kph ace, a  207 kph ace, a 213 kph ace and finished it off in style with a  191 kph ace. Soderling blinked and the tiebreak was over 7-1.

As Federer took his place to serve for the match, a female  voice from the crowd shrilled “Come on Roger! Grab your chance!”
That only helped to unnerve Federer as from 30-15, he  misfired a backhand long. The crowd groaned and he followed up with an even wilder forehand to go break point down. It seemed that even Soderling was taken aback as he lost his chance by firing the ball sky high.
Two points later, Federer sunk to his knees Borg-style and  the tears started to flow.