Peerless Federer stands alone

LONDON, (Reuters) – In the end Andy Roddick, like the  rest of Wimbledon, had no choice but to embrace the greatness of  Roger Federer.
In one of the most heart-stopping and unforgettable finals  seen in a grand slam arena, Federer held his nerve for four  hours and 16 astonishing minutes before finally subduing Roddick  5-7 7-6 7-6 3-6 16-14 to claim the trophy he cherishes above all  for the sixth time.
As a Roddick mishit forehand sailed long, Centre Court  exploded into a roar of deafening cheers and a jubilant Federer  leapt high in the air knowing that he was now the proud owner of  a record 15th grand slam title.

Among the 15,000 souls lucky enough to witness the momentous  occasion was a beaming Pete Sampras, whose milestone of 14  majors Federer eclipsed yesterday, in the front row of the Royal  Box.

“It’s not really one of those goals you set as a little boy  but, man, it’s been quite a career,” Federer, who has enjoyed a  remarkable month having won the French Open title for the first  time just four Sundays ago, told the enthralled crowd.

“It feels amazing but this is not why I am playing tennis,  to break all these records but it is definitely one of the  greatest ones to have.”
Few imagined that Federer’s seventh consecutive Wimbledon  final would come anywhere close to emulating last year’s  five-set thriller when he lost his crown to Nadal in a match  that ended in near darkness.

But if Federer could have dreamed up a scenario when he  became the most successful racket swinger of all time, he could  not have scripted it any better and his thoughts quickly turned  to the vanquished man who had helped to make it such an  extraordinary day.

“Andy played an unbelievable tournament and don’t be too  sad, I went through some rough ones as well, one on this court  last year and I came back and won,” father-to-be Federer, who  had slipped on a gold-trimmed jacket with the number 15  emblazoned on the back, said as he cradled the trophy like a  new-born baby.

“You’re an unbelievable guy and you played unbelievable  today. Unfortunately there has to be a winner and today I was on  the lucky side.
“It was a crazy match and it was an unbelievable end. My  heads still spinning, it’s an unbelievable moment in my career.”
So relentless has been Federer’s reworking of the tennis  record books that he might as well travel with a personal  statistician. He won his 15th major just six years after winning  his first — on the same Centre Court stage.

With no grasscourt equal in sight, Federer has plenty of  time on his side to climb to the top of Wimbledon winners’ list  – a position currently occupied by seven-times champions Sampras  and Briton William Renshaw.

Yesterday, he improved his win-loss record in major finals  to 15-5, with all five of his defeats coming to Nadal. To cap it  all off, he also regained the world number one ranking from the  injured Spaniard.

An utterly dejected and drained Roddick, who did not have  his serve broken until the final the game of the duel — which  lasted an incredible 77 games — slumped into the courtside  chair and sat staring at the ground as he tried to fathom how he  let the match get away from him.
When it was his turn to speak, he told fellow American  Sampras: “Sorry Pete, I tried to hold him off.”
Sampras was not the only great in attendance yesterday.  Sitting alongside him in the Royal Box was Laver and Bjorn Borg  and all three were perhaps thanking their lucky stars their  careers did not coincide with the magician from Basel.

No such luck for Roddick. When he won the 2003 U.S. Open, he  was tipped to win many more. Many factors may have conspired  against him but none more so than Federer’s brilliance.

Most people expected him to be a mere whipping boy for  Federer yesterday as the 26-year-old had lost 18 of his 20  previous clashes with Federer, including the 2004 and 2005  finals here.

That prediction proved way off the mark as Roddick fought  gallantly in the longest ever grand slam singles final in terms  of the games played.

Roddick has always been blessed with two principal weapons,  a thunderbolt serve that could clear pigeons from Trafalgar  Square and an equally brutal forehand.

Yesterday, the new fitter Roddick backed that up with  stinging groundstrokes and passing shots to steal the first set  from under Federer’s nose by breaking him in the 12th game.

But if he ever chooses to watch the official DVD of the  match, the fast-forward button might come in handy when the  contest enters into the second set tiebreak.

On the verge of taking a two-set lead, he ended up blowing a  6-2 lead to let Federer off the hook. A missed backhand volley  on his fourth set point will haunt him for a while.

Federer, who served a career record 50 aces in the match,  did not flinch in the third and took it 7-5 in another tiebreak.
While Federer barely got a look in on Roddick’s bone  rattling serve, the American broke for the second time in the  match for a 3-1 lead in the fourth set, thanks to yet another  screaming passing shot.

While the first four sets were tight, they were nothing  compared to the drama that unfolded in the fifth set which alone  lasted 95 pulsating minutes.

Ten times Roddick had to serve to stay alive. Ten times his  missiles hit their targets.
Federer got himself out of trouble in the ninth game when he  trailed 15-40, blasting down an unreturnable first serve and  then whipping a drive volley.

Just when it seemed as if for the second year running  Wimbledon could be heading for another long night, Federer  conjured a match point out of nowhere.

At 14-15 Federer slapped away a forehand winner after a  couple of mishit exchanges from both players. Seconds later the  ball shot off Roddick’s frame and Federer celebrated with a  flying leap before embracing his shattered opponent.