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Roger Federer
wins 9th career Grand Slam
NEW YORK—Roger Federer and
Tiger Woods broke open two bottles of Dom Perignon and toasted — to a
growing friendship, greatness and Grand Slams. With his new best pal
watching from a corner box, Federer rocketed a final forehand past Andy
Roddick, then fell to his knees and flopped onto his back. He'd won his
third straight U.S. Open title in convincing fashion, 6-2, 4-6, 7-5, 6-1
Sunday.
When it was over, Federer returned to the locker room, cracked open the
champagne and spent an hour with perhaps the only other athlete on the
planet who understands such sheer domination.
They'd met for the first time earlier in the day, but had been distant
admirers. And after Federer's third Grand Slam win this year and ninth
overall — Woods has won 12 majors — they visited. Federer sat while
Woods stood with his foot on a chair, two champions in the zone.
"More and more often, over the last year or so, I've been kind of
compared to Tiger — what he's doing on the golf tour, me doing on the
tennis tour," Federer said. "I asked him how it was for him. Many things
were similar. He knew exactly how I kind of felt out on the court.
"That's something that I haven't felt before: A guy who knows how it
feels to feel invincible at times and when you just have the feeling
like there's nothing going wrong anymore," he said.
Federer called his parents in Switzerland. Avid golfers, they were
thrilled when he put Woods on the phone. And that only reinforced
Federer's solid first impression.
"He's very nice, and much nicer than I expected. I thought him to be
nice, but he's really, really nice, so that's nice," Federer said.
At a tournament that spent two weeks paying tribute to the greats of the
game — Andre Agassi's tear-filled goodbye, Martina Navratilova's
for-real retirement and the renaming of the tennis center in Billie Jean
King's honor — Federer left his mark.
Only 25, many think he'll wind up being called the best player ever.
This was the first Grand Slam event to use instant replay to challenge
calls — 32 percent were overturned, overall — yet no one contested
Federer's dominance.
"Obviously, he's the guy everybody's chasing," said Jimmy Connors,
Roddick's advisor.
Federer won every major this season except the French Open, and moved
closer to Pete Sampras' total mark of 14.
Facing a player known for a big serve, Federer outserved him. He fired
17 aces without a double-fault; Roddick has seven aces and one
double-fault.
"I'm shocked myself how well it's been going the last three, four
years," Federer said, "being not only compared to former great tennis
players, but now especially also other great athletes all over sports.
It's just really nice."
Federer pleased himself by putting on a quite a show for Woods, who flew
up from Florida just to see this match. They had missed meeting at
events in Shanghai and Dubai, and Woods told Federer he'd come to
Flushing Meadows if he made the final.
"When I go out there and I see Tiger sitting there, it's like, I try to
play well, you know? I try to kind of get my act together and focus and
get off to a good start," Federer said.
Federer took control early against the 2003 U.S. Open champ, winning the
first five games in only 17 minutes. At that point, there seemed little
doubt that he would improve to 11-1 lifetime against the ninth-seeded
Roddick.
"Roger is at the top, and he's the only person at the top, regardless of
how much people want to make rivalry comparisons and this, that and the
other," Roddick said. "He's the best player in the game. There's no
question in my mind."
The No. 1-ranked Federer went 27-1 at this year's Grand Slam
tournaments, his lone loss coming to Rafael Nadal for the French Open
title. Federer became the first man since Ivan Lendl in 1985-87 to win
three consecutive U.S. Open titles, and the only man to win Wimbledon
and the U.S. Open back-to-back three years in a row.
Beaten in the first round of the U.S. Open last year, Roddick made an
outstanding run. But during the first set, Federer unleashed a 131 mph
ace and Roddick bowed his head.
"You don't want to get embarrassed out there, that's for sure," Roddick
said.
Roddick has never lost a set by 6-0 at a Slam event, though he was in
danger of doing it as Federer tried to close the match. With the crowd
cheering him, Roddick held serve to make it 5-1.
Moments later, Roddick was done. A little bit later, he was asked
whether this version of Federer is better than the one who beat Roddick
in the 2004 and 2005 Wimbledon finals.
"He's improving as well," Roddick said, "which is scary."
Federer, meanwhile, was already looking ahead — to watching Woods in
person.
"I'm going to go to each Masters, each Grand Slam he plays and get him
back," he said, laughing. "I'm going to tell him I'm going to come when
you're about to win a major, when you're out on the 18th green, I'll be
standing there."—Agencies |