
Roger Federer admits Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray are clear
favourites for the Wimbledon title as the Swiss star tries to salvage an
injury-plagued year by winning his favourite tournament for a record
eighth time.
For the first time in 15 years, Federer arrives at
the All England Club with few pundits expecting the world number three
to leave with the trophy after one of the most troubled seasons of his
glittering career.
Federer, tied with Pete Sampras on seven
Wimbledon men’s singles titles, is preparing to make his 18th successive
appearance at the grass-court Grand Slam, but there is now a genuine
sense of vulnerability about the 34-year-old as the ravages of time take
their toll on his body.
From the moment he suffered a torn
meniscus in his left knee while turning awkwardly to run a bath for his
children shortly after the Australian Open in January, this has been a
year to forget for Federer.
The 17-time Grand Slam champion had
surgery on the knee in February but, when he recovered from that, a back
problem kept him out of the recent French Open, which ended his record
run of 65 consecutive appearances in Grand Slam tournaments.
Back
on the lawns of south-west London, Federer, who hasn’t won a title in
his six tournaments in 2016, is desperately hoping to emerge from his
struggles and emulate his run to Wimbledon final 12 months ago.
“I
was very, very sad, just because I thought I was going to be lucky not
having to do surgery in my career,” Federer told reporters at Wimbledon
on Saturday.
“I just got really disappointed about it because that’s when I really understood what the road was going to look like.
“I
felt like I got unlucky throughout the process with hurting my back
again before Madrid, getting sick in Miami. I got into a tough spell
there.
“I just had to stop everything by not playing Paris, reset
basically, essentially. I don’t want to say ‘start from zero’, but just
reset from there and make another push for Wimbledon.”
– Mechanics –
Federer
played grass-court events in Stuttgart and Halle earlier this month in a
bid to prove his fitness, but although he was happy with how his body
responded, the results were a further dent to his morale.
His semi-final loss to Germany’s Alexander Zverev in Halle was his first defeat to a teenager in 10 years.
Federer,
who faces Argentine Guido Pella in the Wimbledon first round next week,
is trying to stay positive, saying: “Look, this back has won me 88
titles, so I’m okay with that.
“It’s just frustrating because it
shakes the whole mechanics of the body, what you can work on. Yeah,
maybe if it hits you in bad times, it’s not funny
“All of a sudden you’re coming into Wimbledon with more confidence, more understanding where you’re at. Now we’ll see.
“Now
at least I’ve played. That was crucial for me going into Wimbledon
knowing, okay, I passed that test, the body can take that amount of
tennis.”
Federer, who last clinched a Grand Slam when he won
Wimbledon in 2012, is seeded third and Friday’s draw placed him in the
same half as Djokovic.
That means he would face the world number one in the semi-finals before a potential final showdown with Murray.
Beaten
by Djokovic in the last two Wimbledon finals, Federer had no qualms
making the Serb and 2013 champion Murray the front runners for the
title.
“Clearly I’m not thinking of the title right away. Novak or
Andy are the big favourites in my opinion. They’ve had such a great
last six months, last few years. To me they are the ones to beat,”
Federer said.
“I need to focus on myself, getting myself into the
second week, growing momentum and the whole thing starts rolling then
hopefully.”
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