Federer slams door after Murray glimpses glory
Federer slams door after Murray glimpses glory
Roger Federer left the door tantalisingly ajar for
local hero Andy Murray in the Wimbledon men's singles final on Sunday,
then slammed it shut to win a record-equalling seventh Wimbledon title
and in so doing return to the top of the world rankings.
The Swiss great, contesting his eighth final at the All
England Club, flirted with danger in the second set after losing the
first but just when Murray looked like ending 76 years of plucky British
failure Federer gave a stunning reminder of his genius to win 4-6 7-5
6-3 6-4 on Centre Court.
When a Murray forehand looped narrowly wide after three
hours 24 minutes of enthralling action, Federer dropped to the turf in
joy, just as he did in 2003 when he beat Australia's Mark Philippoussis
to begin a grand slam collection that now stands at 17.
For the second time in three grand slam finals against
Murray he reduced the Scot to tears, although this match, unlike the
others, was a contest to savour.
It was only after Centre Court's translucent lid was
slid across after heavy rain began to fall in the heart of the final
that Federer took charge, striding to the win that puts him level with
Pete Sampras's record of seven Wimbledon crowns.
At 30 years and 335 days he also became the oldest
men's champion since Arthur Ashe in 1975 and, to put the icing on the
cake, Monday's ATP rankings will show him back at No. 1 for the first
time in two years and he will equal Sampras's record of 286 weeks at the
summit.
"I played some of my best tennis in the last couple of
matches," Federer said after raising the trophy with his wife Mirka and
giggling twin daughters Charlene Riva and Myla Rose watching on from the
players' box.
"I've missed playing in the finals, and it feels like a
great moment. I've gone through some struggles, so this one comes at
the right time," added Federer, whose last grand slam title was at the
2010 Australian Open.
For Murray, his girlfriend Kim Sears and many of the
thousands watching the huge screen on Henman Hill under a forest of
multi-coloured umbrellas, there was just despair.
"I'm getting closer," Murray, whose valiant effort was
watched by Royal Box guests Prime Minister David Cameron, David Beckham
and Prince William's wife Kate Middleton, choked as applause rang out.
"I was told after my semi-final that this was my best
chance, Roger's 30 now, but he's not bad for a 30-year-old, he played a
great tournament. Congratulations, you deserve it."
While Federer basked in the glow of another major
title, Murray was left to contemplate equalling coach Ivan Lendl's
unwanted record of losing his first four grand slam finals.
ENCOURAGING WORDS
A gracious Federer had words of encouragement.
"I think he's giving himself so many looks at big
titles. I really do believe deep down in me he will win grand slams, not
just one," Federer told reporters.
By defeating Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on Friday, Murray had
become the first British man to reach the final since Bunny Austin in
1938 and as the players set foot on a sunlit Centre Court, there was an
electric buzz of anticipation that he would emulate the 1936 title of
Fred Perry.
Having failed to win a set in two Australian Open
finals and one U.S. Open one, Murray would have been excused early match
nerves but he came out firing to break Federer in the opening game of
the match.
Federer quickly restored parity and wasted break points when leading 4-3 as Murray's first serve misfired.
The Swiss was made to pay in the following game,
sloppily dropping serve and Murray closed out the opening set with ease
to a deafening roar from the 15,000 crowd.
Murray was the more threatening player in the second
and upped the ante at 4-4 only to squander two break points that would
have given him the chance to serve for a two-set lead and leave Federer
facing a daunting task.
"The second set I had some chances and didn't quite get
them," Murray said. "Often what happens is matches change over a couple
of points here and there."
That was the case as Federer seized his chance. A
tiebreak loomed but, out of nowhere, Federer conjured a set point with
an exquisite drop shot and grabbed it with another stunning volley after
a mesmerising rally.
The crowd sighed and then the rain began to fall, a prelude to the British tears that were to flow later.
After a 40-minute break while the roof was rolled into
position, the players returned, only this time Federer looked a
different player - dominating rallies with a dazzling mixture of power,
spin and clever angles.
Had Murray survived a marathon service game at 2-3 in
the third, things may have been different, but when Federer struck on
his sixth break point it proved to be the beginning of the end for the
fourth seed who took several tumbles.
Federer hammered another nail in the coffin with a
backhand winner to break midway through the fourth set and despite
chants of "Murray...Murray" echoing around the court, kept his cool to
close out the match on his second match point.
"It was crazy how it all happened under the
circumstances," said Federer, of the first Wimbledon singles final to be
partly played under the roof. "I'm happy that closing the roof maybe
helped me today."
The roof stayed closed as Americans Mike Bryan and Lisa
Raymond won the mixed doubles title with a 6-3 5-7 6-4 victory over the
Indian/Russian duo of Leander Paes and Elena Vesnina.