Jump to content
Bellazon

Roger Federer
Thumbnail


Letycja

Recommended Posts

Transcribed Interview

Roger Federer

Friday, August 29, 2008

THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.

Q. You said during the off‑season you missed 20 days of practice because of your illness. Can you put into perspective what that 20 days means? Is that something that you can make up, or does that affect your preparation for the entire year?

ROGER FEDERER: No, it will definitely affect me throughout the year, you know, because I've got to work during the year, you know, to catch up, which makes you a little bit more tired at times.

This year was difficult because I couldn't really take tournaments off, because I always had to, you know, chase the rhythm of playing on that particular surface that I was wanting to play on.

That's the reason why maybe it was an important 20 days in the beginning of the year this year.

Q. You missed a few volleys today, and I just wonder, are we looking at things because of your year that when you miss a volley, saying, Oh, look he's doing that and he you didn't do it last year and it was not that big a deal?

ROGER FEDERER: Well, I guess we're talking about it today and if I win the title you forget about it again. That's usually how it goes. No, but I was struggling to see the ball at the net a little bit with the crowd in the back.

He did well to scramble back, you know, quite a few balls. But I wasn't comfortable at net from the start, you know. It just made it hard, you know.

And they be in the second set when it got tough, you know, he dug out some shots and everything seemed to go against me on those break points. So it was kind of difficult mentally, but it was actually fun playing this well and really got the crowd into it.

I was never really in danger, so it was actually pretty good for me. I knew the longer the match would go the more tired he would get, so it was was a good match for me.

Q. I read that tennis players get a smaller percentage of overall revenue than basketball players, baseball player, et cetera, other athletes in other fields. I was curious what your thoughts are on that.

ROGER FEDERER: Well, we heard that, as well. I mean, I know that tournaments, you know, all around the world are raising prize money, you know, more and more.

I mean, obviously very happy where tennis has gone over 40 years ago, so that's a good thing. But I agree that I still think the biggest tournaments, they're supposed to share a little bit more with the players, but we'll see how it goes in the future.

Q. Will this lead to more unionization, perhaps, a place to organize? Make sure you get an equitable part of the pie?

ROGER FEDERER: We'll definitely have conversations, you know, over the next year or so, as we usually have. There's a quite a bit of change in the ATP at the moment. I think that's one of the issues on top of the agenda.

Q. The two matches you've had this week have been some of your more comfortable wins over the summer. Winning the gold medal in Beijing in the doubles, even though it's a different discipline, is that confidence you've been able to take into your singles game moving forward?

ROGER FEDERER: Well, maybe wasn't confidence. It was fun. It was good for ‑‑ it inspired me. It was an unbelievable couple of weeks for me, and I left it with good spirits instead of leaving, you know, on a quarterfinals that I lost.

So from that perspective it helped. I really thought I played, you know, great in doubles throughout the tournament. I really carried Stan through a few matches, you know, and then after that he really started to play well.

I was just happy that I was finally playing good doubles again, because I never really did that well anymore in doubles, which was really disappointing for me.

Then it was hard. I was really tired of getting in here from Beijing. But after that I've actually felt fine. I was really eager to practice for the singles again, which was good.

Q. Is there a good feeling about this court, sort of home sweet home where you've done so well helping your spirits?

ROGER FEDERER: Absolutely. It does help, especially starting off with the night session. I think that's always the best way. I really feel great crowd support this year, you know, with the parade, first of all, but also now with the two matches I played on center court. Both times was an unbelievable experience.

Again, you know, after everything I've got through already, these are the early‑round matches, so it will only get better from here.

Yeah, so I'm really happy to be playing well. Everybody's cheering me on, so it's a nice feeling.

Q. You've been sort of on and off with different coaches. Where are you now with that?

ROGER FEDERER: Um, well, José's here, you know, for Robby. For the tournament I had the preparation week for José, but he tries to see my matches and practices as much as he can.

It happened that me and Robby were playing at the same time, so I don't know if José is going to stick around. But.

I have my Davis Cup captain here as well Switzerland, and I've been doing the entire year anyway with him already. So that's the situation here.

Q. Have you been following Nadal's matches? Like did you watch him last night on TV, or...

ROGER FEDERER: No, I missed both matches, actually.

Q. Why don't you just zero in...

ROGER FEDERER: I schedule my life around my life, not his life. (laughter.)

I was gone for dinner and he decided to do it quick, so I missed the ‑‑ I was expecting five sets. I was there for four and five, but he wasn't there anymore, so that was that was problem.

And the other day, I don't know where he was when he was playing Phau. I guess I was in the city.

Q. You played obviously the late match, and then you played a relatively early one. There's a lot of discussion, because this is the only tournament with night matches whether people more comfortable day or night. Does it matter to you?

ROGER FEDERER: No, I feel good in both. I have no preference. Of course, there's days, you know, you're like maybe next match you'd rather play at night. You can sleep in and have more time.

Depends a little bit, you know, the scheduling. But I don't feel superior in the day session or the night sessions. There's always usually more wind during the day. So I think that was good I got used to the wind actually today, because in Beijing there was zero wind, you know, for like two weeks.

Took me a little bit of adjustment, even though in practice there was wind, you know. But in match situations it's different. You can't just, you know, play your normal way. You have to play with the wind a little bit, and today maybe I struggled at times a little bit.

Q. I don't want to ask you if you like Hawk‑Eye or not. It's been here for a while. How do you think it affects matches the way it's sort of evolved?

ROGER FEDERER: I don't think it's affected a whole lot of matches. I don't know how many times it's saved a match, because that's what it's there for really, you know. But at the big tournaments at the big courts, you know, usually you have the best linespeople, as well.

The worst linespeople are usually on the outside courts where you need it more. You know, that's my problem with the system, you know. I mean, we only have it on the two biggest courts. Grandstand already doesn't have it anymore.

I guess as you go down, the umpires get less experienced, same as the linespeople. Look, at least you have it on the matches that are really covered with the TV, so you're not going to have a big scandal anymore like maybe a few years ago. That was more possible back then.

Q. Is it fair that they have a system not for all courts?

ROGER FEDERER: You ask the other guys. You ask the other guys. I don't care, you know. I mean, if it's there, it's there. It's not my problem. Exactly. But I wish it was no problem for nobody.

Unfortunately for the lower‑ranked players, it still exists, you know, so they are the guys that are maybe sometimes not happy.

Q. Since having mono, has there been a residual effect where the normal fatigue that before you would have considered just a normal part of your season you pay more attention to, or, you know, how do you differentiate between just normal fatigue and maybe fatigue that could be signaling a recurrence?

ROGER FEDERER: Mmm, I mean, the fatigue, honestly, I've had it many times through my career, so I never look at it as, Is it back, you know, something like this.

I never really looked at it in this way. I mean, I was so tired after Beijing coming here, and then of course I'm a bit worried. But then I look back, maybe two years back, prior to Wimbledon I couldn't move for a week. I still was able to win Wimbledon after that.

Once the tournament gets underway you find energy somewhere, you know. So this is not the first time it happened, and so I don't put it down as my sickness, you know.

Maybe I put it down as sickness when I still feel a little bit slow sometimes. These are the moments when I might think, you know, this is maybe lack of practice still a little bit.

But with recuperation I never really feel like I have a problem to recover, which is a good thing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

U.S. Open: Navratilova says Federer needs full-time coach

by David Waldstein/The Star-Ledger

Friday August 29, 2008, 9:44 PM

Richard Drew/AP

Martina Navratilova believes Roger Federer needs a full-time coach to avoid coasting NEW YORK -- There have been many reasons cited lately to explain Roger Federer's recent decline from No. 1 to No. 2 in the world, from his bout with mononucleosis to Rafael Nadal's improvement to a general lack of confidence.

Federer came into the U.S. Open having lost an unheard of 12 matches, and won only one minor tournament all season. Friday he had little difficulty beating Brazilian qualifier Thiago Alves, 6-3, 6-5, 6-4, for his 600th career match victory, which is a good sign in terms of him recreating another enticing final against Nadal and getting back to No. 1.

Martina Navratilova believes that in order to do that, to get back to No. 1 and stay there, Federer needs to hire a full-time, dedicated coach. The Hall of Famer, who won four women's championships here, said that without a coach, many players tend to "coast."

"It's interesting," Navratilova said earlier this week. "I thought he needed a coach last year. When you don't have a coach you just coast. You cannot improve. You improve a little, but everyone else improves a lot.

"He started riding the wave and you can only ride it for so long or people will catch up, and they have. I think he needs a regular coach, frankly. You can't fix yourself. You can only do so much fixing yourself because you can't see yourself."

Federer may actually agree with Navratilova, to an extent, because he has two different people coaching him now: Jose Higueras and Swiss Davis Cup coach Severin Luethi, who is here with Federer at the U.S. Open.

Having one dedicated coach seems to be difficult for Federer, who was devastated when his coach, friend and mentor Peter Carter died in an automobile accident in 2002. Since then, he has had several different coaches on and off, including Peter Lundgren, Tony Roche and now Luethi and Higueras, a clay specialist whom he hired in May to help him at the French Open.

But Higueras is really Robby Ginepri's coach, and Friday he was sitting in the Grandstand watching the American's loss to Marin Cilic. Federer didn't mind at all.

"Jose's here for Robby for the tournament," Federer said. "I had the preparation week with Jose, but he tries to see my matches and practices as much as he can. It happened that me and Robby were playing at the same time, so I don't know if Jose is going to stick around, but I have my Davis Cup captain here."

One former great player, Ivan Lendl, who tended to use coaches part time as well (including Roche), didn't necessarily agree with Navratilova's assessment.

"Some people need a coach," Lendl said, "some people don't. It depends on the player."

For Federer, coaching has not been a priority. Others, such as Andy Roddick, rely heavily on their coaches. Roddick has switched from one high-profile coach to another, including Brad Gilbert, Jimmy Connors and his current adviser Patrick McEnroe.

For Federer, most of his run to 12 major titles has come without a coach, and he seemed pretty darn happy about it.

Federer's mind-set, or his frustration level, has also been under scrutiny in this dispiriting year. He looked morose and lethargic during his loss to James Blake in the Olympic singles, and it wasn't until he entered the doubles draw with fellow Swiss player Stanislas Wawrinka that people suddenly saw a stark contrast.

Federer bounced joyously around the court like a kid during the doubles matches, and when he and Wawrinka won the gold, he celebrated as if it were his first championship. Wawrinka said that experience may have helped Federer extract some fun out of the game again.

"I think so," Wawrinka said. "He was very happy to be playing and it was just fun for him. The game was fun again, and I think it really helped him because instead of coming here with nothing, he left Beijing on a good note. Maybe it will help him now."

http://www.nj.com/sports/njsports/index.ss...says_feder.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...