AUSTRALIAN OPEN 2018: ROGER FEDERER EASES INTO FINAL AS CHUNG RETIRES
Federer's not the quickest
guy on Australian open 2018.He's
never been the fastest and definitely not the most buff (did you see the guns
on display by Rafael Nadal last week before he retired?)..
In term of being physically
fit? Yes, Federer has had his ailments. And, yes, he withdraws from the
occasional tournament. But when he shows up, he
finishes what he starts.
His ability to play an entire career without ever quitting is one of
the most remarkable feats in all of sports.
So, he's due an occasional easy night, and Federer certainly wasn't
apologizing for Friday's brief match.
"You do take the faster matches when you can because there's
enough wear and tear on the body," Federer said. "There's enough
tough matches throughout the season that when they happen, you take them."
There have certainly been better
Australia Day tennis celebrations at Melbourne Park. There have undoubtedly
been much longer Australia Day tennis celebrations at Melbourne Park.
Roger Federer did his part at age 36,
but the next generation was unable to keep pace. Though Hyeon Chung was able to
defeat Novak Djokovic and two other seeded players in this Australian Open, he
was unable to get through the second set against Federer in the semifinals.
Hampered by deep blisters on both
feet, Chung, the emerging 21-year-old South Korean star, retired with Federer
leading, 6-1, 5-2.
“I think I did the right thing,” Chung
said after the match. “It really hurts. I can’t walk normal.”
Federer and Chung, in their first
meeting, played for only 62 minutes. That was more than long enough for Federer
to identify and exploit Chung’s weak points: his forehand under pressure, his
first serve, his variety.
There is no dishonor in any of that.
Chung has years ahead of him to become a more complete threat, and his movement
dropped off after the opening games, when he was sliding, Djokovic-style into
the corners.
Meanwhile, the second-seeded Federer
continues to bust through mental and physical barriers and will face another
member of the tennis establishment, the No. 6 seed Marin Cilic of Croatia, in
Sunday’s final. Federer said it was bittersweet to reach the final in the way
he did.
It was surely bittersweet for the
Australian Open organizers as well. This is the only Grand Slam tournament that
stages the men’s semifinals on separate days, and Friday’s abbreviated match
made for a very short main event.
“I knew he was having issues with his
feet going into it,” Federer said of Chung. “But I knew he also had issues
going into the match against Novak.
“He handled that very well, the same
against Sandgren,” he added, referring to Chung’s four-set victory over the
American Tennys Sandgren in the quarterfinals.
“For me, I was trying to block that
away and just play Chung himself,” Federer said. “If he had no issues, well,
that’s normal. If he has issues, well, bad luck for him, and I’ll take
advantage of it.”
Neville Godwin, Chung’s coach, said
the problem began in earnest in the quarterfinals of the tournament in
Auckland, New Zealand, earlier this month when Chung lost to David Ferrer.
“Hyeon always has calluses on his
feet, which is normal, all the players have that,” Godwin said. “He just hadn’t
shaved them down far enough, so in Auckland they started blistering and
bruising underneath.”
Godwin said that when Chung arrived in
Melbourne, he held up well for the first week, but that he required
anesthetizing injections in both feet before each of his last three matches. At
this stage, he essentially had open wounds that were wrapped for play.
“These are serious injections,” Godwin
said. “Each one lasts like a minute. The guy is biting into a towel for a
minute, and you have to do it pretty close to match time otherwise it wears
off. So 45 minutes before a match, and he’s biting into a towel having someone
jabbing his feet.”
Godwin said that it was Chung’s
decision to take the injections and that the problem was a new one.
“We just basically ran out of time,”
Godwin said. “He’s young, and he had a great run, and it’s a very unfortunate
time for it to happen, but he managed it the best that he could actually. He
had three doctors, a podiatrist and five trainers running around after him the,
sort of, last 10 days.”
Godwin said he believed there was no
other good option except to retire from the match.
“It was starting to look messy, where
he couldn’t move,” he said. “For someone who laid his foundation for the whole
tournament on his movement, it’s not the right thing. There was obviously
something wrong.”
It is unclear how long recovery will
take.
“Every human being is different in
their healing protocol,” Godwin said. “Now he really has to do nothing for five
days to seven days. He’s entered into some tournaments coming up, so we
literally have to take it day by day and see. Luckily he’s had a good result,
so it does buy us a little more time.”
On Monday, Chung will climb to No. 29
from 58th in the rankings; that is the highest singles ranking ever for a
Korean player.
Federer said he believed Chung was
“going to be a very good player,” but he resisted making predictions.
“I don’t like to put too much pressure
on players by saying they’re going to win everything, because I don’t think
it’s fair,” he said. “A lot of experts, such-called experts, said I was going
to be world No. 1 and win everything. In a way it’s funny and cool, but it’s
not so cool in hindsight. Afterwards, anything you achieve is normal. I find it
disappointing. Getting to No. 1, winning Grand Slams, winning Masters 1000s, it
ain’t normal. It’s extraordinary.”
The pundits do deserve credit in this
instance for getting it right, however. Federer has indeed become one of the
greatest players of all time.
Sunday’s duel with Cilic will be a
rematch of last year’s Wimbledon final, which, like Friday night’s semifinal,
also turned into an anticlimax because of foot blisters: Cilic began crying on
a changeover at the frustration of not being able to perform his best.
Cilic has beaten Federer just once in
nine matches, but it was a significant victory, coming in the semifinals of the
2014 United States Open en route to Cilic’s first and only major singles title.
He presumably will need his top gear
again on Sunday to trouble Federer, who has yet to drop a set as he defends the
surprising title he won last year by prevailing in a series of tense
five-setters.
His return visit has been much shorter
on drama but not on statistical import. This will be Federer’s seventh
Australian Open final, a men’s Open era record. It will be his 30th Grand Slam
singles final, building on his own men’s record.
If he beats Cilic, Federer will have
20 major singles titles, increasing his record total among men to a nice round
number that seemed all but unreachable when Djokovic was dominating the game in
the first half of 2016.
Djokovic has fallen back because of an
elbow injury, but Federer glides on — thoroughly in his element.
News Source : newsdotcomdotau
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