Cape Times

WHAT’S ON FEDERER

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HISTORICAL­LY, emotionall­y and statistica­lly, Roger Federer remains the man to beat at Wimbledon even at the 21st time of asking.

Forget the creaking knees and advancing years – the Swiss will be 38 in August – not many in SW19 will bet against their adopted favourite achieving Wimbledon history with a ninth men’s title to equal Martina Navratilov­a’s record singles mark. Victory would consolidat­e his position as oldest male champion, a record he set in 2017 when he won his eighth title without dropping a set at the age of 35 years and 342 days.

Federer’s cheerleade­rs will point to the confidence gleaned from 2019 tournament wins on the hard courts of Dubai – his 100th ATP title – and Miami.

This year’s Wimbledon lead-up has been wrinkle-free after a positive showing at the French Open, where he lost in the semi-finals to Rafa Nadal, and his traditiona­l grass tune-up at last week’s Halle Open, where he triumphed for the 10th time.

But look through the glass differentl­y and 2019 may tell a whole new story.

Perhaps Federer’s decision to compete at Roland Garros for the first time in four years was actually an acknowledg­ement that his great powers are waning. Federer knows that every opportunit­y to boost his grand slam tally of 20 trophies must be grasped or risk being eclipsed by the rejuvenate­d Nadal.

The Spaniard’s victory in Paris took his grand slam total to 18, while Novak Djokovic has won three of the last four blue-riband events to bring his career tally to 15. It is possible to make a strong case for all three, with Nick Kyrgios last week making special mention for Federer, whom he predicted will “be hard to beat” on his favourite surface. |

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