San Francisco Chronicle

For 8-time champion, it’s all at his service

- By Howard Fendrich Howard Fendrich is the Associated Press tennis writer.

LONDON — As Roger Federer was winning 35 consecutiv­e service points at Wimbledon on Wednesday — yes, 35 in a row — a Centre Court spectator cheered him on while wearing a red shirt with white lettering that said, “PeRFect.”

Federer comes pretty close to living up to that at times.

He moved into the third round at the All England Club as he chases his record-extending ninth championsh­ip there, using close-to-impeccable serving to beat 73rd-ranked Lukas Lacko of Slovakia 6-4, 6-4, 6-1.

Federer, 36, compiled 48 winners and just 11 unforced errors. He won 40 of 43 firstserve points, did not face a break chance, and delivered 16 aces.

“Sometimes your serve matches up better against certain players,” he said. “There’s no doubt about that.”

At 4-3, 40-30, Federer hit a 118 mph ace to hold and start his roll that included the last five points he served in the first set, all 20 in the second, and then the first 10 of the third. By then, it was so dominant that one television announcer was moved to jokingly exclaim, “Come on, double-fault!”

Moments later, Federer did lose a point he served at 4-1, 30-love, when Lacko smacked a down-the-line backhand passing winner.

“I think (what’s) important when you want to serve well is your point-for-point mentality, saying, maybe, ‘The first point is as important as a break point,’ so the concentrat­ion is the same,” Federer explained. “Trying to remember all the things you’ve done throughout the entire match: what has worked, what hasn’t worked.”

Very little did not work on this day, and he has allowed his two opponents to collect a total of 17 games through six sets.

Very little hasn’t worked for him over the years at Wimbledon, even in his mid-30s.

Wednesday’s result increased Federer’s streak to 26 sets at Wimbledon, equaling his second-best run, which came in 2003-04. His best was 34 from 2005 through ’06.

A year ago, Federer became the first man since Bjorn Borg in 1976 to win the title at the grasscourt Grand Slam tournament without ceding a single set.

So what, Federer was asked, makes him great on grass ?

“I don’t know,” he began, before offering quite a list for someone who doesn’t know.

“Maybe it’s that it helps my slice. That maybe the footwork on grass comes easier to me than for other guys. I’m not sure. Then because I have a decent speed on the serve, and I can serve kick and slice. Maybe also the grass helps me just a little bit to get a few more free points than what it would on some other surfaces.”

 ?? Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images ?? Roger Federer seeks his ninth Wimbledon singles title.
Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images Roger Federer seeks his ninth Wimbledon singles title.

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