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Federer: I’m not the favorite

Defending champion deflects attention to Nadal and Djokovic

- By John Pye Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia— Roger Federer prefers to think of Rafael Nadal or Novak Djokovic as the favorites for the Australian Open title, despite entering as defending champion and coming off a worryfree preparatio­n.

“I play down my chances just because I don’t think a 36-year-old should be a favorite of a tournament,” Federer said Sunday on the eve of the year’s first Grand Slam tournament, “It should not be the case.

“That’s why I see things more relaxed, you know, at a later stage of my career.”

The 19-time major winner can afford to relax slightly longer, given the half of the draw that he shares with Djokovic doesn’t start until day two. Top-ranked Nadal will get under way Monday night against Victor Estrella Burgos on Rod Laver Arena, where he lost the final in five sets to Federer last year.

All four singles finalists were 30 or older here last year in what became a tournament for the ages, and three of them are back.

Serena Williams beat her older sister Venus Williams in the final to capture an Open era-record 23rd major here last year but decided against defending her title because she didn’t have enough time to recover from health issues after a complicate­d childbirth in September.

Venus Williams is seeded fifth and is scheduled on center court to get her 77th major under way with a challengin­g opener against Belinda Bencic.

She’s 4-0 in career headto-heads against 20-year-old Bencic — who reached a career-high No. 7 ranking in 2016 and who helped Federer win the Hopman Cup title for Switzerlan­d earlier this month — but is coming off an abbreviate­d preparatio­n that included a loss in the second round to eventual champion Angelique Kerber at the Sydney Internatio­nal last week.

At 37, Venus Williams among the top contenders at Melbourne Park. Others in action today include seventh-seeded Jelena Ostapenko, who meets Francesca Schiavone in a match featuring current vs. former French Open champions, No. 2-ranked Caroline Wozniacki, who opens against Mihaela Buzarnescu, and U.S. Open champion Sloane Stephens against Zhang Shuai.

Simona Halep is the No. 1 seed in the women’s draw and one of six women who can hold the No. 1 ranking at the end of the Australian Open.

Only two men can hold the top ranking in the first week of February — Nadal or Federer — regardless of what No. 3 Grigor Dimitrov or No. 4 Alexander Zverev or anybody Melbourne.

Federer returns in contrastin­g circumstan­ces to his appearance in 2017, when he was coming off a six-month break for an injured left knee and had low expectatio­ns about ending a Grand Slam title drought that dated to Wimbledon in 2012.

“This year I hope to win the first few rounds and get rolling hopefully, whereas last year I was just hoping to win,” a match, Federer told his pre-tournament news conference Sunday.

Six-time Australian Open winner Djokovic has been sidelined for six months with an injured right elbow, returning with a remodeled service motion, and 2014 champion Stan Wawrinka has also been out of the game since Wimbledon after surgery on his knee.

Nadal, who won the French and U.S. Open titles last year, has also had a limited preparatio­n restricted to couple of exhibition matches last week as he recovers from a sore knee. else does in

 ?? VINCENT THIAN/AP ?? Palm Beach Gardens’ Venus Williams serves to Switzerlan­d’s Belinda Bencic during their first round match.
VINCENT THIAN/AP Palm Beach Gardens’ Venus Williams serves to Switzerlan­d’s Belinda Bencic during their first round match.
 ?? CLIVE BRUNSKILL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Roger Federer of Switzerlan­d says he’s ahead of the start of the 2018 Australian Open in Melbourne.
CLIVE BRUNSKILL/GETTY IMAGES Roger Federer of Switzerlan­d says he’s ahead of the start of the 2018 Australian Open in Melbourne.

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