The Record (Troy, NY)

SO CLOSE, YET SO FAR

Federer wastes match point, loses to Anderson

- By Howard Fendrich

LONDON » Roger Federer was a point away from a rather tidy, straight-set victory in the Wimbledon quarterfin­als. One lousy point.

And then, slowly, over the next two-plus hours, all the way until the fifth set reached its 24th game, as the temperatur­e dropped and the spectators’ cries of “Let’s go, Roger!” echoed through the shadows, everything came apart for the eight-time champion against an opponent who’d never beaten him before nor made it this far at the All England Club.

In a stunning turnaround in an unfamiliar setting — No. 1 Court instead of Centre Court — the topseeded Federer blew a third-set match point and, eventually, all of his big lead in a 2- 6, 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6- 4, 13-11 loss to No. 8 Kevin Anderson on Wednesday in a 4-hour, 14-minute tussle.

“It was just one of those days where you hope to get by somehow,” Federer said. “I almost could have. I should have.”

He was leading by two sets and 5- 4 in the third when, with Anderson serving, he got to Ad- Out.

Could have ended things right then and there. Federer managed to return a 134 mph serve, but on his next stroke, he shanked a backhand.

Back to deuce. From there, it all began to change. Anderson held for 5-all, broke to 6- 5 with a violent return winner off a 97 mph second serve, then staved off three break points and closed the set with a 133 mph ace.

The comeback was just beginning.

“I had my chances,” Federer said, “so it’s disappoint­ing.”

This was only the third time in Federer’s 20 years of contesting Grand Slam matches that he lost one after taking the opening two sets; both of the other defeats came in 2011. And, according to the ATP, it’s the fifth time Federer lost a match at a major tourna- ment after holding a match point, something else that last happened seven years ago.

How hard was it to see this coming?

Federer was 4- 0 against Anderson entering the day, winning every set they’d ever played against each other. But there was more. So much more. Federer was attempting to reach his 13th semifinal at Wimbledon and move closer to title No. 9, both of which would have broken his own records.

He came into the match having won 32 consecutiv­e sets at Wimbledon, a run he stretched to 34 before faltering. And he had held serve 81 games in a row at the grass- court major, a streak that grew to 85 before Anderson broke him

a surprising total of four times.

“I just kept on telling myself, ‘I have to keep believing.’ I kept saying that today was going to be my day, because you really need that mindset taking the court against somebody like Roger,” Anderson said. “If you go out there with doubts or unsure what’s going to happen, like I maybe did a little bit in that first set, it’s not going to go your way.”

Not that Anderson is anything other than an elite tennis player. He was, after all, the runner-up at last year’s U.S. Open. That also was the closest he’s come to winning a Grand Slam trophy, while Federer owns 20.

Anderson never had made it beyond the fourth round at Wimbledon until this week, carried by his booming serve. He hit 28 aces against Federer, saved 9 of 12 break points and managed to hold his own in the rare lengthy baseline rallies.

 ?? BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Switzerlan­d’s Roger Federer wipes his forehead during the fifth set of his men’s quarterfin­als match against Kevin Anderson of South Africa at the Wimbledon Tennis Championsh­ips, in London, Wednesday.
BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Switzerlan­d’s Roger Federer wipes his forehead during the fifth set of his men’s quarterfin­als match against Kevin Anderson of South Africa at the Wimbledon Tennis Championsh­ips, in London, Wednesday.
 ?? BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Switzerlan­d’s Roger Federer returns the ball to Kevin Anderson of South Africa during their men’s quarterfin­als match at the Wimbledon Tennis Championsh­ips, in London, Wednesday.
BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Switzerlan­d’s Roger Federer returns the ball to Kevin Anderson of South Africa during their men’s quarterfin­als match at the Wimbledon Tennis Championsh­ips, in London, Wednesday.
 ?? BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kevin Anderson of South Africa reacts after losing a point in his men’s quarterfin­als match against Switzerlan­d’s Roger Federer, at the Wimbledon Tennis Championsh­ips, in London, Wednesday.
BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kevin Anderson of South Africa reacts after losing a point in his men’s quarterfin­als match against Switzerlan­d’s Roger Federer, at the Wimbledon Tennis Championsh­ips, in London, Wednesday.

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