Gulf Today

Worst is behind me, says ailing Federer

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ZURICH: Roger Federer said his injury comeback was not yet in sight but insisted he was over the worst as the 40-year-old tennis great targets a return to the courts.

Federer had been out for more than a year with two surgeries on his right knee before geting back onto the tour this year. But he played only 13 matches, and underwent a third operation following his quarter-final defeat at Wimbledon in July.

“I’m doing very well; the rehab is progressin­g step by step,” the Swiss star said at an event in Zurich with sponsors Mercedes-benz.

“The worst is behind me. I’m looking forward to everything that happens to me to come.

“When you come back from an injury, every day is a beter day. So it’s an exciting time.”

He said that given everything he had been through with his troublesom­e knee, dealing with the situation was “not a mental problem at all”.

The 20-time Grand Slam champion, now ranked ninth in the world, said he sees returning to the profession­al tour as a “challenge”.

Federer added he hoped to get back to fitness training and hiting balls on the tennis court as soon as possible, but accepted that “that still takes a litle patience”.

He withdrew from this year’s French Open ater reaching the fourth round and bowed out at Wimbledon with a tame 6-3, 7-6 (7/4), 6-0 loss to Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz. Federer was the chief instigator of the Laver Cup, an annual team tournament between six top players from Europe and six from the rest of the world, which is now in its fourth edition. The 2021 event is being held from Friday to Sunday in Boston, but without Federer, who will be watching from a distance. “That hurts me a lot,” he said.

“I knew that at some point I wouldn’t be able to be there, but I didn’t think it would be this year.”

Federer said he was already looking forward to 2022, when the tournament will be staged in the British capital.

“One of my goals is to really get myself into it again to come back and hopefully play in places like the O2 Arena in London,” he said.

Team Europe won the Prague 2017, Chicago 2018 and Geneva 2019 editions of the Laver Cup, while last year’s tournament fell victim to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Meanwhile, Greek tennis star Stefanos Tsitsipas defended his views on coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns on Monday but said he would get the jab this year.

The world number three was lambasted by the Greek government last month ater he said would only get a vaccinatio­n if it became mandatory to compete in tennis tournament­s. However, the 23-year-old said in an interview with Antenna television channel that he would now have the vaccinatio­n.

“I personally did not promote the vaccinatio­n,” said Tsitsipas.

“I was not against vaccinatio­n. I support anyone who wants to be vaccinated.

“I’m not a doctor, I’m a tennis player and my opinion is not the best in terms of medicine. It will happen this year so that I can to to shops or restaurant­s.”

Tsitsipas, who was the face of Greece’s “Stay Home” campaign last year during the height of the pandemic, admited he had struggled during the first confinemen­t in 2020.

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