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Federer eyes fresh ‘fairy tale’ as Slam rivals struggle

- KYRGIOS IN GOOD NICK

MELBOURNE — The prospects of an unpreceden­ted 20th Grand Slam victory have strengthen­ed for ageless wonder Roger Federer as his main rivals flounder ahead of the Australian Open.

The 36-year-old is coming off an extraordin­ary 2017, when he won a fifth Australian Open title and a record eighth at Wimbledon, and there could be yet more glory with a depleted field of top contenders in Melbourne.

Andy Murray and Japan’s Kei Nishikori are already out of the year’s opening Grand Slam with injuries, while 12-time major champion Novak Djokovic is troubled by an elbow complaint and hasn’t played for six months.

World number one Rafael Nadal withdrew from his first tour event of 2018, in Brisbane, with continuing knee problems, and is seeking match practice in a Melbourne exhibition event ahead of the Jan. 15 start.

The 2014 winner Stan Wawrinka, who hasn’t played since last year’s Wimbledon and subsequent knee surgery, has had little warm-up work and is no longer with his fouryear coach Magnus Norman.

Yet amid it all Federer keeps going, winning all his matches at the mixed-teams Hopman Cup in Perth this month and seemingly injury-free.

“I just have to pace myself all the way up to the tournament in Melbourne, and I’ll be ready,” he said after his Hopman Cup final victory with Switzerlan­d teammate Belinda Bencic.

“I’m just excited going back to Melbourne where I had my fairy tale run last year. It was crazy.

“It’s great to be the defending champion. I take it the right way. I won’t put extra pressure on myself, regardless of who’s going to play, or not play.

“For me it’s just important to be in a good mind-set, well prepared, and ready to go. And I feel like I am ready.” Nadal, who lost to Federer in five sets in a vintage Australian final last year, has opted to join Djokovic at the Kooyong Classic exhibition event for some match practice in the week before the Open.

The Spaniard, who hasn’t played since the World Tour Finals in London, had a stellar 2017, winning his 10th French Open, a third US Open crown and the year-ending world number one spot.

Six-time Australian Open champion Djokovic pulled out of events in Abu Dhabi and Doha with elbow soreness before heading to Melbourne, and hasn’t hit a ball in anger since the problem forced him to quit Wimbledon in the quarterfin­als in July.

Big-serving Canadian Milos Raonic is another with a checkered preparatio­n after wrist surgery last year, while American world number eight Jack Sock hurt his hip while playing in the Hopman Cup.

The Australian Open is the second straight Grand Slam to be badly hit by injury issues.

The US Open was missing Wawrinka, Djokovic, Nishikori, Raonic and Murray, and after the early eliminatio­ns of Alexander Zverev, Marin Cilic, Grigor Dimitrov and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, it was one of the rare Grand Slams where big names didn’t dominate the quarterfin­als. —

 ??  ?? AFP ROGER FEDERER
AFP ROGER FEDERER

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