Los Angeles Times

Federer and Williams falter early but recover in time

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helps a lot.”

McNally wasn’t intimidate­d by the occasion or the cavernous stadium.

“I knew I was playing against the greatest of all time. I walked out there and I had the chills,” she said. “Just an unbelievab­le experience and something I’ll never forget for the rest of my life . ... I was super happy just to get a set from her. That’s something not many people do.”

World No. 1 Novak Djokovic went the minimum to defeat Juan Ignacio Londero of Argentina 6-4, 7-6 (3), 6-1, but Djokovic didn’t escape unscathed. He needed a medical timeout for treatment of pain in his left shoulder that had adversely affected his serve and backhand, and he said at several points he wasn’t sure if he would be able to finish the match. But he did, erasing an 0-3 deficit after going down two breaks in the middle set.

“It’s something I’ve been carrying for quite a while now,” he said. “I’m hoping that with proper medical help and treatments, I’ll be able to get myself in a better state than I was today in a few days.”

It’s the ultimate compliment to 38-year-old Federer that the pulse of tennis fandom still pauses when he loses a set. Losing the first set in two consecutiv­e matches stopped that pulse for a couple of beats.

“I have been in that position many times where you go through a little phase where you don’t start so well and everybody asks you right away, ‘What are you going to do?’ ” he said. “You’re like, ‘I don’t know.’ ”

There’s something reassuring about hearing a 20-time Grand Slam tournament champion say he doesn’t have all the answers after he’d played his 100th match at the U.S. Open. But he had enough answers against Dzumhur to earn a 3-6, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4 victory, though he was irked he had to follow his four-set opener against Sumit Nagal of India with another four-set exertion.

“I don’t think there is, per se, a secret to a good start other than warming up well, being well-prepared mentally, not underestim­ating your opponent. I did all of that. You know me, I will always do that,” Federer said. “So when it happens like this in back-to-back matches it’s just a bit frustratin­g more than anything, especially when the level is that low and there is that many errors and the energy is not kind of there. Can only do better, which is a great thing moving forward.”

Federer no longer seems so invincible. He couldn’t hold off Dominic Thiem in the final at Indian Wells in March and followed that by losing in the quarterfin­als at Rome and Madrid, and squanderin­g two match points against Djokovic in the Wimbledon final. In his last tournament before Flushing Meadows, at Cincinnati, he lost to Sergey Rublev in the round of 32.

Maybe he merely found it difficult Wednesday to get psyched against a player whose year is made when Federer says hello to him, but Federer will have to better conserve his energy to get deeper into this tournament without stopping any more pulses.

“I knew what Nagal was going to give me. I knew what Dzumhur was going to give me. But I didn’t expect to hit 15 to 20 unforced errors, which is basically the entire set just sort of donated,” said Federer, who committed 17 of his 45 unforced errors Wednesday in the first set. “But look, they came out and they were well prepared and got me to do that. But I clearly have to play better from the get-go.”

That’s two tests passed for Federer, Williams and Djokovic, with more to go.

 ?? Justin Lane EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? NOVAK DJOKOVIC worked through a shoulder problem to beat Juan Ignacio Londero in the second round. He needed a medical timeout for treatment of pain.
Justin Lane EPA/Shuttersto­ck NOVAK DJOKOVIC worked through a shoulder problem to beat Juan Ignacio Londero in the second round. He needed a medical timeout for treatment of pain.

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