New York Daily News

Federer simply perfect

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON — As is the case in virtually every Wimbledon news conference, top-seeded Roger Federer seamlessly shifted gears Monday by fielding and answering consecutiv­e questions in English, French and German. He's capable of doing the same in Swedish and Italian.

The defining characteri­stic of Federer these days is not his effortless eloquence, but his efficiency.

Federer has not lost a set in this tournament since 2016 — a streak of 32 in a row, the latest being his 6-0, 7-5, 6-4 victory Monday over Adrian Mannarino. The Frenchman lost the first set in a mere 16 minutes before putting up a bit more of a fight in the next two sets.

With that, Federer knocked off his 11th opponent of this streak and inched closer to his Wimbledon record of winning 34 consecutiv­e sets between 2005-06, when he eclipsed John McEnroe's mark of 31 in a row between 1984-85.

“I feel like these streaks just happen,” said the Swiss superstar, the defending champion and record eight-time Wimbledon winner who last lost a set here when he fell to Canada's Milos Raonic in a 2016 semifinal.

“You can't plan for them anyway because one point can change the outcome of a set. If you break it down, it could be one shot really. That's not something you can always control. Of course, if you give yourself maximum chances, you're playing well, you have super focus, then these streaks are kind of possible.”

Federer, who turns 37 next month, will play South Africa's Kevin Anderson in the quarterfin­als with a chance to break his record for consecutiv­e sets won. But perfection is not the goal. Moving forward is.

“Look,” he said with a smile, “I'm equally happy if I would have won all the matches in four sets.”

On what's annually regarded as the best day on the tennis calendar because of the quality of the matches, eight players in both the men's and women's brackets advanced to the quarterfin­als. Among them were Rafael Nadal and Federer, the world's top two men's singles players, who 10 years ago squared off in an unforgetta­ble Wimbledon final that many people call the greatest match in the history of the sport. That classic, won by Nadal in five sets, is the subject of the just-released documentar­y “Strokes of Genius,” based on the Jon Wertheim book of the same name.

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