Nervous Federer eases past Lajovic into third round
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[July 07, 2017]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - Roger Federer has
risen above mere mortals on Wimbledon's lawns over the past 14 years
so it was almost comforting to learn the king of cool had an attack
of nerves before his second-round match on Thursday.
Usually so serene on his Centre Court stage, the 35-year-old Swiss
was visibly snatching at some shots early on against 79th-ranked
Serb Dusan Lajovic and dropped his first service game before ironing
out the kinks to win 7-6(0) 6-3 6-2.
His record-extending 86th win at the All England Club put him closer
to becoming the first man to claim eight Wimbledon singles titles,
having first lifted the trophy in 2003, but it was far from a
routine day at the office for the 35-year-old.
"I was feeling nerves for some reason. Not sure why," third seed
Federer, who will face German serve-and-volleyer Mischa Zverev in
round three, told reporters.
"It was definitely more acute than I normally feel it. It was just
like all of a sudden I was walking up to the locker room after my
warm-up and I was feeling excited and nervous.
"Then when I walked to the court it was still ongoing and after the
warm-up it was still there. And down 1-0, 0-40, it was still there,
and it was still there at 6-6 in the first set.
"Just took a while to shake it off."
NERVOUS TENSION
That Federer still has nervous tension after winning 18 majors is
perhaps the strongest argument to suggest he can reclaim the title
he last won in 2012.
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Switzerland’s Roger Federer in action during his second round match
against Serbia’s Dusan Lajovic REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth
He is clearly not a man just playing out the last few
years of his magnificent career for fun.
"It's weird how sometimes you can be way more nervous for a second
round than for a final," he said. "I'm happy I got through this one
feeling the way I did, because in a way it's strange playing this
way when you're so tense."
His early-evening match became a piece of cake after he demoralized
Lajovic with a masterful tiebreak.
Lajovic had played admirably to stay with Federer throughout the
first set and even led by an early break.
The 27-year-old Serb must have felt he was in with a chance as the
tiebreak began but Federer played seven scintillating points to
finally calm the nerves.
With dark clouds looming overhead the Swiss looked in a hurry to get
the job done and broke early in the second set.
The third set was one-way traffic and Federer sealed victory with
his ninth ace.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Clare Lovell and Ken Ferris) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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