Roger Federer – all of us know this guy. At some point; we
all have watched him play – even if we are all crazy for cricket or; especially
the girls; don’t feel interested in sports at all. It’s a foregone conclusion
that he is a great player. Maybe the best ever; but who am I or any of us to
conclude? Much more experienced and knowledgeable people have written about
him. Hundreds of articles abound the internet; analysing why is he so special,
what makes him him. A polite peek at
the stats shows that he is one of the most successful athletes of all time. All
this is common knowledge. Then; why am I writing this? There is no great secret
about him that I can reveal; no mind-boggling new analysis of his nimble
footwork or dextrous wrists or stunning single – handed backhand I can offer.
A confession
first: I am a die-hard Federer fan. When I saw him lose to Djokovic last week
in the French Open 2012 semi-final; something deep inside me stirred. I walked
back to my room; dejected and depressed. That day; I ended up spending an hour
and a half watching Federer videos on Youtube (bless the internet). I looked up
videos of the time when he was at his vintage best – 2005 to 2007 or 2008. The
time he completely dominated the game. Slowly but surely; my sullen mood
lifted. I cheered his amazing shots; and clapped like a child with the shots.
It got me thinking again; why did these make me feel better?
As a 14 or 15
year old; I ardently followed Tennis on TV. I myself play table tennis. The
more I saw of Federer; the fascinated I became. The on court demeanour; the
calmness; the eons of time he seems to have to hit the ball; the reflexes; how
quickly he moved around the court; the impossible shots he hit; the way he
dismantled his opponents, and a million other tiny things. When I play; I turn
into this raging, aggressive, gesticulating, shouting maniac. I have a hard
time controlling my emotions. Also; I see the ball coming; but I can’t hit it
the way I want to; put it where I want to. Federer did these with effortless
ease. A valid point that I can myself make is any professional player has these
attributes. But something in Roger Federer was different – he inspired me. Maybe it was because there
was more to his game than brute strength. The pleasing-to-the-eye way he
carried himself. How he turned the game into a show of elegance. I read more
about him – he had anger management issues as a teenager. He was expected to
conquer the world of tennis; but his start was slow etc etc. Watching him play
inspired me to improve. If you have played any sport; even at school level; you’ll
appreciate the fact that you need a constant source of inspiration to push
yourself.
He left a
deep ingrained impression on me. Watching him was an exciting breathless
experience – you never knew when the next audacious shot came up, the cross –
court single handed backhand winner, the sliced backhand passing shot, the
amazingly agile serve – it still surprises me how he managed to put the serve
in any corner with the same ball-toss. He made me his lifelong fan and source
of inspiration. When Marat Safin defeated him in Australian Open (2005) semi
final I remember foregoing dinner as I was so upset. That match showed me his
mortality. He is also a human- and can make mistakes (he blew away a match
point that day). The 2006 Wimbledon final is an epic classic – no one can deny
that. Now as I realize that he is past his prime – with changing priorities (he
is a family man now) and age catching up – I may not witness the bewitching grace
and fluidity of Federer very long now. It saddens me. It’ll be a great loss to
tennis when he calls it a day, more so, a lot of youngsters coming up wont be
able to learn from him by watching him in action. Tennis will lose a role
model.
Now as Wimbledon approaches us; I cant help but hope, c’mon
Federer turn back the clock – show us your A game – just once lets us all be
mesmerised again!!
The desired polar dawn might not actually come, sigh; sad but true, in my opinion!
ReplyDeleteYeah! but i still Hope :)
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