Jump to content

Roger Federer


Boxy

Recommended Posts

57 minutes ago, Boxy said:

Nista, sve preskace do trave, sto je bolje jer se prosli put ranije vratio pa je posle pravio 6 meseci pauzu :classic_sad:

Poprilicno ce da padne na listi, jer dosta poena on brani, ali ni to nije bitno, najbitnije je da bude zdrav

Brani 3180 bodova, kad se oduzme od danasnjeg broja bodova ostaje mu 3950, sto je trenutno #7 na ATP listi.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mislim da on tu egzibiciju ne bi igrao samo da mu je ruka ili noga bila u gipsu, to mu je previse znacilo.

Drago mi je sto je odmah otisao na operaciju, sto nije odugovlacio i tako pogorsao stvari, nego je odmah resio problem.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pol Anakon za NY Times, bas veliki majstor i uvek glas razuma :heart:

 

Quote

 

“The big challenge in my experience is the older you get, the harder it is to come back from anything,” Paul Annacone, Federer’s former coach, said in a telephone interview. “But these all-time greats are aberrations, not the rule, so you risk your own peril to predict what’s going to happen, pro or con. In 2010, when I started with him, people were wondering when he was going to retire.”

 

“I can promise you he is a very thoughtful decision maker,” Annacone said. “I think probably he approaches everything from the macro perspective: what gives him the best chance to do well and stay really healthy for a longer period of time.”

 

The decision to call off that match left Federer in tears in the locker room. He was in tears again in Cape Town, South Africa, on Feb. 7, deeply moved as he and his longtime rival Rafael Nadal played an exhibition to benefit Federer’s charitable foundation that drew a crowd of 51,954 to Cape Town Stadium.

Federer showed no clear signs of a knee injury during that match, chasing down lobs and lunging for groundstrokes and volleys as he and Nadal played three sets of singles.

But one of Federer’s skills, Annacone said, is how rarely he discusses his injuries, “so you don’t ever really know quite how healthy he is.”

“We take for granted the way he plays that he’s generally pretty healthy, but he plays through a lot,” Annacone said.

 

“He just got to the semis of the Aussie Open by the skin of his teeth basically, but he was there, and those are the moments all those greats live for,” Annacone said. “So I’m not quite ready to write him off. And you look at his grass-court record and how unique his game is for grass, I don’t see any reason he can’t still win Wimbledon.”

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Slika sa USO, tada su navijaci govorili da je masirao i hladio koleno posle treninga.

Ocigledno to sto je rekao da ga muci "for a little while", nije bas tako kratko, ali najverovatnije i nije bilo toliko ozbiljno jer je odigrao par meseci i imao neke skroz dobre rezultate i pobede.

Tako da mislim da je procenjeno da je sad najbolji trenutak da se uradi operacija i da je najmanji problem ako se preskoce ovih par mastersa, jer posle od jula krece W, OI, USO

 

Image may contain: one or more people and people sitting

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Exclusive Roger Federer book extract: Federer’s rock (Part 1)

Exclusive Roger Federer book extract: Federer’s rock (Part 2)

 

Sve je vezano za Mirku, najbitnije deo njegovog tima i da bez nje ne bi toliko osvojio, niti bi igrao jos uvek.  

Doduse, to zna svaki Fed fan, Mirka :heart:

ovo su neki najzanimljiviji delovi :classic_smile:

 

The 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney were ill-fated for Swiss Tennis: the star players Martina Hingis, Patty Schnyder and Marc Rosset had all withdrawn. So the small tennis delegation made up of young Roger Federer, Vavrinec, Emmanuelle Gagliardi and their coach, Peter Lundgren, shared a house in the Olympic Village with four Swiss wrestlers. Nobody had even an inkling of the romance which was to blossom under the Australian sun. Even before the Games, Vavrinec told Swiss journalists that Federer had given her a stomach ache by making her laugh so much. She liked that he wasn’t a bore, but rather a joker who always put everyone in a good mood. But for a long time she didn’t realise that he was interested in her. “I just didn’t get why he wanted to talk to me so much,” she said later.

On the court Roger Federer missed two chances at a medal: in the semi-finals against Tommy Haas and in the bronze medal match against Arnaud di Pasquale. But off court he took his shot: on the last day he summoned all his courage and kissed Mirka. She like it but joked: “You’re still so young. A baby.” He had just turned 19, she was already 22. “She’s a little older than me, and women mature earlier anyway. That helped me a lot when we got together,” he says in hindsight. “Our relationship quickly got very serious.”
 
Initially the two were able to keep their romance from the public eye. Even though it was an open secret on the tennis scene in the summer of 2001, at Federer’s request it only became public during the US Open. By then it was also nearly impossible to hide, given that they both eagerly watched each other’s matches from the stands and that Federer’s coach, Peter Lundgren, was also working with Vavrinec. “The cool kid from Basel and the beauty from Thurgau – they share more than net cord, aces and break points. The two play ball off-court too,” revealed the Zurich tabloid, SonntagsBlick. The reporter let his imagination run wild: “She kisses him when he wins, which is often. He comforts her when she loses, which is not so rare. For months now, Roger and Mirka have been making their way through the daily jealousy, resentment and relentless competition of the hectic professional tour together.” Vavrinec offers a quote, saying: “It’s not easy. Thank God there’s phones and texting. Because we only play together at Grand Slam tournaments and in Key Biscayne.”
 
During Wimbledon 2004, she told the Zurich-based Tages-Anzeiger: “When Roger wins, it’s as if I were winning too. I feel it so intensely and I know what it means. He shares everything with me. On some level, Roger gives me back my tennis life. I enjoy being back on tour. And now everything is even more intense than in the time when I played myself, since he’s number one.” These words are quoted often as they come from the last longer personal interview she gave. Whilst in the early days she also worked as Federer’s press manager and had to send a lot of refusals, she later passed the task on to his manager, Tony Godsick, and stopped speaking publicly. Not least on Federer’s recommendation, careful as he is about what his immediate circle say in public. His wife isn’t on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram or Snapchat.
 
In 2012 Federer’s coach at the time, Paul Annacone, told The New York Times: “She still plays a huge role and has great input and impact. She understands the big picture extremely well and does a great job in terms of letting us work but also shares invaluable information. This is a tricky balance. She’s been there since day one, so she knows very well what it takes and how to get there.” And she’s not one to shy away from telling her husband what she thinks to his face. Even if it hurts.
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...