Federer - "The story of my life"

DragonBlaze

Hall of Fame
Federer - "The story of my life"...

Thought this was a great quote and interesting to see Federer recognise it as well.

Q. You're such an instinctive player. The game always has seemed to come so easily to you. Do you think it's even more difficult, someone who is a natural touch player when the timing is off, it even looks worse when we're used to you hitting the ball so sweetly?

ROGER FEDERER: Maybe. Look, then again, it's always been a fine line, especially in the beginning of my career when I didn't have the results to back me up. People thought, Did he even try? Does he care much? Like, He can play so well. Is it so terrible? Now, with the results, I know you don't believe that so much. That's the good thing. The story of my life: when I lose, people are shellshocked to see me play this way. If I win, it's the best thing. Yeah, I can see that. But there's no doubt about it, I'm trying hard out there trying to make it work. Sometimes it just doesn't happen.

That basically IS the story of his life. The fans/media hype all of Federer wins way way way over the top (e.g. the media starting the GOAT bullcrap back when Fed was on 6-7 slams), and whenever he loses the fans/media/haters all jump on his back.

And the most hilarious thing is how even among the Fed detractors there is this underlying belief that Federer is the superior talent and should win every match but didn't because he is mentally weak/a wimp/tanking to avoid players etc etc. It can never be that his game just flat out sucked on the day/opponent played better on the day it is always a mental issue or whatnot.

Anyway here is the rest of the interview. Not bad from Fed, thankfully he recognises this year has been going crap and he needs to work on his sh-t. No more "oh it hasn't been great bur not a disaster either". And doesn't get baited by the stadium/delay questions either.

Q. Obviously a difficult day for you. A disrupting day as well. Did the fact you had to switch courts, was that a difficulty at all?

ROGER FEDERER: No. I mean, that should not be the issue. I've waited for so many matches throughout my career. That's definitely the last excuse you could find, you know. I mean, I've been practicing on Armstrong, so there's no excuse there either. I was prepared for it. I was even happy about it. I thought it was going to be a great atmosphere, that I could, you know, take advantage of maybe the fact that people were really going to get behind me, make it a great atmosphere. But unfortunately, you know, I didn't show the game that they could really get into it and excited about. That's how it goes sometimes.

Q. What went wrong for you? Physically your game, you couldn't find a rhythm?

ROGER FEDERER: Yeah, I mean, I think I started badly, which put me down a break. Then I was able to come back in that one. But it's true, I mean, I struggled throughout, which is not very satisfying, to be honest. I mean, Tommy did a good job to keep the ball in play and make it difficult for me today. I missed so many opportunities. Rhythm was off. Yeah, when those things happen, clearly it's always going to be difficult, you know.

Q. Do you think also it's a matter of confidence at this point that when things go wrong, you start to, I don't know, get angry at yourself or nervous, you're not as evoluted as you normally are?

ROGER FEDERER: Yeah, probably. Confidence does all these things. It takes care of all the things you don't usually think about, you know. But I just think it's been a difficult last three months, you know. Maybe how do you say my consistency is just not quite there yet. Maybe on a daily basis, set by set or point by point basis, maybe that's something that has been difficult for me, you know. So maybe that was one of the reasons I lost today.

Q. Being more negative?

ROGER FEDERER: No, I mean playing up and down. Then against a quality player, it becomes more difficult to keep that level up.

Q. Was the back an issue today?

ROGER FEDERER: No.

Q. Anything going on there?

ROGER FEDERER: No issue.

Q. I'm sure you're not happy with your performance, but what is going on through your mind?

ROGER FEDERER: I kind of feel like I beat myself, you know, without taking any credit away from Tommy. Clearly he was making sure he was making many balls. It was up to me to make the difference and I couldn't. I kind of self destructed, which is very disappointing, especially on a quicker court. Your serve helps you out. You're going to make the difference somewhere. I just couldn't do it. It was a frustrating performance today.

Q. What about the anticipation, maybe the disappointment of not getting into the quarterfinals against Rafa?

ROGER FEDERER: Yeah, I mean, it would have been a quarters, not a final. Not that much of a disappointment at the end of the day. If I'm playing like this, I'm not going to beat Rafa, or Kohlschreiber, for that matter. So, for me, I didn't think of that. I've been too often in this situation. I was fighting with other things in my match today. Not thinking too far ahead of myself, especially the level I was playing at.

Q. The conditions seemed slow. Did you have a chance to practice before the rain? How did you feel during the warmup?

ROGER FEDERER: Actually, believe it or not, Armstrong is a bit faster than Arthur Ashe. Clear, it was very humid. Definitely it's been humid the last couple of days now. That also had an effect on both players, you know, how you can maybe hold the grip, the timing you get through it. But there again, I mean, it's not like it's just humid on my side and not on his. It's all around humid for everybody watching. Yeah, it was a different type of court, atmosphere, surface speed, if you like. But then again, you know, I know Tommy's game really well. We've played so often against each other. There's no secrets out there today. Credit to him for playing a good match today.

Q. Did you feel all right during the practice?

ROGER FEDERER: Normal. Doesn't really matter, practice, to me, you know.

Q. You're known as such a great closer, 2 for 16 on break points.

ROGER FEDERER: Yeah, that was a great close. No, it wasn't a very good close today.

Q. No. Could you talk about your difficulty on break points? Secondly, were you overall surprised by your performance today, by the result?

ROGER FEDERER: I mean, I think I explained enough, you know. We have a forehand here, end up losing the point like three times. Every time like he comes you play where he's standing, and, I mean, it just ended up being a bad combination of many things today. So I've definitely got to go back to work and come back stronger, you know, get rid of this loss now as quick as I can, forget about it, because that's not how I want to play from here on. I want to play better. I know I can. I showed it the last few weeks, that there is that level. So today was pretty frustrating.

Q. I know it's right after the match, but do you anticipate you're going to make any changes to your training program or regimen?

ROGER FEDERER: No. I mean, who knows? I haven't thought of it right away, you know. Nothing goes past the hard work, you know. However you want to see it, whatever that means to you, you know, as a player, or in the fitness room, I'll make sure I'll put the work in. Once I decide what that is, I'll believe in it and go after it. So in some ways, as a player, you're always excited about that prospect because there's always something to look forward to, even in a big disappointment like the match today.

Q. I don't know if the Masters Cup is one of your goals or not, but you are a little bit in trouble. Would you change maybe your schedule in order to do that, or is not really that important for you to be in the top 8 at the end of the year?

ROGER FEDERER: I'm not really thinking about it. I don't think I'll change my schedule accordingly. I believe if I do play well, I'll make good results. If I make it or not, then we'll see. But important for me, first and foremost, that I move better, that I play better. My problem is there in training, not actually playing matches right now.

Q. You played Robredo a lot in the past. Did he do anything differently, show anything different from when you played him in the past?

ROGER FEDERER: No, he didn't. Pretty simple. No surprises. He didn't serve and volley or chip and charge. He stood back the way he usually does. He kick serves the way he usually does.

Q. You're such an instinctive player. The game always has seemed to come so easily to you. Do you think it's even more difficult, someone who is a natural touch player when the timing is off, it even looks worse when we're used to you hitting the ball so sweetly?

ROGER FEDERER: Maybe. Look, then again, it's always been a fine line, especially in the beginning of my career when I didn't have the results to back me up. People thought, Did he even try? Does he care much? Like, He can play so well. Is it so terrible? Now, with the results, I know you don't believe that so much. That's the good thing. The story of my life: when I lose, people are shellshocked to see me play this way. If I win, it's the best thing. Yeah, I can see that. But there's no doubt about it, I'm trying hard out there trying to make it work. Sometimes it just doesn't happen.
 
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Roger was very honest in this interview he definitely self destructed, he had sixteen break points and shockingly only broke Robredo TWICE. Robredo, gave Federer so many chances to win BUT Roger choked again and again making silly errors.

But Tommy was solid and people need to give the man credit, he didn't CHOKE and he played well enough to win.
 

tata

Hall of Fame
Wonder if he's still going to do more prototype testing like he said he would after the USO.
 

Rozroz

G.O.A.T.
honest interview, even quite uplifting after the atrocious match.
let's hope he's right and that he'll improve.
 

terribleIVAN

Hall of Fame
What a crock of ******** from Fed !

The truth is you knew once he was down 2 sets to love he would tank it !

There have been many great champions in the past who tried and managed to win from that position, but Fed had already decided to pack his bags and didn't give an honest effort.

I have seen him for many years and that much is very clear.

He just didn't want to lose to Rafa next round !
 

PhrygianDominant

Hall of Fame
Q. What about the anticipation, maybe the disappointment of not getting into the quarterfinals against Rafa?

ROGER FEDERER: Yeah, I mean, it would have been a quarters, not a final. Not that much of a disappointment at the end of the day. If I'm playing like this, I'm not going to beat Rafa, or Kohlschreiber, for that matter. So, for me, I didn't think of that. I've been too often in this situation. I was fighting with other things in my match today. Not thinking too far ahead of myself, especially the level I was playing at.

This is the part that lept out for me
 

galain

Hall of Fame
I only watched the first set, but it seemed as though he came out really trying to prove something, hitting a lot harder than he has lately, and consequently, making a lot of errors.

I was sad to read that he lost when i woke up this morning, but I think he gave a good interview here. I'd like to know what he means when he says the problem is in the training - as though he hasn't been training in the same fashion as previously.
 

terribleIVAN

Hall of Fame
All he had to do in order to win was play a little more conservately on the tens of break points he had, instead of going for the impossible shot each time.

You would think a player of his calibre understood that after missing the first ten; well, think again !

So, you go hell broke on each break point, say the other played too good, and avoid getting a pasting vs Rafa for the world to see !

Same old, same old story with Fed !
 

Devilito

Hall of Fame
Federer, "The Story of My Life - How I can't convert breakpoints to save it"

Federer is famous for this. I wouldn't doubt it if Fed has the worst BP conversion rate of anybody in ATP history.
 

Goosehead

Legend
All he had to do in order to win was play a little more conservately on the tens of break points he had, instead of going for the impossible shot each time.

You would think a player of his calibre understood that after missing the first ten; well, think again !

So, you go hell broke on each break point, say the other played too good, and avoid getting a pasting vs Rafa for the world to see !

Same old, same old story with Fed !

u sad tit.
 

Luminaire

Semi-Pro
All he had to do in order to win was play a little more conservately on the tens of break points he had, instead of going for the impossible shot each time.

You would think a player of his calibre understood that after missing the first ten; well, think again !

So, you go hell broke on each break point, say the other played too good, and avoid getting a pasting vs Rafa for the world to see !

Same old, same old story with Fed !

As RH310 said....
 

Luminaire

Semi-Pro
Q. Do you think also it's a matter of confidence at this point that when things go wrong, you start to, I don't know, get angry at yourself or nervous, you're not as evoluted as you normally are?


Hmmmm........pretty creative with the word choices. :)
 

fednad

Hall of Fame
All he had to do in order to win was play a little more conservately on the tens of break points he had, instead of going for the impossible shot each time.

You would think a player of his calibre understood that after missing the first ten; well, think again !

So, you go hell broke on each break point, say the other played too good, and avoid getting a pasting vs Rafa for the world to see !

Same old, same old story with Fed !

Correct. Avoiding ****** has always been his story. That is why they have played only 31 matches so far.

And, for your eyes only:
Nadal.jpg
 

terribleIVAN

Hall of Fame
Correct. Avoiding ****** has always been his story. That is why they have played only 31 matches so far.

And, for your eyes only:
Nadal.jpg

C'mon.

Does anybody with 2 brain cells believe Fed would have lost 3-0 to a player he beat ten times before his eyes closed if his next match was against a David Ferrer instead of Nadal ?

Do pigs fly yet ?
 

dman72

Hall of Fame
Bottom line is he made a ridiculous number of forehand errors. Backhand shanks we expect now and again, but hitting wide and long on his forehand OVER AND OVER again....just way off, and frankly, frustrating to watch.
 

terribleIVAN

Hall of Fame
Gilles Simon Australian Open....why did he not tank it Idiot? Rafa was in his half of the draw.

This was 2011, and he didn't tank, because Simon had already won their first 2 encounters, and was menacing to beat him a third time after losing the first two sets.

Robredo had only taken 3 sets in 10 matches vs Fed.

Now go get your head examined.
 
C

chandu612

Guest
Thought this was a great quote and interesting to see Federer recognise it as well.



That basically IS the story of his life. The fans/media hype all of Federer wins way way way over the top (e.g. the media starting the GOAT bullcrap back when Fed was on 6-7 slams), and whenever he loses the fans/media/haters all jump on his back.

And the most hilarious thing is how even among the Fed detractors there is this underlying belief that Federer is the superior talent and should win every match but didn't because he is mentally weak/a wimp/tanking to avoid players etc etc. It can never be that his game just flat out sucked on the day/opponent played better on the day it is always a mental issue or whatnot.

Anyway here is the rest of the interview. Not bad from Fed, thankfully he recognises this year has been going crap and he needs to work on his sh-t. No more "oh it hasn't been great bur not a disaster either". And doesn't get baited by the stadium/delay questions either.

God how many times does he say "I mean" and "You know"..some times 3 or 4 times in the same sentence. I really wanted to read the full interview but I am vexed.
 

Fedinkum

Legend
Now go play with the twins, have a nice break and come back hard with the indoor season!! You can still redeem 2013 if you beat them all at ATP Final!! You can do it!!
 
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