Roger Federer Wimbledon 2015
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Roger Federer has not won a grand slam title since 2012, he
is at that age when he keeps getting asked about his retirement plans, and he
is about to bid farewell to another one of his contemporaries.
Rather than looking back
on a stellar career that has earned him a record 17 grand slam titles, the
33-year-old Swiss declared on Saturday he has never felt better coming into Wimbledon. "It's probably been
the best preparation I've ever had for Wimbledon because we have a week more on
the grass," Federer told reporters about the extended three-week grass
court swing ahead of Wimbledon. "Winning Halle has
given me the extra confidence I guess it's going to take me to win this title
here."
Reuters report continues;
Twelve months ago his
hopes of hoisting the gilded Challenge Cup for a record eighth time were dashed
in a heartbreaking five-set loss to world number one Novak Djokovic.
Rather than dwelling on what
he failed to achieve as a result of that defeat, Federer was more focused on
what the run to the final 12 months ago taught him.
"Last year's final
... if it does something, it goes to show that I was playing well. I wasn't
playing great and I (still) made the finals," said the second seed, who
tuned up for Wimbledon by winning his eighth title in Halle.
"I didn't expect
myself to right away make the finals. To be honest, I was still somewhat on the
way back (after injury niggles in 2013). But things went faster than I thought
they would."
His relationship with his
co-coach, six-times grand slam champion Stefan Edberg, was also in its infancy
but after working together for 18 months, Federer feels he is on the verge of
reaping the rewards of that union.
"This year I feel my
game is better," said Federer, who also switched to a bigger-framed
racquet.
"I've gotten used to
the racquet. This is not the first time I'm at Wimbledon with Stefan Edberg.
The work I've put in ... I feel I could really aim for Wimbledon this year.
Whereas last year, it was all about getting back."
This year's event will
also mark the final hurrah for 2002 champion Lleyton Hewitt, the last man to
win here before the sport's Big Four of Federer, Rafa Nadal, Novak Djokovic and
Andy Murray began their Wimbledon dictatorship.
While Hewitt is the
latest of his grand slam final victims to hang up their rackets, following in
the footsteps of Mark Philippoussis, Marat Safin, Andy Roddick and Andre
Agassi, Federer is in no hurry to slip on the slippers just yet.
"I don't want to go
there with my thoughts because the more I think about it, the closer I am to
retirement," he said.
"Clearly I need to
think about it eventually, but not for the moment."
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