Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Federer wins US Open, 13th Slam title

YESSSSS!!! Roger finally won something BIG at last this season.And it has propelled him to an all-time record of 13 Grand Slams. Just one more, and he'd have equalled Pete Sampras' best of 14 Slams.

It was definitely sweet victory for Federer after a dismal start which continued even into mid-season, what with a shock Wimbledon loss to his most prominent foe, Rafael Nadal. And worse still, losing his No. 1 spot in the world to Nadal.

But at least, he's back and won something. That makes me happy.

Well done, Roger!!! Keep the Slams coming in.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Federer wins fifth US Open in a row for 13th Slam title
Monday, 08 September 2008
source: http://sport.my.msn.com/article.aspx?cp-documentid=1666604

Roger Federer won his 13th Grand Slam crown and fifth consecutive US Open title, defeating British sixth seed Andy Murray 6-2, 7-5, 6-2 to move one Slam title shy of the all-time record.

Roger Federer won his 13th Grand Slam crown and fifth consecutive US Open title, defeating British sixth seed Andy Murray 6-2, 7-5, 6-2 to move one Slam title shy of the all-time record.

Federer's 56th career crown moved him into sole possession of second place on the all-time Slam title list, one more than Roy Emerson and one below the career record 14 won by Pete Sampras.
"One thing is for sure. I'm not going to stop at 13," Federer said. "That would be terrible."

After losing this year's Wimbledon and French Open finals and his number one ranking to Spain's Rafael Nadal, Federer's aura of invincibility had dimmed but his victory Monday served notice he still remains a force in the sport.

"After Wimbledon, after Paris - I had some rough losses those - to come away with the last Slam, to sit on this for four months, it's unbelievable," Federer said.

Federer became the first man to win five Slams in a row at two different events, having also completed the feat last year at Wimbledon. No one had won five US titles in a row since Bill Tilden in 1924.

"It definitely feels great," Federer said. "This is a very special moment in my career. To take this one home is incredible. It means the world to me."
Swiss second seed Federer stretched his US Open match win streak to 34, his last loss at Flushing Meadows coming to David Nalbandian in the fourth round of 2003, and took home the top prize of 1.5 million dollars.

It took Federer 38 Slam appearances to win his 13th Slam, five fewer than Sampras needed to reach the same mark. It was Federer's 17th Slam final, two shy of Ivan Lendl's all-time record.

Federer had not won a prior hardcourt title all season. The last player to make the US Open his first hardcourt crown of a season was Pete Sampras in 2002 in his last Slam victory.
Murray, playing in his first Slam final, had won two of three prior matches with Federer but was outclassed to bring a disappointing end to a run that will see him rise to fourth in the rankings, matching the best-ever British mark.

"I had a great tournament," Murray said. "Came up against, in my opinion, the greatest player to ever play the game. I got the best of him the last two times we played. He definitely set the record straight."

Asked what he had learned, Murray replied, "I've got a lot of improving to do if I want to win one of these."

Federer, 27, thrilled a sellout crowd of 23,763 at Arthur Ashe Stadium in the first US Open final since 1987 pushed to Monday by bad weather. It was the first Monday men's Slam final since Goran Ivanisevic won at Wimbledon in 2001.

Murray's loss was the fifth for a British man in a Slam final since Perry's triumph, including Greg Rusedski at the 1997 US Open, John Lloyd at the 1977 Australian Open and Bunny Austin at the 1937 French Open and 1938 Wimbledon.

The 21-year-old Scotsman would have been the first British man to win a Grand Slam since Fred Perry captured the 1936 US Open and the first Briton of either sex to win a Slam singles title since Virginia Wade won at Wimbledon in 1977.

"He made very few mistakes," Murray said. "The times I had played him before he had given me a few free points. I missed a lot of first serves and he was able to dictate a lot of the points on second serves."

Federer broke Murray in the sixth and eighth games of the match to win the first set in 27 minutes. He broke Murray again in the second game of the second set but Murray broke back at love in the next game and the fight was joined.

"I started serving well. I put the pressure on Andy. I started the second set well so I always had a little bit of a cushion," Federer said.

Murray went to 0-40 on Federer's serve in the fifth game of the second set but Federer denied the Scotsman and the two traded holds of serve until the last game, which Federer finished with three winners to break for the set.
"I played well in the game I broke to win the set and that was key because it was going to be hard for him to come back from two sets down," Federer said.
Federer broke Murray's first two service games at love in the third set and, after surrendering a break when he was serving two points from the title, broke him again in the last game on his third overhead smash of the point.
Murray sent the ball into the net after one hour and 51 minutes and Federer fell to his knees and then rolled onto his back, overcome with the moment as he screamed his joy before rising and raising his hands in a salute to the crowd.
Murray, who ousted Nadal in the semi-finals, took home 750,000 dollars in runner-up money plus a 250,000-dollar bonus from organizers for his results in US Open tuneup events.