LONDON - Roger Federer and Pete Sampras were headed in different directions Monday, a day after the Swiss took over from the American as the most prolific Grand Slam winner in the history of tennis.
The retired Sampras, 37, whose seven Wimbledon titles led him to 14 singles crowns overall at the majors was on hand for Sunday’s changing of the guard on Centre Court as Federer lifted the new mark to 15, defeating Andy Roddick 5-7, 7-6 (8-6), 7-6 (7-5), 3-6, 16-14.
Sampras and his wife flew in for one night from Los Angeles to watch proceedings in the royal box and were back across the Atlantic 24 hours later.
The friends from two different tennis generations did have time for a brief chat as Federer accepted congratulations from former heroes in the post-match hours at the All England club.
“I’m happy I broke the record here because this is always the tournament that’s meant the most to me because of what we spoke about with my heroes and idols being so successful here,” said Federer.
“It feels like it’s come full circle for me, starting it here and ending it here - but my career is far from over.
“It’s also nice to think especially so many legends were sitting there today. Especially Pete, who I had a great time with in Asia (exhibitions) a short while ago.
“I know how much the record meant to him and he knows how much the record means to me. In a way, I still feel like we share it, because he was such a wonderful champion.”
Federer will take the next month off to be with wife Mirka Vavrinec as he awaits the birth of their first child sometime over the summer.
While Federer is laying low, rival Rafael Nadal will be working to regain fitness in a pair of tendinitis-plagued knees which kept him from defending the Wimbledon title he won over Federer last year.
But Federer doesn’t think the absence of the Spaniard changes the values of his sixth trophy in seven years at the grandest of the Slams.
“In tennis, that’s the way it goes. Everybody expected Andy Murray to be in the finals, he wasn’t there. It’s not the mistake of the one who wins at the end.
“Of course, I would have loved to play Rafa again. But I’ve also played Andy (Roddick) now in three great Wimbledon finals. I think he deserves the credit, too, for playing so well.”
Federer said that predicting “what-if” is useless.
“You never know how he would have played, but it’s sad Rafa couldn’t even give it a fair chance. He had the injury and tennis moves very quickly.”
The Swiss returns to the number one position he held for a record 237 weeks until losing it to Nadal just before the Beijing Olympics last August.
“I’m happy at least that I became number one by winning the tournament, not just by him not playing at all, or me playing decent or someone else playing decent and getting to number one,” said Federer.
“That’s not the way it’s supposed to be.
“It’s supposed to be that you win big matches, big tournaments. That’s how you get back to it.”
If all goes well with the birth - date never made public - Federer should be back on court at the Montreal Masters 1000 from Aug 10.
Related News
Federer heads unchanged men's tennis rankingsOctober 5th, 2009 HAMBURG - Switzerland's Roger Federer continues to top an unchanged top 10 in the latest Association of Tennis Professional (ATP) tennis rankings issued Monday. Federer has 11,255 points, followed by Spain's Rafael Nadal (8,845) and Andy Murray (8,390).
Federer remains atop men's tennis rankingsSeptember 28th, 2009 HAMBURG - Roger Federer continues to lead an unchanged top 10 in the latest ATP tennis rankings issued Monday. Federer has 11,255 points, followed by Spain's Rafael Nadal (8,845) and Andy Murray (8,390).
To win US Open, Murray must get aggressive: HenmanSeptember 1st, 2009 LONDON - Former British tennis star Tim Henman has told Andy Murray he can win the US Open if he gets aggressive. Henman reckons Murray can go one better than last year, when he lost the final in straight sets to Roger Federer.
Federer dealing with fatherhood, challenge of being World No. 1August 27th, 2009 LONDON - Tennis star Roger Federer appears to have dealt with fatherhood with the same ease as he would have done with a qualifier in the first round of a tournament. The World No.
Playing doubles: Federer goes to the Net and posts photo of twin girls on Facebook accountAugust 7th, 2009 Net game: Federer's twins make Facebook debutZURICH — Roger Federer is showing off his new doubles team. The Swiss tennis great has posted the first public photo of his twin girls on the Internet.
Roger Federer's twin girls photo published!August 7th, 2009 ZURICH — Roger Federer has posted the first public photo of his twin girls on the Internet. Federer wrote below the photo on his Facebook account on Friday, thanking friends and fans for their warm wishes.
Roger Federer, wife welcome twin girlsJuly 24th, 2009 LONDON - Wimbledon tennis champion Roger Federer and wife Mirka have become proud parents of twin girls. The happy news came on Thursday.he twins are the first children born to the couple, who were married in April.
15-time Grand Slam champ Roger Federer's wife gives birth to twin girls, Charlene and MylaJuly 24th, 2009 Roger Federer's wife gives birth to twin girlsGENEVA — Roger Federer is playing a different kind of doubles. Tennis' top-ranked player became a father for the first time when his wife, Mirka, gave birth to twin girls Thursday.
Federer stays top, Roddick moves up in ATP rankingsJuly 13th, 2009 HAMBURG - Wimbledon champion Roger Federer stayed ahead of Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray at the top of the men's tennis rankings, issued by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Monday. The leading 10 was largely unchanged, with losing Wimbledon finalist Andy Roddick of the United States moving up one place to fifth, exchanging places with Argentina's Juan Martin del Potro.
Sampras reckons Federer as greatest tennis playerJuly 5th, 2009 LONDON - Tennis legend Pete Sampras considers Swiss player Roger Federer, who will overtake his record of 14 Grand Slams if he beats Andy Roddick in today's Wimbledon final, as the greatest tennis player of all time. "What he's done over the past five years has never, ever been done and probably will never, ever happen again.
Murray approaches every match without fearJuly 3rd, 2009 LONDON - British tennis star Andy Murray has said that he approaches every match without fear, and adds that he is on a mission to end 71 years of British hurt of not winning a Wimbledon men's final. According to The Sun, success on Centre Court will make Murray the first Britisher to crack the final frontier since Bunny Austin in 1938.
Meeting Mandela my dream, says FedererJune 27th, 2009 LONDON - Swiss tennis star Roger Federer, chasing his 15th Grand Slam title at this season's Wimbledon, has expressed a desire to meet former South African President Nelson Mandela. The five-time Wimbledon champion once the tournament is over, he would appreciate a chance to shake hands with Mandela.
Federer declares war on players involved in match fixingJune 25th, 2009 LONDON - Hitting out against players involved in match-fixing, tennis star Roger Federer has called for severe penalties for any player involved in the scandal. After his 6-2, 6-2, 6-4 victory over Spain's Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Federer urged the sport's governing bodies to show no mercy if any cheating of the system can be proven.
Federer taunts MurrayJune 21st, 2009 LONDON - Tennis player Roger Federer is leaving no stones unturned to hit at the pivotal opponent British star Andy Murray at this seasons Wimbledon. On the eve of the tournament, Federer was not in a mood to miss any opportunity to belittle the No.2 seed.
McEnroe backing Murray against Federer to win WimbledonJune 17th, 2009 LONDON - Tennis legend John McEnroe is backing Andy Murray to win the Wimbledon saying that the 22 year old has already won his first points against experienced Roger Federer. McEnroe said commended Murray's game play and said that he is a thinking player.