WIMBLEDON, England – Rising, rising, rising, high above the most famous patch of grass in tennis, Roger Federer channeled Pete Sampras on match point in the Wimbledon semifinals Friday, tucking both feet back beneath his body and uncorking an overhead smash.
And now, after years of chasing Sampras, Federer is poised to surpass him.
A victory over Andy Roddick in Sunday’s final at the All England Club would give Federer his 15th Grand Slam singles championship, breaking a tie with Sampras for the most in history. It also would give Federer a sixth Wimbledon title and a return to No. 1 in the rankings.
As it is, Federer’s overwhelming 7-6 (3), 7-5, 6-3 victory over Tommy Haas of Germany in Friday’s opening match on Center Court put the Swiss star in a seventh consecutive Wimbledon final and 20th career Grand Slam final – establishing two other marks.
“I’m very proud of all the records I’ve achieved, because I never thought I would be that successful as a kid. You know, I would have been happy winning a couple tournaments and maybe collecting Wimbledon,” the 27-year-old Federer said. “It’s quite staggering.”
When he finished off Haas with that Sampras-like leaping putaway, Federer simply waited at the net to shake hands. Then he gave a little wave of his racket in the direction of his pregnant wife, his parents and other supporters in the guest seats above a scoreboard, before making the same gesture toward the Royal Box, where past greats of the game Bjorn Borg and Rod Laver were among the invited guests.
Winning a Wimbledon semifinal – indeed, any Grand Slam semifinal – is all so very been-there, done-that for Federer: He is 20-3 in major semis over his career, reaching 16 of the past 17 major finals.
“I know what’s on the line,” Federer said. “I hope I can play another good match.”
His previous match against Haas, on June 1 in the fourth round of the French Open, was much tighter. Haas won the first two sets that day – drew within five points of victory, even – before Federer came back en route to winning the title at Roland Garros to complete a career Grand Slam and tie Sampras with 14 Grand Slam championships.
This time, Federer was quite close to perfect. He won a remarkable 72 of 83 points on his serve, did not face a single break point and finished with 49 winners and only 15 unforced errors.
“You know, that’s the way it goes playing against him,” Haas said. “There aren’t really any weaknesses.”
Roddick beat Andy Murray of Britain, 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (7), 7-6 (5), in Friday’s second semifinal.
“To be honest, the last couple of years, I didn’t know if I’d ever get a chance to play for another Grand Slam title,” said Roddick, the 2003 US Open champion. “Now I get to. It’s just a dream.”
This part might cause some nightmares before Sunday: Roddick is 2-18 against Federer, including losses in the 2004 and 2005 Wimbledon finals, as well as the 2006 US Open final.
“I’ve had plenty of time to study his game, to understand his game,” Federer said. “He’s always played me also quite differently every single time.” (AP)