Federer sets his sight on Olympics |
Now, it is a trivalry, with emergence of Rafael
Nadal and Novak Djokovic, who have been dominant in last two seasons of Slams.
The recent domination of Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic has left Federer
waiting for a 17th major since he won the Australian Open in 2010. Federer is
fast losing his touch while he is nearing 31, so he has to fight it out against
Nadal and Djokovic. It was foolish to discount him from this year's grass
court grand slam, a title he has won six times, which he won for seventh time. But his best chance of glory on
the lawns of south-west London might come a few weeks later at the Olympics.
From the moment he surprisingly lost to James Blake in the quarter-finals of
the Beijing singles four years ago, Federer has been eyeing his shot at gold in
London on Aug. 5.
But while the 17-time Grand Slam winner watches
from the wings as Djokovic and Nadal contest the big prizes. But returning to No. 1 in grand fashion with Wimbledon win was absolutely like the old Roger Federer. Not only does he have
to deal with Nadal, now he’s got Djokovic and there’s still Murray and maybe
Del Potro in line-up. Let's not forget the extraordinary run of 32 consecutive
Grand Slam quarter-finals, a record that surely will never be broken. And of
course the Olympics is a substantial and realistic goal later in the summer.
Some believe that tennis does not need the
Olympics. However, Nadal's joy at winning in Beijing proved how much the title
meant to him and should Federer crown his career this year it could become one
of the iconic images of the London Games. Federer clearly believes Olympic
recognition is good for tennis. Federer
has twice carried the Swiss flag at the opening ceremony and it would be a
surprise if that were not to happen again. After all, he is Switzerland's
greatest sportsman and, each summer in London, he has become almost royalty.