The ballboy from Basel leaves an undying flame
Time flies,
careers end, memories linger and eyes turn moist. Sport isn’t immune to this
truism which got reiterated when Roger Federer bowed out of tennis with a final
ballet in London, with his great rival Rafael Nadal staying in tandem as his doubles partner in the
Laver Cup. It was also a moment that again revealed the universal love hecommanded, an emotion that rippled across the globe for more than two decades,
an undying flame that will continue as long as his fans live.
Awe-inspiring
After
generations vanish and the reference points get restricted to old newspaper
clippings, frayed posters nibbled by silverfish, YouTube videos and the cold
gaze of statistics —he has done remarkably well with
20 Grand Slams— Federer will inspire awe like how Sir Don Bradman does in
cricket even if none of us have seen him bat.
Right from
the time he ambushed the previous Zen Master at Wimbledon— Pete Sampras —
Federer had made it known that he would be part of tennis royalty. In the early
years he would serve, charge, volley and slide in a drop shot while the bruised
grass at Wimbledon sighed. As years went by baseline duels became the norm
across surfaces and he held his own against Nadal and Novak Djokovic.
The freeflowing
style, the onehanded backhand and forehands that married aesthetics and
geometry, all found an ally in endurance, a trait that held him in good stead
when nervewracking fivesetters often shadowed him in the
business end of the Slams.
Enduring allure
Headtohead
against Nadal and Djokovic, Federer may have emerged secondbest but there is
no mistaking his role as the torch bearer whom the other two hoped to
emulate. Numbers aren’t everything in sport. Viv Richards isn’t the highest
rungetter in Tests and ODIs and yet the respect he commands is jawdropping.
The
geniussportsperson has an enduring allure burnished in a halo glowing bright
in our collective nostalgia.
Federer did
that and along with Serena Williams across the genderdivide, nursed tennis
back to health even as European football and F1 were cultivating niche fandom.
And for the finicky, obsessed with John McEnroe’sdefeats at the French Open or Ivan Lendl’s meltdowns at Wimbledon, Federer arrived
with a Teflon coating As he won at RolandGarros
too even if Wimbledon was the magic carpet upon which his dreams soared.
But Federer
was much more than a tennis champion. This was an athlete, who loved his
sunshine on court and off it wanted to be the regular guy you met at a coffee shop, who said a hi and gingerly shook hands. Once, his
Swissmate Stan Wawrinka used an expletive to describe Federer.
MORE INFORMATION THAN CLICK HERE FOR SEO
It was a
moment that summed up admiration and sheer helplessness while Federer offered
his famous grin, an expression with its underlying notes of shyness, a baby’s
gurgle and frothing hot chocolate.
Of a gentler time
Even if he
operated during this era of milliondollar brand endorsements, Federer was a
throwback to a gentle time of pause and poetry. The ballboy from Basel, who
dreamt big, scaled the stratosphere in his unassuming ways.
And at 41
when he quit the arena he adorned with such finesse, Nadal burst into tears. The
love of fans and the respect of peers isn’t
easily attained and Federer secured that with his blend
of magic and humility. There will be none like him.
0 Comments