NEWS: Federer Wins Third Straight Grand Slam Title

Jan 29, 2006 06:30

I could translate the numbers, but I'm just going to keep this for my own personal record. I know what it means, and I don't need to explain it to other people. It's always nice knowing you've done a good job and it shows in your results.

Federer Wins Third Straight Grand Slam Title
At One Point, World No. 1 Wins 11 Straight Games in Men's Final



Torsten Blackwood, AFP/Getty Images
Marcos Baghdatis became a fan favorite, but world No. 1 Roger Federer was too much to handle in the Australian Open men's final.

MELBOURNE, Australia (Jan. 29) - Top-ranked Roger Federer claimed his seventh Grand Slam title Sunday, overcoming an early challenge from unseeded Marcos Baghdatis to win the Australian Open 5-7, 7-5, 6-0, 6-2.

Stepping up his game as the match wore on, Federer's experience under pressure showed, running off 11 straight games to take control from 5-5 in the second set.

The 24-year-old Federer won Wimbledon and the U.S. Open last year and will be seeking a non-calendar year Grand Slam in May on the clay at Roland Garros, where his best performance was reaching the semifinals in 2005.

After becoming the first man since Pete Sampras (Wimbledon and U.S. Open in 1993 and Australian Open in '94) to win three consecutive majors, Federer broke down in tears.

He repeatedly had to take time to gather himself after he got the champions trophy from Rod Laver, the last man to sweep all four Grand Slam events in the same year, in 1969.

"I guess it's all coming out now," Federer said. "I've had some hard speeches, but this one is a little rough right now."

He thanked Laver, his voice breaking one last time, then embraced the 67-year-old Australian.

Even Baghdatis' rowdy fans, who grew in number as he knocked off second-seeded Andy Roddick, No. 4 David Nalbandian and two other seeded players in the tournament, couldn't help the Cypriot rally this time.

He still was flying high despite the loss.

"Its a dream come true," Baghdatis said after having to playfully shush his cheering fans. "It's just amazing. I love everybody watching in Cyprus. Kisses."

With a boisterous atmosphere more akin to a World Cup soccer final, a buzz permeated Rod Laver Arena well before the match started: Could Baghdatis - a 500-to-1 longshot in November who had never gone past the fourth round of a Grand Slam event - really knock off the man dominating the men's tour?

It looked improbable at best. Federer had won all three of their previous matches, including earlier this month in Doha.

But Baghdatis made believers of the crowd for a while.

It was a perfect night for tennis after two weeks of occasionally unbearable heat and sudden storms. While there were plenty of red-and-white Swiss flags scattered around the stadium, the dominant colors were Greek blue and white. Signs of "Go Marcos, You Rule" were mixed with "We Luv You Federer."

Baghdatis' backers chanted between points, giving chair umpire Pascal Maria a real challenge to maintain control. One man, in a traditional Greek outfit, danced on his chair.

As in Baghdatis' earlier matches - including a semifinal victory over Nalbandian in which he rallied from two sets down - the Cypriot was nerveless early, shaking off errors with stinging baseline winners.

In fact, it was the normally implacable Federer who blinked first. Serving at 5-5 in the first set, he fended off two break points before committing back-to-back forehand errors - the latter after he halted his service motion after a fan shouted, "Settle, Roger, settle!"

Federer By the Numbers Losses in Grand Slam Finals by Roger Federer

7
Grand Slam titles Federer owns

7
Grand Slam titles Federer needs to tie Pete Sampras' all-time record

2
Australian Open titles for Federer

52
Current hardcourt winning streak for Federer

Flashing his infectious smile and using his racket to bounce the ball once between his legs before each serve - a move that he picked up from watching Federer - Baghdatis held easily to finish off the set as the crowd roared.

He broke Federer again to start the second set and had two break opportunities to go up 3-0 before Federer fought back to level at 3-3.

Bagdhatis, a former junior world champion, had three game points at 5-6 to force a tiebreaker, but Federer rallied to break on a Baghdatis forehand that was ruled just long. The Cypriot, who questions calls infrequently, did this time. But TV replays showed the ruling was correct.

Federer ran off 27 of the 37 points in the third set to take control.

Baghdatis had played two consecutive five-setters and three overall in the tournament, and the wear and tear started to show. He suffered a cramp in his left thigh in the second game of the fourth set, and the brilliant winners came less often as the errors piled up.

Federer got just 53 percent of his first serves but smacked 11 aces and 50 winners to go along with 48 unforced errors.

He won his 11th consecutive game to go up 3-0 in the final set.

Getting treatment on his calf at every changeover, Baghdatis tried to rally one last time and had a break point with Federer serving at 4-2 that would have gotten him back on serve, but Federer held, then broke for the eighth time. A forehand crosscourt set up match point, and Baghdatis netted a backhand to finish it in 2 hours 46 minutes.

Federer rose his arms in triumph and applauded his racket in acknowledgment of the crowd's ovation.

01/29/06 07:10 EST

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