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Federer cast back to Nadal's brash arrival in 2004 wearing a sleeveless red shirt, his famous biceps powering him to a win over Federer, who was then a newly anointed No. 1.
Carlos Alcaraz embodies Roger Federer’s fundamental lesson: That tennis champions are defined not by the titles they win, but the points they lose.
Federer had won four Grand Slam titles by then; he would win Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in 2005 as well, moving 6-1 ahead in a title count that would finish 22-20 in Nadal’s favor.
Federer, 42, clarified that he shed tears of joy because he feels “happy, gratified, thankful.” 6 Roger Federer “cried six times” watching a documentary about his retirement.
Roger Federer said of the new documentary “Federer: Twelve Final Days,” “I only cried six times.” Getty Images for Tribeca Festival. Sidelined by persistent knee injuries and botched ...
(He was even once voted the second most admired person in the world after Nelson Mandela.) “Federer: Twelve Final Days,” a polite documentary by Asif Kapadia and Joe Sabia, follows the living ...
Roger Federer and Taylor Swift take Eras Tour selfie at Zurich stop: 'In my Swiftie era' Federer posted to his Instagram story showing five friendship bracelets. By Mason Leib.
A trailer, newly released by Amazon Prime, includes Djokovic saying that “Roger’s legacy will be forever,” over footage of Federer with his wife Mirka and children, as well as footage of his ...