Jo-Wilfried Tsonga stuns Federer with fightback

By David Lord / Expert

Roger Federer is gone from Wimbledon 2011, so has Bernie Tomic. But he’s arrived as a qualified member of the elite group. Federer went down 3-6 6-7 6-4 6-4 6-4 in a tick over three hours to the free-spirited Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.

Novak Djokovic eventually tamed teenager Tomic 6-2 3-6 6-3 7-5 in two hours 41.

But Tsonga is the story.

“I played unbelievable, served unbelievable, and now I’m here in the semi-final. I can’t believe it.

“It’s never easy playing Roger. I came back from two sets down, it was just amazing. That’s crazy,” said the wide-eyed Tsonga.

Crazy, alright.

Down two-sets to love, Tsonga pushed the explosion button, and Federer had no answer. Yet, the Swiss maestro knows how to win the big matches.

In 227 victories during his stellar Slam career, Federer has never lost 178 times after winning the first two sets. Until last night. And he sure didn’t play poorly.

Federer served at 75%, winning 78% of first serves and 71% of second serves. He cracked 57 winners and made only 11 unforced errors – seriously good numbers that would win 999 of 1,000 matches.

No problem.

But this was the 1,000th, and Tsonga was the problem.

He served at 70%, winning 73% of first serves and 67% of second. And he blasted 63 winners, with 22 unforced errors, in this high quality clash.

The serving was extraordinary.

Federer converted one break point in Tsonga’s opening service game of the match. That clinched the first set. But that was it. Federer never saw another break point in over three hours, while Tsonga converted one of three break points in each of the third, fourth, and fifth sets.

And there was the stunning victory in a nutshell.

Awesome tennis, with golf legends Jack Nicklaus and Greg Norman side-by-side in the Royal Box.

So Federer bowed out of Wimbledon for the second successive year in the quarters, with Tomas Berdych the destroyer last year, on the way to his only Slam final.

Tomic bowed out overnight as well, and like Federer, with distinction.

Djokovic paid Tomic the ultimate compliment. As the chockers number one court crowd stood saluting the Serb, he was saluting Tomic, clapping his racquet and pointing directly towards the Australian with a big smile.

There’s no better accolade than public recognition from a peer. Tomic has arrived, alright.

While the Djokovic-Tomic quarter-final didn’t have the overall quality of the Tsonga-Federer clash, there were many moments of pure magic.

Some of the long rallies produced blistering strokeplay off both wings by both players; a genuine slug-fest.

Yet, both were adept at changing the pace, although Djokovic paid Tomic another compliment by saying the Australian was better at disguising his change-ups.

“It was really hard to predict where he’s going to go,” said Djokovic.

“He was not making many unforced errors from the baseline, and that made life very difficult for me.

“We were playing cat and mouse, but in the end I’m just happy to get through”.

For the record, Djokovic served at 63%, Tomic 65%; Djokovic cracked 39 winners, Tomic 43; and Djokovic made 27 unforced errors, Tomic 41.

So it’s a Djokovic-Tsonga semi that promises plenty.

But a special tribute to Novak Djokovic for being so gracious in victory as to stand aside and let the crowd acknowledge Bernie Tomic’s outstanding contribution to a classic confrontation.

A very rare recognition.

And to Roger Federer, a gracious loser, waiting for three minutes while Jo-Wilfried Tsonga enjoyed his moment in the sun, then leave centre court together.

Rafael Nadal take note. Let’s see how gracious he can be in his semi with local hope Andy Murray.

The Crowd Says:

2011-06-30T13:47:22+00:00

amazonfan

Roar Guru


"Rafael Nadal take note. Let’s see how gracious he can be in his semi with local hope Andy Murray." A completely unnecessary cheap shot at Nadal. We get it, you think he's a bad sport (many of us would agree), however the article clearly isn't about Nadal so why issue a challenge to him? It comes across as quite petty.

2011-06-30T10:09:43+00:00

GrantS

Guest


Spiro I hope you are wrong but the way Federer was totally mauled by the Tsonga power was something I didn't expect to ever see. I watched to the very end and was STILL waiting for Roger to turn it around up till the last stroke.

2011-06-30T02:49:46+00:00

freemanrockin

Guest


I agree Tsonga has shots in tennis that is the equivalent of his lookalikes knockout punches in boxing. Absolutely awesome power behind his groundstrokes and also has a deft touch. More power Wilred.

2011-06-30T02:05:18+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Tsonga is just about the most powerful all round tennis player i have seen. Not nessicarily the best but with an all round power game, i haven't seen the likes of Tsonga scince well SCUD. A few years back tsonga had the match of his life, he blasted NADAL OF THE COURT at the Australian Open, it was amazing to watch Rafa be so out powered. I had never seen Jim Courier so awstruck, he had one of those matches a bit like when Scud beat Pete Sampras at Aust open 1996. Tsonga is on of ethos dangerous players if he gets it right he is capable of beating any player on his day.

2011-06-30T00:30:31+00:00

freemanrockin

Guest


Roger lost, but was really a gracious and classy loser. He knows he really can't win it all, he still performs at the upper eceleons of the sport and maybe fatherhood has distracted him a bit, though he may not be winning as he used to, he still bringing in the big bucks by his endorsements and still is the highest paid in his sport. I'd say he still has a Slam or two left in him to win.

2011-06-29T23:33:59+00:00

Spiro Zavos

Expert


I went to bed after Roger Federer had won the first set. He was making it look so easy and playing so beautifully, as Wally Masur noted continually in his commentary, that I thought he would win easily. Thanks David for staying through the night to bring us this astonishing result, and an analysis of what happened, to us readers of The Roar. I guess this means that Federer's time as a potential grand slam winner is probably over.

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