Roger Federer won't be emulating Merlene Ottey's ageless career

By Jocelyn McLennan / Roar Guru

One sure way to make the always polite and highly-mannered Roger Federer roll his eyes in a press conference is to keep asking the ‘R-word’. Retirement.

The question has not been on the lips of journalists this Australian summer, as it was in late 2018, thanks to the scintillating form he was in leading up to the Australian Open.

He looked as sharp as ever at the Hopman Cup and probably even believed himself that a third straight Australian title was a very realistic possibility.

The sparkle in his eyes and the bounce in his step was very noticeable in the early rounds of the Open as he dispatched Denis Istomen, Dan Evans and Taylor Fritz.

The 37-year-old Federer had stated last year the ‘age is just a number’ as a response to the ever present retirement question.

After his third-round demolition of Fritz, he was reminded of his quote in the press conference. The journalist (this author) then reminded him that the great Jamaican, later Slovenian, sprinter Merlene Ottey had also lived by that mantra in her, still yet to end, career.

For the record, Ottey; won Olympic silver at age 40 in Sydney in 2000 and was a semi-finalist in Athens aged 44, narrowly missed qualifying the Slovenian relay team for Beijing in 2008 aged 48, ran a sub 12-second 100 metres aged 52 and is still competing at a national level at age 58.

“I won’t be doing that,” Federer stated.

Federer was then asked, with Ottey in mind, if his best was yet to come.

“No,” he replied politely.

“The last ten years were perhaps more fun than the first ten but now with four children and the career that I have had and my body … I want my body to be somewhat healthy when I retire.

“I don’t think that (competing at that age) is a good idea to be quite honest.

“For the time being it’s all good.

“The lights are on green and I am injury free, I am enjoying myself, the kids are having a great time too on the tour, my wife is happy and for the moment there are no complaints or plans.

“I am happy where I am in my life and my career right now.

“But these numbers (Ottey’s career) are definitely something else – unreachable numbers.”

The Crowd Says:

2019-01-27T22:59:53+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


Sprinters dont have the wear and tear on their bodies, which is why you see tennis players slow down in their late 20's while sprinters hit their peak. It also depends on the style of tennis, if a player is straining their body to the limit like Nadal, Hewitt,etc then they start slowing down and suffering injury problems in their mid 20's. Federer is smoother and has lasted longer but even he ran into problems. I think a big issue is players not taking up enough doubles , doubles is skill practice without a lot of movement and strain on the body. By not playing doubles and doing other training players are not sparing their bodies they are making it worse.

2019-01-27T08:20:55+00:00

Kane

Roar Guru


Pretty sure it’s been over five years since Nadal has beaten Federer

2019-01-26T06:15:19+00:00

Bruiser

Roar Rookie


What do we take away from the thrashing Tsispas copped from Nadal after beating Federer? Can we assume nadal would have wiped the floor with him ?

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