
Federer
Former world number one John McEnroe has cast doubt on whether Roger
Federer may ever pass Pete Sampras's record of 14 grand slam titles.
The American told reporters on Thursday that the coronation of
Rafael Nadal at the top of the world rankings, to be confirmed on Aug
18, and the Spaniard's defeat of the Swiss in the Wimbledon final, had
broken Federer's aura of invincibility.
When Federer won his fourth straight U.S. Open title last September
for his 12th grand slam crown, it seemed only a matter of time before
he would overtake Sampras at the top.
However, Nadal thrashed Federer in June to win his fourth straight
French Open and followed that up a month later by ending the Swiss's
five-year reign at Wimbledon with a dramatic five-set triumph.
Speaking at the ATP event in Los Angeles, McEnroe said breaking
Sampras's record was no longer a given for Federer.
"Let's put it this way, Pete's sleeping a little better than he was
about five months ago," the seven-time grand slam winner said.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: Beijing
Olympics | Latest images
"He's thinking 'maybe I actually have a chance to hold on to this
thing'. It's not out of the question that 14 is going to be enough.>
"It's not going to be as easy to just mow through it the way most of
us thought. Pete talked about 17, 18, and I thought he was going to get
it, but you always hit that spot when it starts to get tougher.
"When Pete hit 14 I thought, 'God who's going to get there?', and
it's pretty amazing that Roger has got so close. Roger is 27 (today)
and how many did Pete win after 27? It doesn't get any easier."
Only three of Sampras's wins came after he turned 27.
NO MASTERS
Federer lost in the semi-finals at the Australian Open in January
and in contrast to previous years, he has not won a single Masters
Series crown.
McEnroe said Federer had perhaps paid the price for setting the bar
so high.
"What Federer has done is amazing," he said. "He has had four of the
greatest years in the history of Open Tennis (since the sport went
professional in 1968).
Latest tennis news
"No one, Roger, Pete -- he had an incredible run too -- you can't
keep it up. Sooner or later the law of averages catch up to you."
McEnroe said Nadal fully deserved to become the world number one.
"On some levels it's a surprise, obviously, because Federer was
playing so great for so long that you start to think that (losing it)
is never going to happen," he said.
"But then you realise that he's a human being and Nadal's made some
great improvement in the last year or so. It's well-earned.
"He did something that hasn't been done since 1980 (winning the
French Open and Wimbledon back-to-back). He's followed up with some
wins in some other events, so he deserves it."