Sunday, September 18, 2022
The gift of Federer
It’s complicated
That’s how
I would always think of how I felt about the phenomenon called Roger Federer
The otherworldly
talent was obvious. I may be short-sighted, but I’ve never been blind. The
languid grace was other-worldly. The knowledgeable and the n00bs, all were united
in their verdict that tennis was being changed before our eyes, that we had
never seen the likes of such, perhaps we never would. I stubbornly stood my
ground. A childish refusal to look beyond Sampras, the hero of formative years,
followed by an exaggerated adulation of Djokovic on account of ‘discovering’ him
well ahead of the curve clouded my judgement. I even wrote what I thought were
articulate and impassioned pieces on how Sampras > Federer. Now I read them
and agree that we were all idiots once.
It eventually
took the 2017 win in the Australian over his great nemesis for me to accept,
what I should have a long time ago, what a part of me probably always knew but
refused to concede. We had never seen the likes of such, perhaps we never will.
Life is supposed to teach you to be open to overcoming long-held convictions;
Federer did the job so much better. In a sport where 30 had long been
considered an age ripe for retirement, here was one closer to 40 with a will to
win as indomitable as ever, who refused to yield to the vicissitudes of time, who
had finally exorcised the ghosts of that moment 8 years ago that had seemingly rendered
him incapable of speech, and who in doing so, was forging the path to
immortality before our very eyes. Had he ever even been mortal?
Elite sport, when lucky, is blessed with 2 kinds of exponents. There are the gifted geniuses, like
Federer or Messi, who seem to have been born to play their sport. Who reduce it
to its most elemental and effortless form. Your brain tells you that there was
blood, toil, tears and sweat that went into what you see; you want to believe
that this was just poetry written in a flash of inspiration. And there are the super
athletes: the Nadals, Djokovics and Ronaldos, who push at all the mortal boundaries
in their quest for the superhuman. The blood, toil, tears and sweat are there
for all to see. The decree of God vs the will of Man: was there ever a drama
more eternal. God created the sky; man conquered the moon. Yet we marvel at
man, we worship God.
To say that
Federer’s impact went beyond tennis or even sport is an understatement. I would
argue that over the last 2 decades, Federer has become something like a
universal language, a part of collective consciousness. Want to describe wonder:
it is an impossible inch perfect Federer backhand. Elation? “When Federer
wins, a part of me wins” as a dear friend once said. Relief after achieving
something stupendous? His tears on winning a grand slam. Even the business
world has embraced these Federerisms. A famous analysis to emphasize the
importance of ‘where to play’ vs ‘how to win’ done by a former employer used
Federer with a badminton racquet to drive home the message. I could go on. We
all could. Mandarin, English, Hindi, Spanish, French, Arabic- different lists
place them in different orders when it comes to the most widely spoken language;
they all speak Federer.
So yes, it
was complicated when it all began.
Nothing
could be simpler now.
From an
inquisitive Indian to a superlative Swiss; from a west London commoner to a Wimbledon
Royal; from a left-handed badminton amateur to a right-handed tennis legend.
From a boy who cried when he lost to a man who cries when he wins; from a
father of twins to a father of twins: thank you Roger.
You transcended
tennis, epitomized elegance, lyricized life and wowed the world. We had never
seen the likes of you, perhaps we never will.
Let mortals
have their G.O.A.T. You are a gift of God.
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