Ferrero the dangerous floater no longer in a sea of mediocrity
James Corrigan at Wimbledon 26 June 2005 The Independent UK
Of all the dangerous floaters left in the men's draw none bears fins as sharp
or as noticeable as those of Juan Carlos Ferrero. They will have to be, mind
you, for tomorrow he plays Roger Federer in the fourth round. And nature's
greatest predators don't get any more great or any more whiter than white
than that. Ferrero, however, rather than tiptoe warily into the
nerve-infested environs of Centre Court, will fairly skip in there, splashing
around in the joy of it all. Because the depths to which this Spanish
25-year-old has sunk, only too recently, has things that can bite 10 times
more fiercely: namely desperation, frustration, and, most painful of all,
self-doubt.
Actually, in the true sense of the word, thanks to a system here that now all
but hands seedings out free with a glass of lemon barley, Ferrero is not a
floater at all. But when you've been No 1 in the world not even two years
ago, then being down at 23 sure feels like it. Especially when in the time it
takes to contract chickenpox, shake it off and then suffer back, rib, knee
and wrist injuries after falling over, some young upstart has come and nicked
your status as "finest Spanish player".
Witnessing the rise of Rafael Nadal in the last year or so has been one of
many bad times to have blighted Ferrero since September 2003, when the then
French Open champion acceded to the pinnacle of the men's game. As he sat
then, atop the world, he wasn't to know what about to befall him in 2004 when
his world, not to mention his ranking, was to turn upside down.
First came shooting pains up his legs, followed swiftly by the debilitating
viral infection and then the injuries that spiralled him down all the way to
No 90 in the world. "The difficult moments were when I knew that I had the
chickenpox and that it would take two or three months to recover," he said.
"I had to start again physically because the virus left me at zero per cent.
When I started to come back I broke a few things when I fell on court and
that was another two months out. Those five months were pretty difficult for
me. I have a lot of confidence in me that I will be the same Juan Carlos as I
was before."
He certainly looked like the old Juan Carlos to Florian Mayer on No 1 Court
yesterday, although not when the match began. Indeed, the unfortunate German
must have believed he was on the brink of a big scalp when racing through the
first set in 23 minutes, but he was then left tearing his own hair out when
his opponent reeled off the next three in 86 minutes flat. On his day - and
this was his day - Ferrero is control and elegance personified; this
long-limbed, elegant individual covers the court in the blink of an eye,
reaching balls that should really be unreachable with humbling ease.
Well, Mayer felt humble anyway as he was dragged into a fight from the
baseline that was only ever going to have one victor. After having the
tactics dictated to him in the first set, Ferrero suddenly remembered who he
was - or at least who he had once been - by coming into the net just twice in
the second and third (two winners) as he completely altered the shape of the
match with the force of giddying groundstrokes that found the back of the
court with unerring accuracy and impressive depth.
To say Mayer, who reached last year's quarter-finals here, was at a loss to
find a way out of this trap was an understatement. Florian was utterly
flummoxed. "Gawwwwd," he said at one (lost) point in the fourth set as the
game slipped away from him.
"I was good today - eventually," said Ferrero, after giving yet more weight
to the ever-burgeoning theory that the Wimbledon of the new century is
nowhere as near as unfriendly as it once was to slow-court specialists. "But
I came here with a lot of confidence because for the first time I had the
opportunity to play a tournament on grass before Wimbledon. At Halle I won
two important matches against specialist players on grass. That brought me
here on a high."
And he is certain to stay there, despite the imposing figure of Federer
bearing down on him. "Well, Roger is playing so good on this surface and he's
winning almost everything that he's entering. But I'm playing well here and I
go in with a lot of motivation. The last time I played him on a hard court
[in Dubai] I had two match points against him. So, you know, if I play good I
have a chance to put up a good fight."
The resulting first Wimbledon quarter-final would not only eclipse his
previous best finish here - the fourth round two years ago - but also hurtle
his ranking towards his hardly surprising mission. "Do I expect to return to
No 1 one day?" he asked. "Yeah, why not? I've done it once, I can do it
again. This year, I expect to get into the top 10 or top 12, something like
that. Once there, well..."
Federer is in Ferrero's sights, both short-term and long-term.
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這是一篇很棒的文章
提供給所有的蚊迷看
(雖然這篇文章的英文有點小難^^")
特別要大推最後一句
Federer is in Ferrero's sights, both short-term and long-term
最後向大家道個歉...我把它弄得有點花
不過我只是想向大家提示一下重點!!XD
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