---> a quote from www.espn.com/tennis
Federer was betrayed by his forehand, long touted as the game's best. It was the biggest culprit during the match's pivotal stretch bridging the second and third sets, when he lost 24 of 28 points and seven consecutive games.
Federer shanked at least half a dozen forehands and blamed the breeze, a staple at Key Biscayne.
"I definitely struggled with my timing," he said. "You kind of try hard, and then it's just not working. Today it is different just because there's so much wind. Once you start feeling bad, it's kind of tough to regroup."
Federer kicked a ball in frustration after one errant forehand, and two games later he took out his anger on his racket. The startled crowd jeered at first, then reconsidered its reaction as he trudged to his chair and unwrapped a new racket. When he walked back to the baseline, fans roared, and they were firmly in his corner the rest of the way.
Despite the support, the Federer forehand kept misfiring down the stretch, including twice in the final game before he sailed a backhand long on match point.
Federer has endured wrenching defeats in recent Grand Slams, including a loss in February at the Australian Open that left him sobbing. But he has also struggled in Masters events, the ATP Tour's most prestigious tournaments aside from the majors.
With the Key Biscayne defeat, he came up short of a title at his 13th Masters tournament in a row since August 2007. The drought is one reason his 4½-year reign atop the rankings ended last summer, when he was overtaken by Rafael Nadal.
Federer, who hasn't won any title since October, now heads to Europe to play on clay, his least-favorite surface. Or maybe it's now hard court.
"I haven't been winning 20 tournaments in a row, so nobody expects me to win really," Federer said. "It has been a tough last year or so, especially on the hard courts. My game never really clicked. Thank God the hard-court season is over."
Federer was betrayed by his forehand, long touted as the game's best. It was the biggest culprit during the match's pivotal stretch bridging the second and third sets, when he lost 24 of 28 points and seven consecutive games.
Federer shanked at least half a dozen forehands and blamed the breeze, a staple at Key Biscayne.
"I definitely struggled with my timing," he said. "You kind of try hard, and then it's just not working. Today it is different just because there's so much wind. Once you start feeling bad, it's kind of tough to regroup."
Federer kicked a ball in frustration after one errant forehand, and two games later he took out his anger on his racket. The startled crowd jeered at first, then reconsidered its reaction as he trudged to his chair and unwrapped a new racket. When he walked back to the baseline, fans roared, and they were firmly in his corner the rest of the way.
Despite the support, the Federer forehand kept misfiring down the stretch, including twice in the final game before he sailed a backhand long on match point.
Federer has endured wrenching defeats in recent Grand Slams, including a loss in February at the Australian Open that left him sobbing. But he has also struggled in Masters events, the ATP Tour's most prestigious tournaments aside from the majors.
With the Key Biscayne defeat, he came up short of a title at his 13th Masters tournament in a row since August 2007. The drought is one reason his 4½-year reign atop the rankings ended last summer, when he was overtaken by Rafael Nadal.
Federer, who hasn't won any title since October, now heads to Europe to play on clay, his least-favorite surface. Or maybe it's now hard court.
"I haven't been winning 20 tournaments in a row, so nobody expects me to win really," Federer said. "It has been a tough last year or so, especially on the hard courts. My game never really clicked. Thank God the hard-court season is over."
Comment