My evenings for most of the past fortnight have been devoted to watching the Wimbledon tennis championships on television rooting for my favorite tennis player, the great FedEx, the Basel Dazzle, the Swiss Who Cannot Miss, the Artful Roger.
I consider my preference for tennis an anomaly in this country where the main sports obsessions are the three Bs: basketball, billiards and boxing--soon to be joined I suppose by a fourth B, for badminton. I'm probably one of the few who are dismayed to find that the local channels devote their sports coverage to these. But thankfully, there is the Singapore-based ESPN Star Sports that continues to provide live coverage of practically all matches at the tournament every year.
And when it comes to the television coverage of the Wimbledon, I am extremely fortunate to be in this part of the world. With local time seven hours ahead of Greenwhich Mean Time, matches scheduled to start at 11am London time get shown here live at 6pm. This naturally is perfect timing since it allows me to get through my workday without worrying about having to miss watching matches being shown live on tv. If I had been in London itself, I'd practically be unable to watch everything except the evening matches; if I were in the east coast of the US, I'd get to catch only the early matches and miss the rest. (And I've found that unless you've subscribed to the Tennis Channel you don't get much coverage of the tournament either.) Thus this is the ideal place to be to watch the Wimbledon especially if one wants to see the sport's best player in action.
So here I was every evening, watching whatever tennis match was being shown live (or on a delayed basis, in the case of this year's very rainy Wimbledon) on tv and keeping an eye on other matches I was interested in via the Live Scoreboard on Wimbledon's website. If Federer was on, I'd be sure to keep track of his match statistics via the Live Scoreboard as well , marveling at the growing number of winners he has hit. (Sadly our Internet connection hasn't been fast enough these days to enable me to watch the points replayed on the PointTracker.)
Most probably just as Federer went through his early round matches, I pretty much watched his matches with little anxiety, confident that he'd come through with relative ease. I noted however that his game seemed to lack the fire that it used to possess years ago and he was hitting a lot more errors than usual. I attributed this to the fact that he lacked matchplay after skipping his traditional warm-up event at Halle. Thus instead of being relieved when I learned that he received a bye to the quarterfinals via Tommy Haas' withdrawal and consequently got a "holiday" (further extended by rain delays), I became more concerned. Sure enough, he dropped a set when he faced Juan Carlos Ferrero in the quarters after waiting six days to get back on court. I relaxed again though when it was Richard Gasquet and not Andy Roddick whom he had to meet in the semis. There, he overpowered the young Frenchman who was clearly exhausted from having to play matches on consecutive days.
And the finals against Nadal last night? I had to make sure that my bottle of Tums was within reach. I knew that although Nadal had to play matches on consecutive days like Gasquet, he was so physically fit that he would not be tired and that, on the contrary, he would be battle-hardened coming into the finals. Thus as I had expected, he fought nail and tooth to wrestle the title from Federer's hands.
And what a roller-coaster ride that finals match turned out to be. It was a typically warm evening, but I was feeling cold from sheer nervousness. I'd have a few brief warm spells though whenever Federer got the upperhand and especially when he took the third set in a tie-break to eke out a two-sets-to-one lead. (Those tie-breaks are such nail-biters!) But some minutes later, I was in utter despair when Federer fell behind 0-4 in the fourth set. Ugh! I believed then that all was lost.
When Nadal did take that fourth set 6-2 and clearly had the momentum going into the deciding set, I couldn't take the tension any longer. I turned off the tv and crawled into bed (it was past midnight by then), knowing that I wouldn't be able to stand watching Federer lose on his beloved grass and see Nadal triumph in his place. However, I tuned into Wimbledon Radio just the same to listen. Although I couldn't bear to see Federer's disappointed face again, I needed to know what happened.
Just as a I feared, Federer struggled to hold serve in the beginning of the fifth set, falling behind 15-40 twice; the radio commentator was shouting,"This could be the end of Federer's reign!" To my amazement and relief, the champion rose to the occasion to save all four break points and hold serve each time.
But that, I found, wasn't the end of Federer's surprises for the day. I remained in bed, listening anxiously and trying to doze off at the same time, only to suddenly sit up when I heard that he was up with three break points on Nadal's serve! The radio commentator's voice was rising in the excitement, the crowd cheering in the background. The next thing I knew, Federer had broken and was up 4-2 in the fifth. Then a few minutes later, 5-2! I could hardly believe what I was hearing. I jumped out of bed and turned the tv back on. I had a gut feeling that Federer would try to break Nadal's serve to win the match and I dared not miss championship point! There were just a few more anxious moments when Nadal earned a couple of game points before the absolute thrill of witnessing Federer hit a winner at his second match point and collapse to the ground, victorious once more to the applause of all, including Bjorn Borg who was watching from the Royal Box.
Now, that definitely was a match and an evening never to be forgotten.
Photo credit: CHRIS YOUNG/AFP/Getty Images