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France Dares to Dream as Tsonga Defeats Federer | France Dares to Dream as Tsonga Defeats Federer |
(about 4 hours later) | |
PARIS — Jo-Wilfried Tsonga’s surprisingly straightforward 7-5, 6-3, 6-3 quarterfinal victory over Roger Federer on Tuesday at the French Open could be seen through two different lenses. | |
It could be seen through the lens of a Federer analyst, who now has more confirmation than ever of a great and classy champion’s slow fade from Grand Slam power. | It could be seen through the lens of a Federer analyst, who now has more confirmation than ever of a great and classy champion’s slow fade from Grand Slam power. |
There were hints aplenty under pressure in the brilliant Paris sunshine: shots off the frame; leaps that did not appear to leave as much space between the red clay and Federer’s sneakers as usual; missed opportunities off short balls; and even — gasp — missed overheads. | |
“Missing smashes goes hand in hand with missing so many other things,” said Federer, sounding more melancholy than devastated. | “Missing smashes goes hand in hand with missing so many other things,” said Federer, sounding more melancholy than devastated. |
But there was also the much more rose-colored lens available to Tsonga observers, of which there will now be millions more than usual in France after this performance. | |
Tsonga, a 28-year-old who professes to prefer the quiet life of the Swiss countryside to the Parisian party scene, does not yet have a Grand Slam title. But he undeniably has charisma, just like France’s last men’s singles champion at Roland Garros — Yannick Noah, who won here with brio in 1983 and remains one of France’s most popular men 30 years later. | |
It still seems early to start talking about history repeating itself. The pretournament favorites — the seven-time champion Rafael Nadal and the top-ranked Novak Djokovic — are still in contention in the other half of the draw and on course for a semifinal showdown. | |
But the sixth-seeded Tsonga does have an opening in his half, with a semifinal on Friday against David Ferrer of Spain rather than a bona-fide member of the game’s Big Four. | |
Ferrer, 31, unlike Tsonga, has never reached a major final. But the bad news for those boarding the French bandwagon is that the fourth-seeded Ferrer, like Tsonga, has yet to drop a set in Paris this year and was in relentless, energy-conserving form again Tuesday as he overwhelmed his compatriot Tommy Robredo, 6-2, 6-1, 6-1, in 1 hour 26 minutes. | |
“I wasn’t 100 percent ready to fight that match and playing with a guy like David, who is a machine, it’s very tough to be like that,” said Robredo, who had reached the quarterfinals by coming back three times in a row from two sets down to win. | |
No, it will not be easy for Tsonga, soaring confidence and all, to reach even the final in Paris this year, but the French are officially dreaming of another 1983 and another Noah. | |
“It’s not too early to think about it because they are both charismatic players; because it’s been exactly 30 years and because they are both French guys of mixed race,” said Cédric Pioline, the former French star and French Open semifinalist. “There are parallels that are there right in front of us, that are true and that we cannot ignore.” | |
“The atmosphere that was there today, you could almost feel like it was a final. The semifinal against Ferrer will be another note higher and if Jo does indeed manage to reach the final, I don’t know who’ll be across the net but it won’t be a French player that’s for sure, and the atmosphere behind him will be enormous, enormous. There will be so much energy and if he can put both his fingers right into the socket and feel all that power, it will be, wow, like triple turbo.” | |
Asked what kind of relationship he had with Noah, now a popular singer, Tsonga said: “Well, when he sings, I dance. That’s my relationship. When he says something to me, I listen to him.” | Asked what kind of relationship he had with Noah, now a popular singer, Tsonga said: “Well, when he sings, I dance. That’s my relationship. When he says something to me, I listen to him.” |
For now, France and Tsonga will have to settle for his victory over Federer, who had beaten him in 9 of their 12 previous matches, most recently at this year’s Australian Open in a five-set crowd pleaser that seemed to predict a closer match Tuesday. | |
Federer struck first, breaking Tsonga in the fifth game, and was soon up by 4-2. But he could not hold a 40-15 lead in his next service game and Tsonga never trailed again, dominating with his first serve and punching holes with surprising ease in Federer’s defenses. | |
Tsonga’s weaknesses have long been clear: returns and a backhand that has lacked the pop of his world-class serve and forehand. But he did damage with it regularly Tuesday, perhaps the result made under new coach Roger Rasheed. | |
Tsonga spent more than a season without an official coach trying to understand his game and motivations before hiring Rasheed this year. Rasheed, an Australian, was previously the taskmaster and innovator in chief with Lleyton Hewitt and Tsonga’s compatriot Gaël Monfils. | |
“I choose to take Roger, because I knew this guy was able to give me the passion for the game and to give me his passion for the game,” Tsonga said. | |
While Federer had to settle for that lone break in the first set, Tsonga broke Federer eight times in all, winning 42 percent of the points on Federer’s first serve and 58 percent of the points on Federer’s second serve. | |
Federer rebuffed any suggestion that he was suffering from a revival of the back problems that have affected him intermittently. | |
“No, no issues,” he said. | “No, no issues,” he said. |
“They have so much more energy here, the French guys, than maybe elsewhere,” Federer said of Tsonga. “I thought he played great today. He was in all areas better than me today. That’s why the result was pretty clean.” | |
Federer, a 17-time Grand Slam singles champion, will now try to defend his Wimbledon title. Grass-court tennis has lifted him out of the doldrums in the past, but this season has been particularly disappointing by his standards. He has not won a tournament since Cincinnati last August, and although he reached the semifinals at the Australian Open, he has reached only one final this year. That was in Rome, where Nadal overwhelmed him, once again, on clay. | |
Tsonga has spoiled major moments for Federer in the quarterfinals before. At Wimbledon in 2011, he became the first man to overcome a two-set deficit and beat Federer in a Grand Slam tournament. | Tsonga has spoiled major moments for Federer in the quarterfinals before. At Wimbledon in 2011, he became the first man to overcome a two-set deficit and beat Federer in a Grand Slam tournament. |
Tsonga, whose only appearance in a Grand Slam final came at the 2008 Australian Open, may also be less intimidated by Federer than ever. They spent considerable time together in the off-season in South America, with Tsonga playing second fiddle to Federer’s Stradivarius on the Swiss superstar’s lucrative tour of the continent. | |
There is a genuine connection between them now, but that did not remove the sting of being upstaged on a court where Federer had only been beaten in straight sets in his prime by clay-court royalty like Nadal, Novak Djokovic and the former champion Gustavo Kuerten. | |
At 3-3 in the third set Tuesday, with Federer facing yet another break point, he came forward and hit a deft half volley that dropped on Tsonga’s side of the net. The Frenchman sprinted forward and ripped a low, lunging, two-handed backhand that grazed the net and left Federer twisting to get out of the way. The ball struck him in the upper back, giving Tsonga the last break he would require, and though he held up his hand to apologize, Federer never looked back. | |
“Come on, Roger!” someone yelled from the stands, as so many have yelled from these stands through the years. | |
But this was a different sort of day, no matter how you looked at it, and cheers of “Allez Jo!” were much more common down the stretch. | |
Just imagine the sound effects if Tsonga keeps winning. |