DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) Roger Federer arrives for his interview at the precise appointed time, steering his white sedan into a parking spot in an industrial area dotted by art galleries about 15 minutes from his luxury apartment in this home-away-from-home.
After obliging a selfie request from someone on the street, Federer makes his way up to a second-story loft area and sits. He crosses his legs, kneads his right calf and winces.
Just started training. Im surprised I could walk the stairs as good as I have, Federer says with a laugh. My calves are, like, killing me. Just getting back into it. The shock on the body is, I dont want to say immense, every time, but Ive been on vacation for two weeks. The shock just hits you hard.
Ah, the ravages of age.
Federer, who won the first of his mens-record 20 Grand Slam titles when he was 21 and now is 38, explains to The Associated Press that he must go back to the drawing board after just missing out on The Big One, a reference to his fifth-set tiebreaker loss to Novak Djokovic in the Wimbledon final in July. So all of just two days into Federers preparation for next season he flies to Melbourne on Jan. 9, a week before the Australian Open draw he is taking a 48-hour break, sitting out his two-a-day fitness sessions and not lifting a racket.
No one this old has won a Grand Slam title in the professional era.
As a younger man, Federer says, he didnt allow himself such a respite, working six or eight days in a row to get going. But now? The waves, he calls them, making an undulating motion with his famous right arm time on, then time off offer his body a chance to recover. They also let him go through the wall on the day before a rest period, because otherwise, you maybe would hold back just ever so slightly, because you just dont know how youre going to feel the next day.
Federer recognizes that continuing to play tennis at a high level long past the age when many greats of the past were done (his idol, Pete Sampras, competed for the final time at 31) means he repeatedly faces questions from fans, from the media, from those around him about how long he will continue on tour.
And while he cant provide a definitive answer because, quite simply, he says he doesnt have one Federer is willing to discuss this aspect of the subject: He does not consider it important to walk away at the top of his game and the top of his sport.
When hes told about a newspaper opinion piece from way back in 2013 2013! that posited he should quit then to avoid ruining his legacy, Federer just smiles and waves his hand. He knows, of course, that hes managed to reach another seven Grand Slam finals since the start of 2014, winning three.
But he also says the notion that an older athlete could harm his or her status by hanging around too long is nonsense, no matter what the decline looks like.
I dont think the exit needs to be that perfect, that you have to win something huge … and you go, OK. I did it all. It can be completed a different way, as long as you enjoy it and thats what matters to you, Federer says. People, I dont think, anyway, remember what were the last matches of a John McEnroe, what were the last matches of a Stefan Edberg. Nobody knows. They remember that they won Wimbledon, that they won this and that, they were world No. 1. I dont think the end, per se, is that important.
That doesnt mean, of course, that he isnt as competitive as ever or doesnt want to win a 21st major championship above all, No. 9 at Wimbledon, after it slipped away despite two match points in 2019 or his first Olympic singles gold at the Tokyo Games next year.
Or win any tournaments, for that matter, which would push him closer to Jimmy Connors professional era record of 109 trophies (Federer has 103).
Hes still good enough, after all, to be ranked No. 3 having spent a record 310 weeks at No. 1, he is currently behind No. 1 Rafael Nadal and No. 2 Djokovic and to go 53-10 with four titles this season.
If it seems as though the rest of the world is insisting it needs to know when and how retirement will arrive, Federer says its not something on which he expends a lot of energy.
Not anymore, anyway.
I mean, I dont think about it much, to be honest, Federer says. Its a bit different (now) that I know Im at the back end of my career. But I feel like Ive been toward the back end of my career for a long, long time.