If ever a match has been unduly overshadowed, it’s the 2007 Wimbledon men’s final. When it was over, I thought it was the highest-quality match that had ever been played—until I saw Nadal and Federer play on the same court a year later.
Still, in this case, second best is still pretty amazing. In some ways, this match represented both the peak of their rivalry, and the peak of Federer’s reign over the tennis world. In 2006, Rafa and Roger split the French Open and Wimbledon finals, and in 2008, Nadal tilted the balance in his direction when he beat Federer in both of them. But in ’07, while Nadal was closing in on his throne, Federer remained the king. This match gave him his fifth straight Wimbledon title, but it was also the first time during that 35-match stretch that he had been pushed to five sets.
The level of play was high to start, and it only grew higher over the course of its three hours and 45 minutes. Never had so much offensive power been matched with so much defensive speed on both sides of the net—Nadal even hit a winner from a sitting position at the baseline. The sun that splashed Centre Court throughout the match only added to a sense of magical rightness around6 the afternoon.
Federer jumped out to a 3-0 lead on the strength of seven winners. Nadal, who was still discovering how good he could be on grass, answered with a series of brilliant passes to break back. While Federer snuck through the first set in a tiebreaker, Nadal returned the favor with a late break in the second. It was Federer’s turn to raise his game in the third and power through another tiebreaker, but Nadal saved his best tennis of the tournament for the fourth, which he won going away, even while injuring his leg. Federer, meanwhile, felt injured by the Hawk-Eye replay. After a close call went against him, he asked that the system be turned off and told the chair umpire the computer was “killing him.”
In the fifth, it looked briefly as if Nadal’s run of brilliant form would take him all the way to the title. With a rattled Federer serving at 1-1 and 2-2, Nadal went up 15-40 both times, but he couldn’t find a way to break. Finally, with Rafa unable to take it, Roger did. He surged through the final four games and finished his most satisfying win at Wimbledon to that point with a forehand volley winner.
Had Nadal reached his limit on grass? He feared so. Afterward, he said he “cried incessantly for half an hour in the dressing room, tears of disappointment and recrimination.”
In truth, though, the 21-year-old Spaniard had only begun to come into his own on the surface. Perhaps only his opponent that day had an inkling of what was to come.
“I’m happy with every one I get,” Federer said of his win over Nadal, “before he takes them all.”
In the six matches these two have played at the Grand Slam since that day, Nadal is 6-0.