INDIAN WELLS, CALIF.—“They bring out the best in each other.”
It’s a statement that’s often made about great athletes, but it’s more of a hope than it is a fact. Just as often in tennis, one great player brings out the worst in another by rolling right over him. That’s what it appeared was going to happen for the first set-and-a-half here on Sunday, when a razor-sharp Roger Federer threatened to run away with the men’s final against a frazzled and frayed Novak Djokovic.
The Serb had looked and played that way for much of this tournament, and for much of the 2014 season. But that’s not how Djokovic was playing by the end of this match, which he came back to win 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (3). On Sunday at Indian Wells, it really did take one all-time great player, Federer, to bring out the best in another, Djokovic.
“You always have to dig deep against Roger,” a relieved Djokovic said later. “You know that he’s going to play on a very high level in the latter stages of the tournament, especially in the finals. I know that he’s not going to give me anything."
Federer, who has been playing as well as anyone on tour this year, certainly wasn’t in a charitable mood in the first set. Building off the momentum of his last two easy wins, Federer started quickly and aggressively. He chipped and charged to earn a break in the second game, and didn’t let Djokovic get a sniff at a break the rest of the way. Federer hit four unreturnable serves to hold for 4-2, and closed the set with a love game. When he’s clicking for 74 percent of first serves, even a returner like Djokovic isn't going to win many sets from him.
No matter how quickly he starts, though, Federer isn’t going to cruise all the way through many matches against Djokovic—counting today, the Serb has beaten the Swiss five times after dropping the first set (Federer has done that to Djokovic just once, in Dubai last month). In the second set, Federer’s first serve began to stray, while Djokovic, as Federer said, “got his teeth into it."
“As the match progressed,” Djokovic said, “I felt like he started to make a little bit more unforced errors, and it allowed me to step into the court.”
Still, halfway through the second set, Federer was playing well enough to snap off a sharp crosscourt backhand and follow it with a forehand winner to hold for 3-3; at that stage, he had yet to face a break point. When Djokovic opened his next service game with a weak backhand into the net, and Federer wrong-footed him to start the following point, it looked like the second set was going to go the same way as the first. Djokovic reached back for a desperation one-handed crosscourt backhand; Federer moved forward, seemingly for an easy winner. But for some reason, he tried a drop shot instead. It died before it reached the net, and 0-30 became 15-15.