Roger Federer, left, and Rafael Nadal shake hands after Federer defeated Nadal on Sunday to secure his place in history with his fifth consecutive singles championship at Wimbledon.
Anja Niedringhaus, Associated Press
WIMBLEDON, England Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal long ago established themselves as the best of the best in men's tennis, far ahead of anyone else in the game these days.
Then, firmly entrenched at No. 1 and No. 2, they began meeting regularly in tournament finals.
Now they finally have produced the other element any great sports rivalry needs: a scintillating showdown on the biggest of stages. Their five-set "thriller" of a Wimbledon final, as Federer put it Sunday after beating Nadal, left fans wanting more.
Bring on the U.S. Open!
"We sometimes haven't lived up to the expectations in the past, in our matches in majors, especially," Federer acknowledged. "That was maybe a bit of a problem."
Not anymore.
With the most prestigious title in tennis on the line, there were tense tiebreakers, long points, brilliance from both at the baseline. Nadal attacked the way Federer does, even playing serve-and-volley a couple of times. Federer played defense the way Nadal does, winning some points by extending rallies until an error came from the other side.
It was riveting, far more so than their previous Grand Slam encounters, none of which went five sets. It drew TV ratings in the United States that were about 10 percent higher than for last year's Federer-Nadal final. And it increased the likelihood that Federer vs. Nadal will be looked upon one day in the same class as Sampras vs. Agassi, say, or Borg vs. McEnroe.
At four of the past six majors, Roger and Rafa have been the last men standing, dueling to determine a champion, with Federer 2-0 at the All England Club, Nadal 2-0 at Roland Garros. Only one other pair Fred Perry and Gottfried Von Cramm in 1935-36 played each other in the French Open and Wimbledon finals in consecutive years.
Eventually, perhaps, one will triumph on the other's turf, and while the thinking before Sunday had been that Federer was closer to coming through on clay than Nadal was on grass, this match might have changed that.
When they met at the net, physically and mentally spent, Federer told his nemesis, "I'm the lucky one today" a fascinating comment from someone with 11 Slam titles.
"He knows just how good Rafa is," said Federer's mother, Lynette.
Later, after kissing his fifth Wimbledon trophy, Federer spoke of Nadal in glowing terms.
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