Federer returns to No. 1 with Wimbledon win

Published: Monday, July 6, 2009 8:21 a.m. MDT
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WIMBLEDON, England — Roger Federer is back at No. 1.

Federer returned to the top of the ATP rankings Monday, a day after winning Wimbledon by edging Andy Roddick 16-14 in the longest fifth set in Grand Slam final history.

Federer moves up from No. 2, switching places with former No. 1 Rafael Nadal.

"It's fantastic, because definitely, when you lose No. 1, you never know if you're ever going to return to it," Federer said Monday at the All England Club. "I always thought it was easier staying No. 1 than getting there."

A year ago at Wimbledon, Nadal beat Federer in the final and overtook him atop the rankings in August. That ended Federer's record stay of 237 consecutive weeks at No. 1, a streak that began on Feb. 2, 2004, after his first Australian Open title.

"Once I was No. 1, everything just clicked, and everything was easy," Federer said. "I beat all the other top-10 guys, I won every final I played, and so I hope that's going to return again, that I'm able also to dominate my fellow rivals again and go from there. I'm delighted, of course, I'm No. 1 again."

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Nadal did not defend his Wimbledon title, citing sore knees. His lead over Federer had taken a big hit when Nadal lost in the fourth round at the French Open this year, after having won that major title four consecutive years.

Sunday's title was Federer's sixth at Wimbledon and record-breaking 15th major overall.

The rest of the men's top 10 was mostly unchanged, with Roddick remaining at No. 6.

Dinara Safina kept her hold on No. 1 in the WTA rankings, ahead of Wimbledon champion Serena Williams, who stayed at No. 2, and runner-up Venus Williams, still No. 3.

Serena beat Venus in straight sets Saturday for her third Wimbledon title and 11th career major championship. Serena has won three of the past four Grand Slam titles.

Safina, meanwhile, was beaten 6-1, 6-0 by Venus in the semifinals at the All England Club — the most lopsided loss ever by a reigning No. 1 woman.

Safina — No. 1 since April — hasn't won a Grand Slam title, going 0-3 in major finals.

"I'd rather definitely be No. 2 and hold three Grand Slams in the past year than be No. 1 and not have any," Serena said Saturday.

Recent comments

Another "classy" comment by Serena.

no class | July 6, 2009 at 2:55 p.m.

Image
Rebecca Naden, Associated Press

Wimbledon champions Roger Federer, left, and Serena Williams pose together during the Champions Dinner at the Hotel Intercontinental, in London on Sunday.

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