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Federer aims to bury the French Open jinx

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  • Federer aims to bury the French Open jinx

    Federer aims to bury the French Open jinx

    The Star Online
    Monday May 24, 2004

    Wimbledon and Australian Open champion Roger Federer will have to take
    the hard road if he is bury his embarrassing French Open jinx when
    the second Grand Slam event of the season gets underway here today.

    The Swiss world number one, widely considered the finest player of
    the current generation, has suffered successive first round defeats
    on the slow, red clay of Roland Garros in the last two years.

    To add to his problems, he could face triple Roland Garros champion
    Gustavo Kuerten in the third round here with Argentina's David
    Nalbandian and former world number one Marat Safin of Russia waiting
    to pounce later in the draw.

    However, with defending champion Juan Carlos Ferrero horribly out of
    form with a wrist injury and with serious doubts over US Open winner
    Andy Roddick's ability to adapt his booming game to the slow surface,
    there may never be a better opportunity for Federer to triumph here.

    Ferrero must face former world number two Tommy Haas of Germany in
    his first round match.

    Federer also has the added psychological advantage of having defeated
    another leading rival Guillermo Coria in the final of the Hamburg
    Masters, ending the Argentinian's 31-match unbeaten run on clay in
    the process.

    "I'm more relaxed now. The last two years, I went to Paris with very
    high hopes. I thought that if I had been in the quarter-finals of the
    French Open in 2001 and had won Hamburg in 2002, I can do better at
    the French," said Federer whose win in Germany was his fourth of the
    year and 15th of his career.

    History says otherwise.

    In 2002, he was dumped out of the first round here by Morocco's Hicham
    Arazi while last year it was the turn of Peru's Luis Horna to take
    the Swiss player's scalp in straight sets.

    Federer's best showing here remains his 2001 quarter-final finish
    and he is aware that with Ferrero having not played for a month,
    it is Coria who remains a major threat.

    The 22-year-old Argentinian is a master of clay where he has won
    all of his eight titles, the most recent of which was in Monte Carlo
    last month.

    Reigning US Open champion Roddick also has a lot to prove.

    Like Federer, he has lost in the first round here on his last two
    visits with his 2003 exit at the hands of Armenia's Sargis Sargsian
    prompting him to enlist Andre Agassi's former coach Brad Gilbert to
    help him out of his slump.

    It certainly had the desired effect with the young American taking
    his first Grand Slam title at the US Open in September.

    Agassi, now 34, remains many people's sentimental favourite to add
    the trophy to his 1999 triumph as he sets out on his 16th French
    Open campaign.

    But his build-up has not been impressive.

    He made a first round exit at St Poelten on Monday at the hands of
    world number 339 Nenad Zimonjic in what was his first clay court
    outing of the season.

    Safin will also be a contender after a miserable 2003 campaign which
    was wrecked by injury.

    The Russian was a semi-finalist here in 2002 and hammered home his
    recovery by making the final of the Australian Open in January. – AFP
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