Wednesday, March 07, 2018

Roger Federer enjoys his 2nd charity match with Bill Gates






SAN JOSE, Calif. -- From his knees at the middle of the net, Roger Federer struck volley after volley right back at Jack Sock until the American star finally faltered. Federer just smiled. It was all in fun.

And how could Federer not be loving life?

He's the best in the world at age 36. That even sounds a bit strange to Federer himself.

"Those are definitely special times in my life and my career," Federer said. "The dream as a little boy was to make it one day to world No. 1, but not at 36 years old I can tell you that. It was probably at some point at 25 maybe if things went really well.

"I had a tough year in 2016 with my knee and stayed positive, was resilient and fought to come back and really believed I could actually win again. I didn't think it was going to be at this level. It's been an unbelievable journey the last 14 months and my team has been incredible. I'm loving every moment that I can still stay on tour because you never know when it's going to end."

While this doubles match didn't officially count Monday night, it sure mattered to all of the children in Africa who Federer is committed to helping through his foundation.

Federer emerged from the tunnel of smoke and walked onto the court greeted by roars and thousands of camera phones held high for the first Bay Area appearance of his career.

Federer waved every which way, held his racket in the air and beamed when introduced during warm-ups with the announcement at the sold-out SAP Center that he had regained the No. 1 world ranking.

"For me to stand right here as world No. 1 in San Jose is very, very special for me," Federer said.

He entertained from the start, too, praising Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates as a perfect partner.

"He knows numbers very well. He never makes mistakes on the scores," Federer cracked. "I'll do the running and Bill does the thinking."

He joked to opponent Savannah Guthrie of NBC's "TODAY" show: "You have to start looking at the ball and stop looking at me."

Federer called off Gates with, "That's mine ... that's mine, too," before Sock lobbed a winner over Gates that Federer couldn't chase down.

Federer's "The Match for Africa" exhibition sold more than 15,000 tickets to benefit his foundation that supports education for children in Africa.

The Swiss star, who at 36 is the oldest men's player to be No. 1, won the Australian Open in January for his 20th Grand Slam title.

Federer and Gates also teamed up last year in Seattle.

After the doubles, the 25-year-old Sock -- ranked 10th in the world -- pushed Federer to an 11-9 tiebreaker in the first set before dropping the second set 6-4.

At one point in the opening set, Sock showed his respect by overturning a fault call. He walked toward the service line, pointed that it was an ace and went to the changeover.

Sock joked beforehand, "Don't hit it to Roger ... I'm winless against him for my career."

"This match for Africa is something extraordinary," Sock said.

A video promoting the match featured Federer training Gates, from weight lifting -- lunges with a heavy bar over his shoulders -- to studying a tennis book and both ping-pong and tennis practice to work on his reflexes and skills.

"You'll train like I do," Federer said. "You are ready."

And Gates, dressed in a bright pink polo, drew oohs and aahs as he impressed with his shot-making and hustle to keep points alive.

"I think I'm good at picking partners," Gates said after he and Federer won 6-3.

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