Federer had a big, big bag of tactics: Ljubicic

Ivan Ljubicic paid tribute to Roger Federer, saying his big, big bag of tactics set him apart

0
2321
Roger Federer with Ivan Ljubicic and Severin Luthi

Ivan Ljubicic paid tribute to the recently-retired Roger Federer, saying that the biggest strength of the Swiss was his ‘big, big bag of tactics’ that he could draw from.

“While I became Roger’s coach in 2016, I first knew him as an opponent,” Ljubicic told ATP tour.

ALSO READ: Roger Federer bids emotional farewell

Federer retired this weekend at the Laver Cup with 20 Grand Slams and 103 tour titles to his name.

“I competed against him 16 times during my professional career and for me the most impressive thing was that he did not play two of those matches the same way tactically.

Upgrade your serve with our FREE guide

“He would always bring something new to the court and make sure that you didn’t have any reference to learn from.”

Federer won 13 of the 16 matches against Ljubicic.

ALSO READ: Irked Daniil Medvedev mocks French fans

“The problem with facing him is that he would play a match one way and show up next time and do something completely different,” Ljubicic, who reached a career high of No 3, added.

“He was definitely the only player I ever faced who could play that way, and no matter what he did, it was at a very, very high quality.

ALSO READ: Carlos Alcaraz wins US Open, rises to No 1

“For me, this was very problematic because when you lose to somebody you say, ‘Okay, I’ll learn something from this time and get ready for the next one’, but with him it was just not possible.”

When I started to coach Roger, I realised the way he is thinking about tennis is just different than anybody else. I think that was the biggest difference, that he had this big, big bag of tactics that he would pull out whenever he felt he needed it.

ALSO READ: Nick Kyrgios handed biggest fine at US Open 2022

The Swiss started working with Ljubicic in 2016 and won his 18th major at the 2017 Australian Open after a six-month hiatus from the tour due to knee surgery.

“When you watch his matches, Roger was a very elegant and powerful player,” said Ljubicic.

“He made it look very easy. You think that it’s all talent, but he was an incredibly hard worker.”

ALSO READ: Iga Swiatek clinches US Open title

Former Swiss Davis Cup coach Severin Luthi, who was part of Team Federer for years, said the Swiss’ positive attitude was one of the bedrocks of his longevity.

“Until Roger made his decision to retire there was always hope, so we always tried to stay positive,” said Luthi.

ALSO READ: No candy for US Open semifinalist Frances Tiafoe

“That is something he was better at than anyone. I think Roger is really the world champion in being positive.

“Roger also always wanted to learn. He accomplished so much, but knew it was important to keep your feet on the ground.

ALSO READ: Serena Williams eyes life beyond tennis

“You should never think you know everything and he always liked to hear something from the outside.

“Many people ask me, ‘What are you going to tell a guy like Roger?’ I can tell you, these guys, they still want to know things every day.

ALSO READ: French player Fiona Ferro accuses former coach of rape

“They always want to keep progressing.”

Ljubicic and Luthi were present at London’s O2 Arena this weekend, when Federer bid an emotional farewell to the sport.

LEAVE A REPLY