Book description
This acclaimed sports biography, researched and written by the
experienced and multilingual tennis writer Chris Bowers, considers who
Federer is as a person and what place he will occupy in tennis and
sporting history. Roger Federer is a legend not only in the world of
tennis but also in the wider sporting arena. With a record-breaking
tally of 16 Grand Slam titles to his name, he shows no sign of slowing
down and in 2010 added another Australian Open win to his collection,
as well as taking the trophy in the end-of-season ATP World Wide Tour
Finals in London. This authoritative and affectionate biography traces
the rise of Federer, from his first tentative strokes with a tennis
racket to how he dealt with being sent away to a training academy
where he struggled to communicate in a French-speaking part of
Switzerland; and how he handled the sudden death of his first real
coach and mentor. It looks at his development as a sportsman and how
he has matured into a family man with his marriage to Mirka Vavrinec
and the birth of their twin girls. It also examines how Roger bounced
back from arguably one of the most challenging periods of his career
as, following a serious illness and a dip in form, his run of
successive Wimbledon championship wins was ended and he was toppled
from the number one spot by his long-time rival Rafael Nadal. In
characteristic style, Federer silenced his critics by winning the
French Open title for the first time, reclaiming his Wimbledon crown
and ending 2009 at the number one position for the fifth time.
Chris Bowers is an official member of the International Tennis
Writers Association, a commentator for BBC Radio Five Live/ BBC World
and Eurosport, he also writes regularly for the Times, Observer and the
Independent. Covering global tennis since 1992 he is considered by the
'trade' as an authoritative voice on the top tennis players and
tournaments.