Federer made to sweat before rain

Tennis : The last thing Roger Federer needed was another rest

Tennis: The last thing Roger Federer needed was another rest. But 37 minutes after coming out of Wimbledon hibernation the four-times champion was back in the locker room with his feet up.

This time, however, a few worrying thoughts must have been crossing his mind after the first set of his quarter-final against Juan Carlos Ferrero was halted by rain until tomorrow with the score 5-5 and deuce on Federer's serve.

Federer had not played for six days. While Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic and the rest had toiled all week through persistent rain interruptions, the number one seed had polished off Marat Safin in straight sets last Friday.

Courtesy of a bye due to a fourth round injury to Tommy Haas Federer did not strike a ball in competition until a little after 3pm today.

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If that induced the odd flake of rust then that did not seem the case when he raced into a 3-0 lead, breaking the Spaniard's serve in the second game. At that point Ferrero, whose record against Federer stands at 8-3 in the Swiss star's favour, appeared intimidated by his task.

In fact, it was not until the ninth game that Ferrero seemed to realise that he was one of the few people in tennis to have done what Federer has failed to do — win the French Open.

That success came in 2003 when he beat Martin Verkerk in straight sets and when he was number one in the world for eight weeks. Ferrero has also been a runner-up at the US Open and a semi-finalist at the Australian Open.

But it is his first Wimbledon quarter-final and eventually he showed why he has got there with some precise groundstrokes to break the Federer serve and get back on level footing.

Can he derail Federer's seemingly routine march to his fifth successive final when they resume tomorrow? John McEnroe said: "It doesn't look a great match-up on paper for Juan Carlos, but he is not named the 'Mosquito' for nothing.

"He covers some territory. He's a Grand Slam winner and former number one in the world. He's made it an interesting first set."

Whether it is still interesting when Federer finally wakes up remains to be seen.