Switzerland's hopes of a first ever Davis Cup win lay in the balance on Monday as the team awaited word on just how badly Roger Federer had injured his back ahead of this week's final against France in Lille.
The 17-time Grand Slam winner shocked thousands of fans and his opponent Novak Djokovic
in London Sunday evening when he withdrew from the final of the
season-ending World Tour Championship saying he was not match fit.
Ironically
the player who helped inflict the back injury on the Swiss great was
none other than Davis Cup teammate and close friend Stan Wawrinka.
The
two played a thrilling, but punishing three hour semi-final on Saturday evening
which Federer, 33, won in three gruelling sets, saving four match points
along the way.
Later in an on-court interview he
told a hushed crowd that he had tried everything to be able to play in
the prestigious tournament.
"I
tried everything I could last night and today - painkillers, rest - until the very end, but I can't compete at this level with Novak. In a final like this and at my age, it would be too risky. I hope you understand."
What was not clear, however, was just how badly injured he is. Federer
has a history of back pain, but until last weekend he had been
injury-free throughout a season in which he has played some superb
tennis.
He is hoping that the back spasms
he felt will clear over the next couple of days, allowing him to be
able to begin adapting to the indoor claycourt that France as hosts have
chosen for the final.
There
was some astonishment in the French press over how hard Federer and
Wawrinka had gone at it in London, knowing that the Davis Cup final was
only a few days away.
Australian
Open winner Wawrinka admitted that he could suffer psychologically and
physically from the heart-breaking loss and there were unconfirmed
reports of some friction between the two after the match.
Swiss
press reports said that Wawrinka had been irked by someone sitting in
Federer's box with suggestions it could have been his wife Mirka.
Former great and now television
commentator John McEnroe, meanwhile, spoke of the two Swiss players
having a long and tense discussion in the locker-room afterwards.
Whatever
the truth was there, a Federer withdrawal from the Lille contest would
be a huge and potentially lethal body blow to Swiss hopes.
Wawrinka
at fourth is comfortably ranked above all the French players, but after
him the fall off in the Swiss team is steep with Marco Chiudinelli
212th and Michael Lammer 508th.
In stark contrast it was all plain sailing for the French who are seeking a 10th Davis Cup title in all and a first since 2001.
Captain
Arnaud Clement cloistered his team of Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Gael Monfils,
Richard Gasquet and reserve Gilles Simon in Bordeaux where they honed
their claycourt skills away from prying eyes. Doubles specialist Julien Benneteau, who was playing in the doubles in London, was to link up with them in Lille.
Coach Lionel Roux said the team would not be distracted by the doubts surrounding Federer's participation.
"I
don't think Roger's injury is too serious," he said. "If he really
can't play in the Davis Cup it would be very sad. But in my view it was
just preventative.
"Looking at
the TV footage of his semi-final I saw no signs of him being badly
injured. He was struggling a bit only because it had been such a tough
match.
"All the players are carrying injuries by the end of the season and we know that Roger has had problems with his back before.
"But he is a real pro and he simply weighed up the pros and the cons and decided against playing the final."
Date: 17th November 2014, Source: AFP
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