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Federer Wins Fifth Indian Wells Title

Swiss star captures his 90th tour-level crown in the desert
March 19, 2017
Roger Federer celebrates his record-tying fifth BNP Paribas Open title in Indian Wells.
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Roger Federer celebrates his record-tying fifth BNP Paribas Open title in Indian Wells. By

The incredible comeback continues. Roger Federer won a record-tying fifth BNP Paribas Open crown on Sunday as he defeated Stan Wawrinka 6-4, 7-5 in an all-Swiss final at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden.

The Swiss endured a six-month injury layoff at the end of 2016, but returned to tour-level action at the start of the season in spectacular fashion, capturing his 18th Grand Slam championship at the Australian Open with a five-set victory over Rafael Nadal.

“It’s been just a fairytale week once again,” said Federer. “I’m still on the comeback. I hope my body is going to allow me to keep on playing. I was very sad when I couldn’t come here last year. Just being here is a beautiful feeling. It’s one of my favourite tournaments. I came here for the first time 17 years ago. So to be here again as the champion is an amazing feeling.”

He has established himself as the early leader in the Emirates ATP Race To London, which determines the eight players to qualify for the ATP Finals in London in November. He is now set to rise back to No. 6 in the Emirates ATP Rankings, having started his comeback this year at No. 17.

Victory in Indian Wells marks Federer’s 90th tour-level crown and his 25th ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title. At 35 years old, he is the oldest Masters 1000 champion since a 34-year-old Andre Agassi won the 2004 Cincinnati title. Federer has played seven finals in the desert, previously lifting the trophy in 2004-‘06 and 2012, while also finishing runner-up in 2014-15.

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Federer’s backhand has been the talking point of the 2017 BNP Paribas Open, and he set the tone in the final with a rifled winner off that wing in the first game, one of 10 winners he would hit in the opening set. The right-hander has also dominated on serve, coming into the final having faced only one break point throughout the tournament, and he allowed Wawrinka just four points in the first set.

Federer made his move on Wawrinka’s serve in the 10th game of the opener, drawing a forehand error from his countryman at 30/30 to earn a set point, which he converted as Wawrinka overhit another forehand.

History was stacked in Federer’s favour against Wawrinka, with the Basel native coming into the final leading his countryman 19-3 in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series and a notable 14-0 mark on hard courts. But Wawrinka put that firmly out of his mind as he came out firing at the start of the second set, breaking Federer for the first time in the tournament before surviving a nervy service game – saving two break points – to engineer a 2-0 lead. It was the first time Federer had been broken in 42 service games.

Wawrinka’s lead was short lived though. Federer struck back to claim the next three games and broke Wawrinka in the 12th game to claim victory, sealing it in 80 minutes as he punched away a forehand volley winner.

“He was playing really fast. He was staying on the line, trying to play fast from both sides. It was tough for me to really get into [the points],” Wawrinka said. “He always had an answer. I had a few little opportunities that I could have maybe done better, but it wasn't enough.”

As Federer waved up to his wife, Mirka, and family, Wawrinka was left to ponder his third defeat in four Masters 1000 finals. The 31-year-old Swiss won his lone Masters 1000 crown three years ago in Monte-Carlo and recorded runner-up finishes in 2008 Rome (l. to Djokovic) and 2013 Madrid (l. to Nadal).

It is the second time this year Wawrinka has fallen to Federer, having suffered a heartbreaking five-set loss in the Australian Open semi-finals in January. Wawrinka had battled through to his 26th tour-level final with back-to-back third-set tie-break wins over Yoshihito Nishioka, who served for the match twice, and Dominic Thiem, before dominating Pablo Carreno Busta in the semi-finals.

On court, the emotional Wawrinka said, “I’m sorry. I’m just tired after 10 days, so, sorry,” before jokingly remarking on Federer laughing at him from the sidelines. “I would like to congratulate Roger. I lost a tough one against you, but when you played the final in Australia, I was still your biggest fan. Anybody who knows tennis loves to watch you, so it's always good to see you back at that level, hopefully for many years.”

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