21/11/2017
Roger Federer's Anecdote
"Today, everyone sees me as a quiet man, but my career began a little less quietly. There was a coach at my first tournament who told me: ‘At most, you can have coffee in a bar with those hands. You have no talent boy.’ That guy made me grow in anger and changed my personality a bit.
I got up at night to practice. I would put on the lights in the garden and hit against the wall hundreds of times. I hit forehands, backhands…every kind of shot until I could convince myself that each was perfect. I wanted to get there, but in front of me I saw too many obstacles and people who did not believe in me.
There was a time when I used to throw my racket a lot and when I was 16, I was even chased off court because of it. At 17, my family decided that I had to go to a psychologist, because I was so angry on the court. From that moment on, my growth has been constant.
Every time I am under pressure, I think of the hard work I have done to get where I am now. After becoming the number one in 2004, I actually considered quitting. I had accomplished everything I had set out to. But I told myself that I can continue playing because I don’t have to prove anything anymore.
Everything I accomplish going forward is just a bonus. People have told me I cry too much after important victories or defeats. There are people don’t even smile when they win, and there are people who don’t stop smiling for weeks after a victory.
I am the sort of person who lets the tears flow. I let them flow because I remember that coach who told me I would go nowhere in tennis. In those moments, I think of how many sacrifices I've made to get to where I am. But I must actually thank that person because, especially in the first years of my career, he gave me the urge to move on.
He gave me the inner strength to show the world who I could be. Do not ever fall down in sport or in life. Dark moments will come, it is up to you to rise above them.”
- Roger Federer