Roger Federer announces return to tennis after Australian Open withdrawal
Roger Federer has announced his plans to return to the ATP Tour at the ATP 250 tournament in Doha in March.
The Swiss legend left fans gutted recently when he announced he would not be coming Down Under to play the Australian Open, saying he hasn’t fully recovered from knee surgery.
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The 39-year-old, who is tied with Rafa Nadal on 20 grand slam titles, hasn’t played a competitive match since losing to Novak Djokovic in the Melbourne Park semi-finals last January.
So fans were left overjoyed on Tuesday when Federer confirmed his plans for a return.
Federer said he is hoping to make his comeback from double knee surgery in 2020 by competing at a smaller stress-free tournament than the Australian Open.
Federer’s agent Tony Godsick said in December he was looking to build a playing calendar for the Swiss star from late February onwards.
Swiss broadcaster SRF reported Federer could return at the ATP 250 tournament in Doha from March 8-13, an event he has won three times.
“I want to celebrate great victories again. And for that I’m ready to go the long, hard road,” Federer told SRF.
“I've been thinking about when and where to come back for a long time.
“I wanted to make my comeback at a smaller tournament so that I wasn't fully in focus and where the stress is also a little less.”
Federer said he has been keeping on eye on results on the ATP Tour as worked his way back to fitness.
“I actually thought that I would not follow the sport very much and would be more busy with my children and my rehab,” Federer added.
“I was surprised that I kept checking results and watching matches.
“And normally I don't do that at all if I don't take part in a tournament.”
Roger Federer puts family first
In January it was reported that as well as his recovery from knee surgery, one of Federer’s other concerns about the Australian Open was having to put his family through quarantine.
On Tuesday he admitted he’s always thinking about his family and whether or not they’ll be able to travel with him.
“Australia was a touch too early because of my knee. That hurts. It’s one of the places where I love to play the most,” he said.
But he also admitted he doesn’t want to “pathologically stay on the tour” to the detriment of wife Mirka and their four children.
“I want to be able to go skiing with the children and with Mirka,” he said.
“Or go hiking, play basketball or start ice hockey - I still have so many dreams.
“For that I need a good body and I don’t want to hit it against the wall.”
Fans took to social media to celebrate the prospect of Federer’s return.
The best news we could ever get
I cant believe this 🥺🥺🥺
Just waiting for you Roger ❤— ☀️ Paola 🍀 (@GhanemPaola) February 2, 2021
Now that Roger Federer has announced his return to tennis, the world will truly begin healing ✨
— Alisha (@FangirlAl) February 2, 2021
Great news!
— Midwest Sports (@MidwestSports) February 2, 2021
And that was the news the world needed... can't wait for the 8th of March 🙏🥺🙏
— ☀️ Paola 🍀 (@GhanemPaola) February 2, 2021
This makes me so, so happy 🙂
— Tracy Dale (@blackcat313) February 2, 2021
Yes! Can't wait!!!🤗
— HappyLife (@HappyLifehere) February 2, 2021
The dude is back in the game ❤️❤️❤️
— Nicolás Ríos (@tutifrutiauruti) February 2, 2021
Probably the best news I had in months!
— Marleen (@LaLeentje) February 2, 2021
Can't wait to see that👊🥰
— Elhussain Zakari Basarake🔴 (@Elzubsk) February 2, 2021
Finally. The king is back. 🔥🔥
— Andrew Ch P (@dRewChristianJr) February 2, 2021
Happy to hear we can see Roger and his classy tennis next month
— Akshay Arul (@akshayarul11) February 2, 2021
with AAP
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