Men's Vogue > Health

Sports

Legends of the Ball

In a much anticipated rematch, two past and present tennis greats enter the court of public opinion. By Tim Adams

Slideshow: The greatest rivalries in sports history

March 2008

Pete Sampras and Roger Federer

Sampras and Federer meet before their November 2007 bout in Seoul. (Photo: Orestis Panagiotou/epa/Corbis)

A little over a year ago, as Pete Sampras watched Roger Federer close in on Sampras's record of 14 Grand Slams — the Swiss juggernaut is two away — he thought the two of them should get to know each other. Federer was therefore invited over to the Sampras house in Beverly Hills for dinner; they hit some tennis balls, talked about the unique pressures of being number one, found they shared the driest sense of humor. Over the months that followed, they kept in touch by e-mail and text message — Sampras offering mock-grudging congratulations as Federer racked up more titles — and in winding each other up, developed the idea that maybe they should play one another in earnest. "I felt there was," Sampras explains, "this short window in which I might just about still be competitive."

No retired champion — not even one as modest as Sampras — ever likes to think he has nothing left in his locker. Federer, who describes Sampras as his idol, was also excited by the idea. This was the man who set the standards that shaped his game, the closest he has to an equal in tennis history. It would be Nicklaus versus Woods, Ali facing Joe Louis, Jordan against Kobe. They set up a best-of-three series of exhibition matches in Asia last November; Federer won the series, but not without Sampras, still only 36, overpowering him in the last of the matches on a lightning-fast court in Macau. They will resume their rivalry on March 10 in the NetJets Showdown presented by Men's Vogue and Rolex at Madison Square Garden (tickets are available at Ticketmaster, and the match will be broadcast live on the Tennis Channel), with Federer taking nothing for granted. "Pete still has a top-five serve," he says.

There is still a lot of unfinished business between the two players, and the match is sure to stoke the rivalry. Sampras and Federer met only once in tournament play, during the fourth round at Wimbledon in 2001. At the time, Sampras had been undefeated in 31 straight matches at the tournament and had entered that dangerous territory for a legend: He looked like he would never lose. Federer, meanwhile, was known to be immensely gifted but was considered a "choker" — temperamentally suspect, perhaps terminally unable to convert his talent into trophies.

All of that shifted in five sets on that summer afternoon; watching from the press box on Centre Court, I had the sense that nothing in the game would be quite the same again. Tennis players talk about "getting each other's number," by which they mean not only moving up the rankings but something more fundamental. Björn Borg had done it to Jimmy Connors, John McEnroe to Borg, Ivan Lendl to McEnroe. For a decade, no one had gotten Sampras, but that day, Federer, 10 years his junior, showed him the future and made Sampras, a month away from turning 30, look old.

MV Index