UPDATED ON:
Sunday, June 07, 2009
18:41 Mecca time, 15:41 GMT
 
Sport
Tearful Federer takes missing crown

Federer cements his place in legend [AFP]
Roger Federer finally won his missing grand slam as he downed Swede Robin Soderling in straights sets at the French Open final.

The Swiss burst into tears as he equalled Pete Sampras's record of 14 grand slam titles and became the sixth man to win all four major tournaments.

"It was really not easy to deal with my emotions," said the 27-year-old, who lost to world number one Rafael Nadal in the three previous finals.

"It might be the greatest victory of my career."

The 23rd-seeded Soderling had ended Nadal's four-year reign on the Paris clay in the fourth round.

Best in history

"To me, he is the best player in history," the Swede said after losing 6-1 7-6 6-4.

Federer, the second man after Andre Agassi to win all four grand slam titles on four different surfaces, started Sunday's match confidently by racing into a 4-0 lead with two breaks.

Soderling held serve for 4-1 but Federer, who had never lost to Soderling in nine previous matches, kept up the pressure and clinched the first set on the Swede's serve with a crosscourt passing shot.

The match was briefly interrupted after a man came on to Centre Court with a red and blue flag during the fourth game of the second set.

The man jumped from the stand opposite the media box and approached Federer, touching him with the flag.

Leaping over the net towards Soderling, the man was tackled by Roland Garros security officers and carried away from the court.

Losing streak

Federer lost three points in a row after the incident as Soderling levelled for 2-2.

Both players held serve to a tiebreak which Federer cruised through 7-1 after serving four aces.

The Swiss broke in the first game of the third set when his opponent sent a forehand wide and he never found a solution to turn the situation around.

Federer ended his wait on the first match point when Soderling netted a service return, the Swiss falling on his knee in tears and triggering a deafening roar from the 15,000 crowd.

 Source: Agencies
 
 
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