Roger Federer is well-known for the aggressive style that also helped him to win 8 titles on fast courts such as Wimbledon’s.
However, being aggressive means committing more unforced errors than a “more defensive” player. Obviously, the upside of it is that an aggressive player may strike more winners and therefore the difference between the winners and the unforced errors is the key to win a match for a player with this specific style.
Federer beating Nadal and Djokovic in Wimbledon (unforced errors)
It’s rather surprising to see that in the first 4 rounds in Wimbledon, Roger is the player that has committed less unforced errors than the rest of the pack with an average of 0.50 unforced errors per game. The Swiss was even better than Nadal (0.53) and much better than Novak Djokovic (0.73) in this compartment.
The Swiss benefited from his easy win over Matteo Berrettini in the 4th round when he committed just 5 unforced errors also because the Italian looked out of sorts, but still, this is very encouraging for the world no.3
Roger Federer vs. Kei Nishikori – H2H and stats
Roger will try to keep his great run at the Championships when he will face Nishikori in the quarter.
This will be the 11th time that Roger Federer and Kei Nishikori face off. The head to head is 7-3 for Federer (see full H2H stats), 1-0 on grass.
FEDERER STRONG IN WIMBLEDON |
Embed from Getty Images |