NEW YORK -- He fell flat on his back, stretched out his freakishly long wingspan, and the tallest man ever to win a major tennis championship started bawling like a little baby. He thought about his parents, his friends, his life, his dreams.Certain things are impossible, are absolutes. The name of major title winners in tennis can be any off the following list:
Federer, Nadal.
But that big baby, who kept on crying and crying, was Juan Martin del Potro. He won the U.S. Open Monday, beating Roger Federer 3-6, 7-6 (7-5), 4-6, 7-6 (7-4), 6-2.
"You know," Federer said, "you can't have them all."
Since when? Federer, was going for his sixth straight U.S. Open title, his third straight major. The guy just keeps providing classic five-set major finals.
And the only thing more odd than seeing Federer holding the second-place trophy over his head was hearing him argue with the chair umpire during the match over how long del Potro was taking to decide to use the replay system.
"Do you have any rules in there," Federer said. "Stop showing me the hand, OK? Don't tell me to be quiet, OK? When I want to talk, I'll talk. I don't give a (deleted) what he said ..."
Perfection disheveled. So this was the end of ...
No, forget that. This is not the death of anything, but instead the birth of something. Tennis has a new star in del Potro, who is just 20.
He beat Rafael Nadal in the semis on Sunday, and said it was the greatest day of his life. He beat Federer on Monday, and how does this day compare to the last one?
"Much better," he said. "Everything is perfect. I can't believe."
You wonder what tomorrow can hold.
Just imagine what happened: A young man in his first major final played at Ashe Stadium against maybe the greatest player ever. He was two points from losing.
But he wouldn't let Federer close him out.
"It's too early to explain," said del Potro, who's from Argentina. "Maybe tomorrow, maybe next week I will be believing this. But now, I don't know. I don't understand nothing."
U.S. Open Photos
Roger Federer, of Switzerland, sits in his court side chair while waiting for trophy presentations after his defeat by Juan Martin del Potro, of Argentina, in the men's finals championship at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York, Monday, Sept. 14, 2009. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)
AP
Juan Martin del Potro, of Argentina, kisses the championship trophy after winning the men's finals championship over Roger Federer, of Switzerland, at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York, Monday, Sept. 14, 2009.(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Juan Martin del Potro, of Argentina, reacts after winning the men's finals championship over Roger Federer, of Switzerland, at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York, Monday, Sept. 14, 2009. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
AP
Tennis player Juan Martin Del Potro from Argentina holds his trophy after beating Roger Federer from Switzerland during the final of the 2009 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, in New York, September 14, 2009. Del Potro won 3-6, 7-6, 6-4, 7-6, 6-2. AFP PHOTO/Emmanuel Dunand (Photo credit should read EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
Tennis player Juan Martin Del Potro from Argentina kisses his trophy after beating Roger Federer from Switzerland during the final of the 2009 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, in New York, September 14, 2009. Del Potro won 3-6, 7-6, 6-4, 7-6, 6-2. AFP PHOTO/Emmanuel Dunand (Photo credit should read EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
Juan Martin Del Potro of Argentina kisses his trophy after defeating Roger Federer of Switzerland in the Men's Final US Open match at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center September 14, 2009 in New York. AFP PHOTO / TIMOTHY A. CLARY (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
Tennis player Juan Martin Del Potro from Argentina kisses his trophy after beating Roger Federer from Switzerland during the final of the 2009 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, in New York, September 14, 2009. Del Potro won 3-6, 7-6, 6-4, 7-6, 6-2. AFP PHOTO/Emmanuel Dunand (Photo credit should read EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
Tennis player Juan Martin Del Potro from Argentina holds his trophy after beating Roger Federer from Switzerland during the final of the 2009 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, in New York, September 14, 2009. Del Potro won 3-6, 7-6, 6-4, 7-6, 6-2. AFP PHOTO/Emmanuel Dunand (Photo credit should read EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
Tennis player Juan Martin Del Potro from Argentina holds his trophy after beating Roger Federer from Switzerland during the final of the 2009 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, in New York, September 14, 2009. Del Potro won 3-6, 7-6, 6-4, 7-6, 6-2. AFP PHOTO/Emmanuel Dunand (Photo credit should read EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
Juan Martin Del Potro of Argentina hold his trophy after defeating Roger Federer of Switzerland in the Men's Final US Open match at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center September 14, 2009 in New York. AFP PHOTO / TIMOTHY A. CLARY (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
Del Potro showed the ultimate respect for Federer afterward, telling him, and the crowd, that he actually had two dreams, to win the U.S. Open and to be like Federer.
Welcome to the club, Juan Martin. He is going to be a superstar, but who knew it would come this soon? Now, he stands at the top of the game, on the same platform with the two legends.
Of course, Federer has a record 15 major titles. Del Potro has one. But when you see something like this arriving so early ... well here's how Federer put it.
"Rafa, we've had some epic ones, sure, great ones over the years. Who knows, maybe del Potro is going to join that as well."
Listen, this is not just Federer being gracious. He does not allow membership to the club easily. A few weeks ago I asked him about this amazing next generation of men's players -- a generation I believe will be the greatest ever -- and Federer wouldn't have any of it.
He said the young players emerging have been around for a while, and not reached the mountaintop.
"I mean," he said, "del Potro, I played him the first time three, four years ago."
Meanwhile, I asked del Potro during the Open about coming along in the Nadal-Federer generation. He said those guys were two or three steps ahead of him. But he's young, he said, and "they're going to retire and I'm going to be much better, so ..."
See? Del Potro is developing before our eyes.
Last year, the same pressure got to Andy Murray, another leader of tennis' next generation. Murray folded under Federer's pressure. There's supposed to be a learning curve.
And in the first set Monday, del Potro was awful, too.
"The beginning of the match, I was so nervous,'' he said. "I can't sleep last night. I don't take a breakfast today."
So frozen, he couldn't even move his legs.
But by the middle of the second set, del Potro just simply started to improve, got his big serve in, got aggressive on his forehand. His legs started to move.
He got nervous late in the third set, though, and lost it on consecutive double-faults. Del Potro was ready to smash his racquet, but instead decided not to. "I don't do that because maybe when I feel nervous, I saw Roger and he's a gentleman player.
"We have to learn many things about him. Many times I do that today."
See? Del Potro was using the big moment to learn from the best. So instead of falling apart, he thought about fighting to the end.
Late in the fourth set, del Potro was two points from losing on his serve. Federer had stepped up his level, and it was probably an acceptable time for a 20-year old to give in.
Instead, he crushed two big serves and a forehand to hold. He had found toughness.

And in the fifth set, all about mental edge, Federer, so pressured by del Potro's forehand, lost his nerve on serve and on his backhand.
So what does this do to Federer's legacy? Not much, really. He's going to win plenty more majors. This year, he lost two major finals, won two, got married and had twins.
"It's been an amazing year," he said. "Don't know how much more I want."
For del Potro, he finds himself on top of a mountain even he didn't know he was ready to scale. You might not have heard of him before yesterday, but there can be no better introduction, beating Nadal and then Federer.
Those two are still the absolutes, still the impossible. Turns out, there's room on the mountaintop for three.
Email me at gregcouch09@aol.com














Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
9-15-2009 @ 6:40AM
carneyva said...
Everyone heard Federer swear at the umpire, but let's see if that gets the same airplay as Serena's justifiable outburst. It's not complex at all. It simply comes down to race.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 7:06AM
Lakota Wicasa said...
That is total bullshit I am not black but I am from brown people and Serena was way out of line, Federer did not threaten the umpire. I am new to tennis and was (WAS!!) a big fan of Serena but lately my perspective has changed. Compare the two-- 'take this f---ing tennis ball and shove it down your f---ing throat' & 'I don't give a sh-t' the two do not compare. Justifiable outburst man you got some wires seriously crossed. When someone is physically gorgeous (Serena) but shows there true colors that "beauty" is just dust in the wind...
9-15-2009 @ 7:53AM
WHO EVER WHAT EV said...
He didn't threaten an official and the line judge was Asian. I think your the racist.
9-15-2009 @ 10:52AM
johnt said...
Too often race is used as a deflection of the real problem.
The rules of tennis are color blind & Serena's eruption was an embarrassment to tennis, to her family, to her race. She is totally responsible for her actions regardless of her race.
Once people move on beyond race, the world will be a much better place to live.
Comparing Roger's cursing and Serena's tirade is like comparing someone kicking a stone in anger versus someone picking up a stone and threatening to bash someone's head in with it.
Please think the issue through thoroughly.
9-15-2009 @ 4:21PM
meroula said...
carneyva -- I hardly think Federer actions were anything comparable to that of ghetto-like serena williams's behavior. It's not a racial thing it's one of class and sportsmanship. That lowlife S. Williams was pointing her racquet and screaming as if she was still living in the projects. Her fat-ass deserves to be kicked out of professional tennis entirely. It's too bad the directors were not more harsh with her punishment. Federer on the other hand, oozes class and sophistication, and at least he did not take out his outburst on a lowly line's person.
9-15-2009 @ 7:15PM
fomjda said...
No, Serena threatened the umpire, not just swear. The "crying wolf", playing the race card comments are starting to fall on deaf ears because it's being used so much these days to excuse the behavior and actions of some blacks
9-15-2009 @ 8:14AM
theburghk said...
at last i am proven right,federer met a talented player and lost.like i have always said,if he had played in the days of borg,mc enroe connors,lendl,sampras,agassi,he would never,ever have 15 majors.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 5:24PM
amgrigio11 said...
YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY RIGHT , HE DOESN'T PLAY WITH ANYBODY TILL SEMIS AND FINALS ,TOURNAMENTS ARE SHORTER , THE LIPTON USED TO BE 5 SETS ALL THE WAY
AND YOU HAVE TO FACE A LIST OF SOME PLAYERS//
ENQUIST STICH MUSTER SPADEA BECKER KRAJICEK CHANG
WHEATON COURIER KUERTEN LARSSON PHILIPPOUSSIS
MARTIN RIOS MOYA KAFELNIKOV HENMAN BJORKMAN KORDA BRUGUERA KIEFER HAAS ROSSET FERREIRA
MANCINI RAFTER , ANYBODY OF THIS GUYS COULD EASILY PUT YOU OUT OF THE TOURNAMENT //// AND SOMETIMES YOU HAVE TO FACE THEM ON FIRST ROUND///
AND SORRY ABOUT ALL THE PLAYERS I DIDNT MENTIONED //// SAMPRAS AGASSI LENDL MCENROE
BORG CONNORS ARE WAY AHEAD OF MISTER FEDERER , GREAT PLAYER IN A NOT A GREAT TENNIS TIME , AND WE CAN EVEN START TALKING ABOUT THE WOMENS , HOW I MISSED GRAF SELES NAVRATILOVA SABATINI SANCHEZ VICARIO EVERT ETC
BEST REGARDS
9-15-2009 @ 10:33AM
carneyva said...
A physical threat from Serena? Oh, please. That was just angry talk. The only physical attack that ever occurred on a tennis court was a deranged WHITE MALE who stabbed Monica Seles for no reason. And if you knew the sport of tennis as I do, you would agree with John McEnroe, who said that such a Mickey Mouse call should never be made at that stage of a grand slam semifinal. Serena was justifiably angry. If a linesperson is not making that call consistently during the entire match, it should not be made so close to match point.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 10:37AM
carneyva said...
And while we're on the subject, let's give all credit to del Potro, who fought back and won a great victory. It was refreshing not to see Federer crying and snotting afterward. Maybe parenthood is maturing him.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 12:04PM
medinensis said...
Del Potro was my dark horse to win the Open, but I didn't think maybe he was ready yet to actually do it. Congrats to him. He's made tennis fun to watch again.
Now, if Nadal can get back up to speed and Murray will stop choking, tennis could be great again.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 12:07PM
groundspeed said...
Federer was insulting. Williams threatened physical harm. Big difference.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 12:25PM
whiteley9468 said...
Apples and oranges here. Roger did not issue a threat like Serena did. Roger should not have done it but Serena was way off in her rant.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 1:00PM
John said...
Give me a break. I love Serena but lets call a spade a spade. She was so out of line. Clijsters was going to win that match regardless. I admit it was a horrible call. But please don't compare what Roger said. It's not even worth discussing.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 2:00PM
dalivest1 said...
You Mr Couch are the worst sports writer in history..or the smartest.
A couple of days ago you wrote an article about Ms Williams that was 25% sports, 75% your very disrespectful, very intimate, very unsubstantiated description of a person Im sure you don't know very well.
You write this garbage and we all take the bait. Black, white, Brown, purple.. all have an opinion on your inflaming, non sports article and In all of this...there was was little talk of Ms Clijsters amazing TENNIS perfomance against the most talented womens tennis player in the world...Hardly any mention of sports in a sports article?
ROGER FEDERER displays a similar profanity laced tirade at an official and its a foot note in your article...Here we go again...Black, White, Brown, purple, We come on here and add our comments that are NOT related to most of the actual game, but have everything to do with how different the two infractions were...and they were exactly that...INFRACTIONS which they should BOTH be fined for. while we debate on how "apples and oranges" the two infractions were, we almost ignore the the accomplishments of DEL POTRO.
You Mr Crouch are the worst kind of writer, AOL gives you a national podium and without a responsible bone in your body, set fire to a dry bush made up of idiots who could care less about the game and cannot see what you actually do.
You are no sports writer sir, you are the pied piper.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 3:19PM
panthermen015 said...
You people are truly disgusting, every topic on this post always reverts back to race people are people it don't matter what race they are, and that's the downfall of this country
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 3:58PM
jcnorristown said...
I missed it.I watched the first set and part of the second. Looked like federer was playing with this kid Now i have to find the match online. ps. i saw federers outburst on the news ,how can you compare that to Serena without being a raceist?
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 4:08PM
the aol experien said...
It was a great performance by both. Now Rodger has an idea what he would play like if he were 6'6", personaly Rodger played better,just tired.
Reply
9-15-2009 @ 4:09PM
jcnorristown said...
He finally wrote a decent article and this is when you decide to post your remark? Im not saying I agree with the article but it wasnt as rediculous as the majority he writes.
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 8:38AM
Shirley Reed said...
So send me a link so I can reply.
Reply