As seals of approval go, they don’t come much better than from Roger Federer. That’s what Russian youngster Andrey Rublev received as the Swiss tennis icon backed him for big things in 2020.
Federer, 38, knows a thing or two about how to reach the pinnacle of the sport, having amassed a men’s record 20 Grand Slam titles.
As the Swiss bids to add to that haul in 2020, starting with the Australian Open in January, he’s backed 22-year-old Russian Rublev as one to watch next season.
“I think that Rublev is going to be something special,” Federer told ATP TennisTV when asked for his pick on who would shine in 2020.
“He played great against me in Cincinnati, he impressed me a lot there.”
We asked some ATP players to pick someone they think will have a big year next season
The Swiss great was referring to his encounter with Rublev in the third round of the Cincinnati Masters back in August, when the Russian sprang an upset by winning 6-3 6-4.
It was part of a season of renewed promise from Rublev, as he surged up the rankings to end the year at world number 23.
He claimed emotional victory on his 22nd birthday back in October, when he won the Kremlin Cup in Moscow.
After turning pro in 2014, Rublev had seemed destined for big things before injury struck in 2018.
He fell as low as 115 in the rankings this year, even saying that people had “put RIP” next to his name – but is firmly back on track for success in 2020 as part of a talented crop of Russian youngsters including Daniil Medvedev and Karen Khachanov.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has confirmed he will seek parliamentary immunity from prosecution in multiple corruption cases hanging over him ahead of upcoming March elections. In a speech at...
Thousands of nationalists In Kiev have celebrated the New Year with torchlight parades in honor of Stepan Bandera, a WWII nationalist regarded by modern Ukrainians as a hero and by...
There was no sense of festive goodwill from Jose Mourinho after he was yellow-carded in Tottenham's loss at Southampton for appearing to read the tactics being jotted down by a...