
“I've been asked who I would pay to watch to play tennis, and Roger would be one of the few.”
Quoted in "Federer's touch of class" http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/07/03/1088488199904.html, The Age (July 4, 2004).
Federer Both Flesh and Not
Essays
“I've been asked who I would pay to watch to play tennis, and Roger would be one of the few.”
Quoted in "Federer's touch of class" http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/07/03/1088488199904.html, The Age (July 4, 2004).
His influence on writing the song Talk Shows on Mute
Source: Way Station (1963), Ch. 25
Context: That had not been the first time nor had it been the last, but all the years of killing boiled down in essence to that single moment — not the time that came after, but that long and terrible instant when he had watched the lines of men purposefully striding up the slope to kill him.
It had been in that moment that he had realized the insanity of war, the futile gesture that in time became all but meaningless, the unreasoning rage that must be nursed long beyond the memory of the incident that had caused the rage, the sheer illogic that one man, by death or misery, might prove a right or uphold a principle.
Somewhere, he thought, on the long backtrack of history, the human race had accepted an insanity for a principle and had persisted in it until today that insanity-turned-principle stood ready to wipe out, if not the race itself, at least all of those things, both material and immaterial, that had been fashioned as symbols of humanity through many hard-won centuries.
Attributed in Banned Books Week '93: Celebrating the Freedom to Read (1993) by Robert P. Doyle, p. 62
1990s
Bjorn Borg, winner of 11 Grand Slams, after Federer won the 2009 French Open Final http://sports.yahoo.com/ten/news?slug=reu-wimbledonborg&prov=reuters&type=lgns