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#412 How Roger Federer Works

2/19/202648:409,896 words
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What I learned from reading The Master: The Long Run and Beautiful Game of Roger Federer by Chris Clarey. Episode sponsors: Ramp⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ gives you everything you need to control spend, watch your...

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I spent years whining, swearing, and throwing my racket before I learned how ...

My wake-up call came early in my career when an opponent publicly questioned my mental discipline. He said, "Roger will be the favorite for the first two hours, and I'll be the favorite after that." I realized what he was saying. Everybody can play well in the first two hours. You're fit, you're fast, you're clear.

After two hours, your legs get wobbly, your mind starts wandering, and your discipline starts to fade. It made me realize I had so much more work ahead of me. My parents, my coaches, everyone had been calling me out, and now my rivals were doing it. I am eternally grateful for what he did, because it made me work harder, and train harder. A lot harder.

That was an excerpt not from the book that I'm going to talk to you about today, but actually from Roger Federer's commencement address that he gave at Dartmouth after he retired.

And before I get into this incredible book that I read about Roger Federer, which is called the Master,

the long run in the beautiful game of Roger Federer written by Christopher Clarie, I want to pull out a few quotes from Federer's excellent commencement address. And so Federer had three main ideas that he shared in the commencement address. Number one effortlessness is a myth.

Number two, it's only a point, and number three life is bigger than the court.

I want to jump to point number two. This is my favorite part of the entire commencement address. He says, "Perfection is impossible. It is only a point." In the 1526 single matches I played in my career, I won almost 80 percent of those matches.

Now I have a question for you. What percentage of points do you think I won in those matches? Only 54 percent. In other words, even top ranked tennis players win barely more than half of the points they play. When you lose every second point on average, you learn not to dwell on every shot.

You teach yourself to say, "Okay, I double-faulted. It's only a point." Okay, I came to the net, and I got passed again. It's only a point. Even a great shot, an overhead backhand smash that ends up on a top 10 playlist.

That too is just a point. Here is why I am telling you this.

When you are playing a point, it has to be the most important thing in the world.

And it is. But when it's behind you, it's behind you. This mindset is really crucial because it freezes you to fully commit to the next point, and the next point after that with intensity, clarity, and focus.

The truth is, whatever game you play in life, sometimes you're going to lose a point.

A match, a season, a job. It is a roller coaster with many ups and downs, and it's natural when you're down to doubt yourself and to feel sorry for yourself. And by the way, your opponents have self doubt too. Don't ever forget that.

But negative energy is wasted energy. You want to become a master at overcoming hard moments. That is, to me, the sign of a champion. The best in the world are not the best in the world because they win every point. It's because they know the lose again and again and again and have learned how to deal with it.

You accept it, cried out if you need to, and then force a smile. You move on. Be relentless, adapt, and grow. And then these are a few sentences I really jumped out at me from his third point, which is life is bigger than the court.

Even when I was just starting out, I knew that tennis could show me the world,

but tennis could never be the world.

I knew that if I was lucky, maybe I could play competitively until my late 30s. Maybe even until I was 41.

But even when I was in the top five, it was important to me to have a life,

a rewarding life full of travel, culture, friendships, and family. These are the reasons that I never burned out. And never burning out is one of the most important stories from Roger Federer's career and from this book. I love the subtitle, the long, run, and beautiful game of Roger Federer. And the reason I wanted to start with those three ideas from his commencement dresses,

because as I went over and over again and read, reread my highlights and my notes before I sat down and talked to you, I realized what was most interesting to me was not the biographical account of Roger Federer's life and career. What was most interesting to me was the ideas that helped him have this long, run, and beautiful game.

So what I did is I stripped everything away, except the ideas that contributed to his top performance and his durable and long lasting career. And so you'll see some of these ideas just reappear over and over again throughout the decades of his life and his career. I want to go back to what he just said at the beginning of the commencement address and it is tied to the fact that he seeks immediate feedback and then something that

his coaches and people around him noticed for his entire career is how fast, how quickly he's able to apply the things that he learns. And so he talks about the benefit of the fact that his occupation, his career, his mission, his dream, had to be played out in front of a live audience. And there's a benefit to that immediate feedback loop. And this is what he said, playing in front of a live audience, you get to review right away.

If you're good or bad.

even if you're bad, it doesn't matter. All you have to do is then go work at it.

At least you know you have some work to do. And if you're great, it gives you confidence and

motivation and inspires you. And I think that ties to this idea that you and I talk about over

and over again, that all of his huge great entrepreneurs, they constantly preach the value of being close to the customer of getting immediate feedback from your customer and from the people that work for you that are actually servicing the customers. This is all tied to this idea that Federer throughout his entire career, they talk about look how effortless it is. And he actually took you know partial fence to that. It made it seem like he was completely natural. He had to have to work

hard to make it look effortless. And so that's something I repairs over and over again in the book. His as Federer was widely perceived as a natural and yet he became a meticulous planner who learned

to embrace routine and self-discipline, plotting out his schedule well in advance and in considerable

detail. Though his rare to see Federer sweat, there was tremendous toil and ample self-doubt behind the scenes. And that leads us to another idea that helps him make it look effortless. And the way I think about this is this maximum controlling manga that your job as an entrepreneur is to build a seamless web of deserved trust. So much of this book is about the people that helped Federer on his journey, the team that he built the people that he surrounded himself with.

If you listen to last week's episode about Andre Agassi in that fantastic autobiography, it was the exact same thing for Agassi's life. Agassi just like Federer repeat over and again, I would not have had the success I had if it wasn't for the people that were around me. And Federer picked really carefully, says fortune and deed played a role for Federer.

He might not have become a champion, at least on a tennis champion. If an Australian,

journeyman pro named Peter Carter had not decided to take a coaching job in a small club in Basel, Switzerland. Federer might not have had the staying power. If he had not met a cerebral, sensitive and gifted fitness trainer named Pierre Paganini, or crossed paths with Merkha Verneck. God bless these last names. There's no way I'm sorry. There's no ways I'm pronouncing it correctly. An older Swiss player who eventually became his part-time press agent,

organizer, and most importantly, his wife. And one thing that his coaches, his fitness trainers, the people around him would consider your mark on is that Federer wanted to see how far he could take it. He believed that stagnation is regression. I absolutely love this part. He says he did stop school at 16 and was not a particular series student. But he approached adulthood and the tour with much more rigor. He had both an abiding love of the game and the drive to demand more of

himself. He believed that maintaining the same level and pro tennis was actually losing ground. This is something he's going to have in common. This is this belief with one of his rivals, which is Novak Jokevic. This is what Novak Jokevic said. The number one requirement to succeed at this level is the constant desire and open-mindedness to master and improve and evolve yourself

in every aspect. I know Roger has talked about this a lot and I think it's something most

top athletes in all sports can agree on. stagnation is regression. And so something that Novak and Federer and Agacy all had in common is they wanted to be the best from a very young age. They talked about their six years old, seven years old, eight years old, 12 years old, they would say I'm going to be the number one tennis player in the world. And I think that's one of the benefits about reading this book and reading Agacy's book. You realize how much work it takes to go from

10 or 15 or 20 to number one, Andy Roddick, a fellow tennis player, was talking about. It was very obvious when, you know, I think Federer turns pro somewhere at 16 and 17 years old. It was obviously a talent. But what was not obvious is what was ahead of him for the next 24 years of his career. So it's what Andy Roddick said. I think it had progressed past the point of, is this guy going to be really good? I think that was a given. The question was, is he going to be Roger, or is he going to be

Richard Guestquette, who is someone who is really, really good? I think people are lying to you if they say they can tell the difference at that stage because the difference is inward. It is so

important. I think maybe the most important thing about reading about these tennis players and

the same for founders is how much of success comes down to what's going on in your mind back to this quote from Andy Roddick. I think it was a given that Roger is going to be a top 10 guy, a top 5 guy, but there's a big difference between that and someone who is number one, who wins a slam and is a relevant result maker for 10 years. I had the accidental good luck of actually having dinner. I think it was probably like two years ago with a mental coach of some of the top tennis players in the

world. This is not a coach that has anything to do with the aspect of your game, like the physical aspect of your game. He focuses solely on the inner game of tennis. What is going on in your mind? And he says something that blew my mind that he said that the gap between the number four player in the world and the number three player in the world is massive. That the 200th ranked player in the world is closer to number four than four is to number three. And he said the main driver of that

Was their mental discipline.

sponsor of this podcast ramp and I think there's a lesson in here as applicable to anyone who's trying to make something great in the world. The founders of ramp know just like Steve Jobs knew

that you always bet on talent. The founders of ramp want to bet on talent in everything that

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use ramp, the more efficient your company becomes. This is important because as Sam Walton said

in his autobiography, you can make a lot of different mistakes and still recover if you run

an efficient operation or you can be brilliant and still got a business if you're too inefficient. ramp helps you run an efficient organization. I run my business on ramp and so do most of the other top founders and CEOs. I know make history's greatest entrepreneurs proud by going to ramp.com turn on and have it can help your business save both time and money today. That is ramp.com. Now, when I got to this next section of the book, this is when I realized what was the most fascinating

thing to me about Roger Feather about reading this book was how much he changed from the 16 or 17-year-old player over the next two decades. The parallel to Steve Jobs jumped off the page for me. So let me

read this to you. There was a second realization. We all watched him and it looked like he was not

sweating. It looked like his heart rate was 30. It didn't look like anything was affecting him. Like it was clear that there was not going to be any bad decisions because it's a break point and he is nervous because the crowd is a little into it or something. What we were unaware of was how far Feather had come in the behavior department from the racket chucking self-berating episodes of his youth. It just looked like this is what he was ready for and he could handle whatever

situation came up. Go back to what Feather was saying that his wake-up call came early in his career when he was talking to commencement dress. That was not the case. His opponents called him mentally weak that he had no mental discipline that I can wear this guy out and take advantage of him and beat him. And there's example after example in the book and as I'm reading this I'm like this is just like Steve Jobs. Like Steve Jobs, Roger Fetter learned how to have more self-control with age.

There is like a 20 page afterward that I highly recommend you read. It's an Ed Catmos autobiography called Creativity Inc. It's called the Steve Jobs We knew. And Ed was partnered with Steve Jobs for more consecutive years than anybody else. And so I asked my personal AI assistant of which trained on all my notes and highlights and transcripts. I go how did Ed Catmo describe how Steve Jobs changed over the 20 year partnership and there's a few things I want to read to. Ed's point

was that Steve Jobs came profoundly over the two decades they worked together so much so that the popular one note character of Jobs as a relentless perfectionist and an emotional tone deaf bully misses the real story. Catmo watched him evolve in real time. Catmo said early on, Jobs could be dismissive that he could create ill will that he would overreach in negotiations. But Catmo emphasized that Jobs learned from the backfires and explicitly told Catmo that he

learned from his mistakes. And over time, Steve became fairer and wiser and his understanding of partnership deepened, not in a way that diluted his innovation standards, but in a way that's

strengthened them. And if the only thing you take away from Roger Federer's life is that his ability

to learn how to control his emotions. He would have not had the long run in the beautiful game

if he never developed that skill. And I think there's two things that helped him do this and succeed

in other areas of his career. And this is this idea where, you know, most efficiency engineers believe comes before a building. They have excessive self-confidence, even before other people think they deserve to have that confidence and they're obsessed with control. So a lot of these European, I've been reading a lot about European tennis players, a lot of them in their youth are like, oh, I like tennis, maybe I can play soccer too. But they're usually control freaks. And so this is

example of him picking an individual sport on purpose. There was something in him that wanted full ownership, a strain of perfectionism that made him realize he would have struggled to accept other shortcomings when he already had so much difficulty accepting his own. And then just like Novak Jokovitch, just like Andre Agassi, Novak Jokovitch would go around at six years old when he was six years old. He said he was going to be the number one tennis player in the world for Roger Federer

At age eight.

And then I want to give you another example, something we've already talked about a few times. Roger has this ability to apply what he's learning rapidly. And he had this from a young age.

So one of his youth coaches, when he was still a junior player, said he had never seen another

player who could apply his advice so quickly. It was an observation that many coaches would make a feather throughout the decades. And so he smart enough to build a team around him that hold him die standards. And he also holds himself to high standards. This goes back and said just how by his own admission that he had a weak mentality that hit a lack of self control. There was another undeniable weakness in those early years. Federer's mentality. I was a terrible loser. I really

was. Federer said Federer's self control was lacking. This is what he says. I knew what I could do and failure made me mad. I had two voices inside me, the devil and the angel. And one self couldn't believe how stupid the other one could be. He fixes this intermonologue, by the way.

How could you miss that one voice would say? Then I would just explode. My dad used to be so embarrassed

attorneys that he would shout at me from the side of the court telling me to be quiet. And then on the way home in the car, he might drive for an hour and a half and not say a word. Federer's lack of mental discipline was the biggest reason he was not a can't miss prospect. He clearly had the talent and seemed to have the ambition. But the mental game is often what makes the difference between mediocre and good and between good and great. And so as a teenager, he realized as

well if I'm going around saying when we the best player in the world, I'm going to be number one. It's going to require exceptional talent drive. A solid support structure, plenty of luck and sound decisions. And you can't make sound decisions if you can't control your emotions.

There is a line in the commencement address that he says. I think it's really important. And he says

trusting yourself is a talent. And so when Federer was 14, he goes away to boarding school.

And he considers this critical to his later success as when he gives advice to younger players.

He often recommends that they take the opportunity to leave home for a stretch to build their sense of self reliance. This is a key trait and a brutally competitive individual sport where trusting yourself can be every bit as important as trusting your forehand. None of this works if you can't trust your own judgment. And so it's going to come down to the talent and the skill and the play of Federer on the court. But he's also got to choose the people that's

going to help him on his journey. And one of the best decisions he ever made was picking this esoteric and unusual fitness coach. This was not an obvious choice. And here's why he was a much older man who never played tennis competitively, but who played a major role in Federer's long running success. Perhaps the decisive role. This is Pierre Paganini, who was Federer's fitness coach. Paganini was much more than a clever and hyperfit taskmaster. He was Federer's sounding board.

Occasional spiritual guide and the final word on scheduling. A subtle yet convincing lobbyist

for the benefits of dedication and moderation. This is so important. Remember, going back to this

idea of the long game. From the start, Paganini had a long-term view of Federer's health and path. The central message was that tough, consistent work was necessary, but so were rest and escape a Federer wanted to last in a sport whose repetitive rhythms and patterns can wear down a player. And he also focused on the mind too. Fresh legs were vital, but no more vital than feeling fresh in the head. When other people ask to describe Paganini, the word you usually hear is unusual. And so

this is really Paganini just saying this is the goal. This is what we're trying to do with Federer and we're trying to do it from the very beginning. To have potentials one thing, but to express it for 70 matches a year is something else. That is Roger's goal to be consistent in each match he plays and each training session he does. So this idea of, hey, we're going to emphasize the long game. We're going to assume that your career is going to last many decades. And so we're going

to develop a training schedule that allows your body to survive and thrive over decades. This part made me think of the co-founder of Nike Bill Bowerman. Bill Bowerman was Phil Knight's track coach at Oregon. And he had these ideas decades before anybody else. I read this excellent biography of Bill Bowerman probably six years ago. I want to pull out some ideas from here because I think

it's so important. And I think they nailed you in entrepreneurship, which just jumps off the pages

just completely obvious. Bowerman's core point was that restroom recovery aren't a break from training. They're a central part of the mechanism that makes training work. Bowerman explains training as a simple loop. Stress, recover, improve. You apply a stimulus, you let the body rest, and then a little miracle happens. You get stronger, faster, and more enduring. Bowerman immediately pairs that with a warning. Work too hard plus rest too little equals injury.

A big part of why this matter is that culturally many athletes felt rest was weak-willed or ignoble. And Bowerman pushed them directly against that instinct. Bowerman's edge was being

Decades early to treating recovery as equal to work.

He meant rest as intelligent restraint in service of long-term consistency. That is exactly

where we are in the story. Intelligent restraint in service of long-term consistency. That is excellent. And so there's a series of coaches and people in fetters life that see his talent in our trying to help him understand how much work is ahead of him and constantly holding him to high expectations. And so fetters a teenager at this time. He's around 14 or so in this one coach who they described as no nonsense. It's teaching a young fetter about how much self-sacrifice

and self-discipline were required to succeed in the way the fetter said he wanted to succeed. And the way he did this is he said I didn't cut him any slack. It's not in my nature. I didn't give these young players any room to breathe. And one thing that he observed about fetter is that he had a natural inclination to want to play all the time. He was overflowing with emotion and energy. He had to play. He had to move above all. He's a player. And we see the exact same

thing from fetter as a teenager that we saw when he was eight years old that he wants to be the best that he wants to be number one. He's with all these other young junior players. They're all in the same program and they're filling in a form in which they're supposed to state their tennis goals. Most of them wrote down that they hoped to break into the top 100 in the world. Roger was the only one of us to write that he wanted to become number one. And this no nonsense coach notices the exact

same deficiency and fetter that he notices early in his career that he wants up fixing. He said

I could see no barriers when he played. The only thing that could stop him was his head. And I said

to him trying not to be your own enemy because it'll be a lot more complicated. Again, the inner game of tennis. I read this section. I think about one of my favorite quotes comes from Brad

Jacobs. Brad Jacobs wrote in his book how to make a few billion dollars. So much of success in

business and life is keeping your head in a good place. And fetter is going to have a few different ways to keep his head in a good place. One, he's going to get this mental coach which I'll talk to you about in one second. He does this early on in life. And number two, he does something he really smart, especially the very beginning. You're going to doubt yourself enough. You can't have other people around you downing you. You have to run away from naysayers. And there's a

funny story in the book about this where fetter literally switches his dentist because he didn't want to hear any negativity. And so he stops a formal schooling at 16 to pursue being a professional tennis player. And so he visits his dentist and his dentist is like, "So what are you doing now?" And fetter is like, "Well, I'm playing tennis." And his dentist goes, "Okay, well, what else?" And fetter goes, "That's it. I'm just playing tennis." And he looked at me shocked. He said, "That's it.

Just tennis." And so fetter changed dentist. This is why I never went back because I just felt

like he's not really understanding what I'm trying to do here. I'm chasing a dream. I'm trying to aim for the stars and he's trying to pull me back. I don't want to be surrounded by people like this. And one of the funniest ways to deal with people like this actually read in Arnold Schwarzenegger's biography, the one that he wrote when he was in his 70s. One of his mentors was Lucio Ball. Lucio Ball was probably the most powerful woman in Hollywood at the time. She starts mentoring Arnold.

And she gave him hilarious advice that he actually applied verbatim. Says Lucio Ball gave me advice about

Hollywood. Just remember when they say no, you hear yes and act accordingly. Someone says to you,

"We can't do this movie. You hug him and say thank you for believing in me." I absolutely love that. You hug him and say thank you for believing in me. Let's go back to this again. On having high standards, I'm being held to high standards and wanting to be the very best. He talks about the cultural differences of all the tennis players in Switzerland. And he felt that it was important for them to actually aim a little higher as we just saw,

you know, like, "Oh, maybe I can break into top 100." And said, "No, I'm going to be number one." I did feel it was possible for me to aim for the stars. I think we could do a little bit better job to believe, like in America, that anything is possible. That we should dream big. I feel sometimes we don't believe because we're kept in education, a job, and safety, and security. I feel that can sometimes block us from going all out and saying, "Let's take a chance.

Let's go for it. Let's follow our dreams. Let's see what happens." But half-and-half doesn't cut it. If a guy in China or Russia or America or Argentina, or wherever, trains five hours and you only train two, how is that going to work? It's not realistic then to become the greatest ever. It's not by dreaming that you're going to be top 250 that you're ever going to win Wimbledon. So this is when he begins working with a mental coach.

His mental coach is his kind in Christian Mark Holy. I think this is one of the most important

ideas in the book. The idea was to provide better with some tools to change his patterns and manage his emotions more systematically, especially when matches got tight. Fetter chose to address his mental weaknesses when he was still quite young. He was not yet 17 when he began collaborating with Mark Holy. And so Mark Holy describes it this way. There's another fundamental component which is, "Are you at peace with yourself? Is your overall life plan more or less in place,

Which gives you the fundamental joy to be here or would you rather be somewhe...

always had the passion to win. At a certain moment of his career, he made the choice to learn how to

use this energy in a constructive way so he could reach his maximum potential. That was the focus of our work together. This is so important just like his fitness coach. The ideas that his fitness coach had, they were not what everybody else was doing, the same thing. This shows how important this was. Consulting a performance psychologist, or a mental coach, was then still widely viewed as a sign of vulnerability. It also did not dovetail with the rugged individualism that Fetter

adopted and enjoyed projecting once he reached maturity, going significant stretches without

a formal coach or agent. Again, I think that speaks to how important it was. Neither Mark Holy nor

Fetter has publicly explained their work in detail because that is Fetter's wish. That part is fascinating. They only worked together for a short while and then they both agreed not to go into detail about what exactly they did. This kind of reminds me of Red Dispography of Alexander the Great and his tutor, his one-on-one tutor when he was a young man, was actually Aristotle. And much later in life, there was a riff between Alexander the Great and Aristotle because Alexander did not

like that Aristotle was teaching publicly what Aristotle had taught Alexander privately. Alexander did not want his opponents to have the edge that he had. And so go back to what Fetter was saying in the commencement dress that everybody for years was calling him out on this. Since he was a little boy, all the way to the teenager, and so I read this one paragraph on the book, so many people in his early life say exactly this, Roger was fragile emotionally. He could not accept defeat. He was mediocre in training.

He was not a big worker. He was fooling around most of the time to me that is the core to the story. The fact that he adapted, the fact that he changed, the fact that he improved over time. And the beauty of this is this is skill he could keep his entire life. This is his now mental coach, not talking about the 1617 18-year-old Fetter that he was working with. But now looking back

after Fetter retired. When I see Roger today, I always tell him what you do on the court as a

extraordinary, but how you handle your life to me is out of this world. The game doesn't care where you slept, what you did, how many people you met, the game is pure. And he managed over 20 years to come out and play it with humility, and that same amount of connection it takes to be able to keep winning matches. The way he approached his work, the dignity, the level of concentration to me,

he's a role model. And I think a large component of the work they did that was successful as

the fact that you can be Fetter can now be in the moment. This point in front of me is the most important point in the world, but then when it's behind, it is behind. So it says, "What fascinating me about Roger, then instill is that he managed to live in the present." He has a great ability to take things as they come. He lives a moment, experiences a fully, takes pleasure in it, and finishes it, and then moves on to the next. It is the reason you have the feeling that things happen very

naturally with him. It is a talent, and it is a talent that even today fascinates me more than his tennis. This is exactly what people would say about Michael Jordan. I've done a bunch of episodes on Michael Jordan, but this quote from episode 340, which is on Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant together. I love, and it's exactly what they're talking about with Fetter. If one thing separated Michael from every other player, it was his stunning ability to block out everything and everyone else.

This dedication to learning how to control his mind is mentioned over and over again. He was able to shut out everything except his mission. Most people live in fear because we

project the past into the future. Michael is a mystic. He was never anywhere else. His gift was

that he was able to be completely present. The big downfall of otherwise gifted players is thinking about failure. He would say, "Why would I think about missing a shot? I haven't taken yet." And so whether it's his decision to work with this esoteric and unusual fitness coach, going against a trend to have a mental coach, even having his wife work with him. All of these decisions helped because he was building what Charlie Munger said to some of the

best, most important piece of advice is that you need to build a seamless web of deserved trust.

And so as many times in the book, it talks about the value of the team that Fetter built. The other component is to trust that life is going in the right direction and to trust that the close people around you do a great job and that you don't need to worry or think about something else. And I think Roger always had the ability to surround himself with people he can trust and he does fully trust. It takes a while to get that trust, but once you're in, nothing is second guest.

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Back to this idea again about the importance of having this abundance of self confidence that Federer had a higher belief in himself than his ability at that time would demonstrate. Here's a great example. He's about to go to the Olympics and he says I would very much like to

come back with a gold medal. That's strong words from a 19-year-old who was ranked 43rd

and had yet to win an ATP tour title. So learning to have this mental discipline, learning how to control his emotions. It was better for his game but it also

wants it being better for his business. And part of this is because he understood that as he

became more prominent, I see sorts of win more matches. His on-court antics and throwing this fit, breaking rackets, cursing. It actually risked defining his image. And when he watches matches back and he'd see himself act like this. He's actually embarrassed. He says that was a career defining moment for me. I started to feel uncomfortable after a while when you're on TV like this. It's just a bad look when you see yourself

throw the racket in the corner and you're like, "Oh my God!" and you're looking around and you're frustrated and disappointed. And I just said this just looks so stupid and silly. Let's get your act together now. You're on a big stage and you can't behave like this anymore. You're behaving like this when you're playing somebody like Pete Samperus or somebody else that you actually admire. It just can't be like this and it was interesting that talks about

the inner rage is still there. It's just developing the skill to not let it bubble to the surface.

It was enough to finally calm Fetter, at least on the outside. Inside the blood still boils.

Fetter confirmed as much. It was about learning to control the flames. This is such a great line. It was about learning to control the flames instead of extinguishing them. About converting them into slow burning fuel rather than a bonfire of distraction. And so all the work that he's doing, all the skills that he's acquiring starts to pay off. And at just 21 years old, Fetter wins his first title at Wimbleton. And it says a weight had been lifted, a number of weaknesses addressed,

and he was ready to hit some serious heights. Go back to that coach, who was coaching when he was 14 and saying, hey, I'm not cutting him any slack. He was sitting there watching this at Wimbleton. And after he won, he says, look how far he has come. And then he pauses reflecting back on this. Right from 14 to 21, look at how much work this guy has done. He's a completely different person. Look how far he has come. And then now 20 years later from this point, he says,

and now I'm thinking about how far he went after that. Again, that is what I found most fascinating about the book, the long run of Roger Fetter. And it says Roger really made up his mind that he was going to be the best player on the planet. Not just the most talented or the most gifted player on the planet, but the best. And one thing he starts tapping into is the history of the sport. He starts studying the great tennis players dead and living. And it says, though he had been an

indifferent student in school, Fetter was drawn to the history of his chosen sport, a curiosity they only deepen as he proceeded to make so much tennis history himself. I asked a lot of questions and I had a great bunch of guys around me when I came up on tour that educated me as well Fetter or said. They were like, look, this is somebody who played at Sam's in Wimbleton back in 1968. And this is somebody who won the doubles back in 1954. Kobe Bryant said the exact same thing in

that book that he wrote called Mamba mentality. So he talked about the importance of studying the great. He says just as important as reading about them was cultivating relationships with the great to had come before me. Bill Russell, Kreme of Du Drabar, magic Johnson, Jerry West, James Worthy, those guys taught me the lessons that gave me an edge over my competition. It is so important to have those mentors, those north stars who you learn from and look up to back to Fetter

saying the exact same thing. On the importance of studying the great of your profession, they did something very special that I could profit from even today. I wish all the youngsters coming up on tour would be super, super curious to find out everything about tennis.

You should know what's so interesting about these people. Something that surprised me

and something that was highly unusual is that Fetter would go for long stretches with no official coach. So in this case, he announces that he and his coach, Lungren, were splitting, says Fetter made another risky choice to change a winning team. This is a pattern throughout his career. Fetter was not too sentimental to break bonds when his inner voice was shouting that he needed change. Go back to what he said in that commencement address, trusting yourself is a talent.

Fetter said he felt that they had fallen into a routine.

I am the one who has to be satisfied. Nobody else. Fetter had no official coach at his stage.

It was highly unusual for a great young player who could have met the salary demands of any

coach of his choosing. But Fetter was in no hurry to replace Lungren and that ability to trust himself led him to have this long career and there's a ton of people in the book where they're comparing and contrasting their approach to their game and their fitness and their training and contrasting it with Fetter's approach. And so there's just one player, Saffin, who's an example of this. Saffin also struggled with significant injuries throughout his

professional career. It is hard not to wonder what might have been if he, in his teens, had met a fitness guru like Paganini and spent some quality time with a performance psychologist,

like Mark Holy. While Fetter came remarkably close to maximizing his abilities and

optimizing his chances, Saffin undeniably did not. This is what he said. The higher I went, the more I started to be heavy in my head. I sometimes had the sparks of wow. This is really pleasant, but most of the time it was heavy, heavy, heavy pressure. I felt it all the time and I got burned out. So I was actually shocked at how much in this book and the Augusti book and I'm certain to read on Novak Jokovic too. The emotional pain that these guys go through. They are constantly

overwhelmed with emotion and sobbing and crying and being distraught after a loss. And Fetter is

no different. I think the difference at Fetter has is his ability to get over it quickly. He could

lose Wimbleton, be crying his eyes out in the locker room or the shower, and then be it dinner with

friends a few hours later. And so a source of emotional pain for both Fetter and Dahl is the

rivalry that they have with one another. And I think the author has a great job of describing how different they are, but also with the similarities they have. So I want to read a big section to you here. Fetter was increasingly accepting of being viewed as a part of a pair. In the beginning, I didn't want a rival, he said. Fetter and Dahl were a great stylistic contrast. Fetter was elegance, acquired cool and effortless power. Dahl was exuberance, innate fire and flexed biceps. Fetter was

smooth and classical. Dahl was rugged and avant-garde. Fetter was tradition. Dahl was youth. Their pre-game approach was also world apart. James Blake beat Dahl in the semi-finals in Indian wells that year, and then lost to Fetter in the final. It was so funny to me he said. The differences in dynamic in the locker room. Before the match, Rafa's got on his big headphones, and he's running up and down the locker room, doing the sprints, tapping his fingers, he's like a caged animal.

And then the next day I'm playing Roger, and we're talking about his house back in Switzerland, and he just bought some land. And it's about what he and his wife are going to do, and it was

honestly like we were sitting at a coffee shop as calm as can be. Yet both men were remarkable

at flipping the switch when it came time for combat. Dahl's transformation came in the locker room. Fetter's on the court. I think people discredit what a killer Roger really is, Blake said. Because he's so relaxed before the match, and he's saying, oh yeah, come out and see the switch's countryside. It's beautiful. And then he goes out and kicks my ass. He still has that absolute fighter's mentality that attitude of "I'm going to win." But they were also strong

commonalities. They were sensitive and empathetic and raised by their families to believe that manners matter. Fetter's motto was, it's nice to be important, but more important to be nice. And the Dahl and his family, subscribe to, you are not special because of who you are, but because of what you do. Both were close to their parents, but had relied heavily in their youth on a former tennis pro whose own career aspirations had fallen short, even their choice in fitness

trainer was similar. Both of their fitness trainers were deep thinkers who preferred to work unconventionally in the shadows instead of traveling the circuit. Both have an old school streak, a belief that face-to-face relations and traditions are worth preserving. Both increasingly used analytics to some degree at their coaches' behest, but both preferred to free their minds and let their instincts reign under pressure. Roger, for example, is not a big fan of stats

in tennis Nadal said, neither am I. He likes and respects the history of sport and respects the stories of champions like I do. Among their mutual understanding was that their rivalry was very good for a business. And was interesting to me, at least in their public statements, it's just how much respect they had for one another, at one point Nadal's just beating Fetter constantly, even though Fetter at this point has more grand centitals, more wins,

and Nadal was trying to direct the conversation when he's talking to the media. It's like, I'm not trying to surpass Fetter. And that's not what I like about the sport. What I like about the sport is fighting. This was very interesting. And so it says Nadal was different, to revel in surpassing Fetter or was not the point. The meaning was in playing each point.

I love the competition.

Maybe I like fighting to win more than to win. Raphael Nadal told Larry Ellison something very similar.

I found this passage from one of the biographies of Larry Ellison that I read. Earlier Nadal had said something that made it deep impression on Larry Ellison. When asked if he loved winning, Nadal shook his head and replied, "No, I love the fight. If you fight hard, the winning will come." Let's go back to another reoccurring idea that helped him achieve the long game in the durable career that he had. He said in the commencement address,

that life is bigger than the court. His outside life actually helped him get over losses more

quickly. This happens over and over again. It's mentioned over and over again in the book. He has happiness to fall back on. I just adore the fact that his family travels everywhere with him, like a traveling show. The whole family is so tight. I really admire that and I think Roger is a

really good person. He's got a good heart and it's hard to find that when you're in a tough, tough

sport. It's hard to find that gentleness. This is what Fetter says about that. These are little things you start doing over the years to get away from the sport and do something different. He said, "Because tennis is a big focus, but there's also something else in life, the private side with my girlfriend and my family. I want to keep that intact as well because I can only play good tennis when I'm happy." Fetter's priority was to keep himself fresh physically and mentally,

to be smart about scheduling and training loads, but also to be smart about how much he put himself in the spotlight and in group settings. Again, he's everything he's doing. The decisions he's making, the decisions his coaches are making, he's their optimizing for the long game. He wants to avoid burning out to be a bright star in the sky that burns out prematurely and he goes into much detail. This might be the best that he says a lot of things in the book about this.

This might be my favorite part. As much as I take things very seriously, I'm very laid back so I can really get let go very quickly, meaning let go of losses. I truly believe this is a secret for a lot of the players and for the young guys is to be able when you leave the court to say, "Okay, I'm leaving it behind. I still know I'm a professional tennis player, but I'm relaxing. I'm doing it my way. Whatever way helps me decompress. Fetter stops speaking for a moment and

showed me his clenched fist." Because if you're constantly like this, looking at his fist,

then that's how you burn out. And so he's asked a question. So you never had a bit of burnout I asked.

He thought for a good 30 seconds before answering. If I do feel burnout coming on, what I've tried to do is break it down to the absolute minimum. And this is the absolute minimum. That's practice, matches, and family. I will do less press, less autographs, less public appearances, less stuff in the public eye. I need to gather myself to gather my energy for the main purpose, which is the match. I had a period of three months once where I asked a tour to help me out a

little bit because I was tired from the constant everyday grind of being in front of the media. That's where I felt at the most, but that was a short period of time. And then this part reminds me of this idea that's in Rick Ruben's book, the book is called The Creative Act. I just did an episode on a few weeks ago. And he talked about that. It's really important to find the time that you work best and you protect that time. And for Roger Fetter, this late night alone time is key to

not burning out. Late night is his therapy time. That's his alone time. That's his me time. He doesn't need to be Paul's player. That's coach. Our miracles husband. Our Mila and Charlene's dad. Our even Roger Fetter, the icon. He protects that therapy time, that alone time, that me time. And then one thing he also does is even though he's training all the time, and he's working all the time. He likes to mix it up. He likes to keep himself from not getting bored. I hadn't been

around someone that had as much flexibility in their approach that Fetter does. At Wimbleton,

he has all these different houses all the time. He doesn't have superstitions. He doesn't always

need to practice in the same place or have one favorite meal. This was a key element in Fetter's career longevity. Too much routine can kill the joy. Too much constant focus can grind you down.

And I think key to this is Fetter understood what drove him. It was an inner score card. At the end

of the day, it was a competition with himself. This is a great quote, great paragraph from Fetter. The idea is that you want to prove to yourself, you can do it and not to other people. That's why for me, this robbery with Rafa okay, it's interesting. But in the end, I care about winning tournaments. That for me is the bottom line. And if Rafa happens to be on the other side, even better, because then I can beat the main rival or make a great story on top of that. But I think what people

like I or Tiger Woods, he's spending all the time with Tiger Woods at this point. But I think what people like I or Tiger Woods are more interested in is not who we're playing or racing against. You want to do it the best you can. It is important you can wake up in the morning and go to bed feeling good about yourself and your effort. And of course, all these different ideas made him more successful on the court and the more successful he was on court, the more successful he was in business.

There's a bunch of different numbers in the book. But there's just a handful of highlights

I want to pull out.

few billionaire athletes on the planet today. And the vast majority of his money has come from off the

court. And so they call this Fetter Inc. Fetter Inc continued on its upward trajectory. By 2013,

Fetter is annual income had reached an estimated $71 million. That put him second on the 2013

Forbes list of world's highest paid athletes behind Tiger Woods in ahead of Kobe Bryant. He takes pride in delivering personalized service. So most of this is long-term sponsorships with these giant companies. Even in his early years, he would visit all 21 of the sponsor sweets at the Swiss indoor tournament to meet and to do meet and greets. He's just so good if you've seen him with sponsors with CEOs. He just has the ability to make you feel like he really cares

about what you're saying and that he has time for you. He's never rushing you. If you're a fan

at a 100% event that one of his sponsors puts on and you're talking to him, he makes you feel

he has all the time in the world to talk to you and hear what you have to say. And he would also

be comfortable taking risks. He was a long-term Nike athlete. And when he couldn't come to terms with Nike in 2018, he took a giant risk on a completely different company. He signs a 10-year apparel deal with Uniclo. The agreement had been reported to pay Federer. That one agreement everyone alone had been reported to pay Federer over 30 million a year. In 2020 Forbes named him the world's highest paid athlete estimating his annual income over over 100 million a year.

That same year only six million was from a official prize money in tennis. And then he's also

very smart businessman because the Uniclo agreement did not cover footwear Federer also invested in on, which is a Swiss running shoe company that's based in Zurich. I actually just spent time with David, one of the founders of on. I spent a few days with him. I found him wildly impressive. So back to this deal. So he signs this deal. He's okay. Uniclo is just clothing. Let's do a deal with a shoe company. Makes sense to do one with a Swiss running shoe company. When on goes public,

Federer's stake in the company was worth about $300 million. And so think about how crazy that is. This is why all of these ideas that Uniclo have been talking about all really to each other. They all work together. Combined there much more valuable. The fact that he optimized for the long game, the long run from day one. Not only did he have a remarkable tennis career, but it benefited him in business. His biggest win in business came 23 years after he turned pro. Federer endured

when so many of his peers had already retired of the 128 men who played singles at the 1999 French Open, which was his debut grand slam tournament. He was the last one still playing on tour.

And I think this quote from Federer explains why. "I never fell out of love with the sport. Never."

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