Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Free press

cartoon: The Asian Age.

Prasar Bharati should be made independent like BBC. The government should not forget that free press is a strength of Indian democracy. No one should forget one's accountability. If the government still wants to control the freedom of the press it will back-fire surely.

Police Police

cartoon: Deccan Chronicle.

There should be some sort of control over police firing. It should not be used indiscriminately.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Life lessons from Dr Kalam

Life lessons from Dr Kalam

It was an unexpected choice, but one that filled the nation with pride and joy.
In the five years since Dr Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam took residence at Rashtrapati Bhavan , he has been nothing short of inspirational. The man who is synonymous with India's space programme soon became synonymous with India's sense of pride, particularly for its youth.
I love the fact that he is one man you cannot conveniently categorise. After all, how do you slot someone whose favourite pastime includes reading the Bhagvad Gita even though he is a devout Muslim? A remarkable self-made scientist who pens poetry in Tamil and plays the veena in his leisure time? A president who retained his fashionably long locks?
This is what I have learnt from the person I think has been one of India's most interesting leaders in recent times:

1. Humility and modesty
These attributes come naturally to those concerned with causes far greater than personal gain.
India's first attempt at launching the Satellite Launch Vehicle met with failure. At that point, Dr Kalam took responsibility for his colleagues and juniors and became answerable for what went wrong. When the second attempt succeeded and took India into the space age, he stepped aside and let his colleagues take credit for this grand achievement.
Attempting something this selfless requires dedication to the achievement of a larger goal; it is the final goal that matters, not who takes the credit for the achievement.
Over time, I have tried putting a lot more emphasis on the task at hand, and on its flawless execution. Also, in my small way, I look out for people at work or in my personal space, while taking part responsibility for their actions.
Dr Kalam was embarrassed by public acclaim to the extent that that he did not like being called Bharat Ratna Dr Kalam. He even gently reminded the directors at the Defence Research and Development Organisation to not refer to him as Bharat Ratna; he did this by having a circular sent across through the DRDO headquarters that civilian awards cannot be used as titles! This, in today's world, where we mostly see people chasing titles and designations simply to flaunt them to their peers.
In my personal space too, the people I respect the most are the ones who are low-profile in these matters. It is almost immediately endearing when you come across people like these.

2. Respect
Dr Kalam has the utmost respect for everyone he interacts with. He even treats and talks to kids as his equals, and respects their opinions. I know of instances where he refers to professors as 'Professor X' and means it with respect. He attaches great importance to their knowledge and experience; even though he might have achieved a lot than they have, he believes there is a lot to learn from each of them.
Not being judgemental, respecting elders, teachers, professors and looking beyond caste, race, age and colour have taken on a whole new meaning in today's society. Over time, I have realised that the people who respect others the most are the ones who are the most respected.

3. Spirituality
It might surprise a few people that a space scientist can be so spiritual. Dr Kalam recites the Gita and the Quran better than some of the more renowned spiritual 'gurus' of today. He believes in the strength of virtues and values, and the role they play in shaping the youth and society in these times.
A complete vegetarian, a teetotaller and a bachelor, Dr Kalam's spirituality seems to be driven by practicality in a world where these attributes might be frowned upon.
It's clear that he respects other religions, and has done his best to understand them -- something that a lot of us need to imbibe ourselves.

4. Being yourself
The pressures and expectations of the presidential post never got to Dr Kalam. The usual full-sleeved blue shirt, the long grey hair, and various 'Kalam-isms' like 'Fantastic!', 'Funny guys, why did they do that?' and 'What's happening?' have made it to many parts of the Rashtrapati Bhavan. In this case, the person changed the place, rather than the place changing the person.
Situations never changed the person Dr Kalam was. He is disarmingly approachable to students, civilians and politicians.
It is this genuineness that makes us all individuals in the first place. I try keeping that in mind when I get flustered by grand or formal situations. I no longer constantly bother about how I speak or dress, thanks to a lesson from Dr Kalam.

5. Respect for children
Dr Kalam believes that children and the youth of today are magical with their ideas and thoughts. This is the reason he spent so much time meeting school kids and addressing the country's youth. He understands the language of youth and their ambitions, without having the air of superiority that age and experience brings with it so often.
Dr Kalam even extended his scientific expertise to help disabled children by replacing their metal supporters, which weigh three kilos, with carbon-based braces weighing 300 grams.
I think it is this, more than anything else, that makes him seem larger than life to me. The fact that he touched so many lives, and did not stop at just addressing them... He gave so many disabled kids a reason to smile.
Thank you, sir, it is an honour to be a fellow Indian. Those presidential shoes are going to be very hard to fill, to say the least.

Source: rediff.com

Monday, July 23, 2007

India to dominate global KPO mkt


India to dominate global KPO mkt


NEW DELHI: India, already known as the back office of the world, will account for two-third of the global Knowledge Process Offshoring (KPO) segment that could create up to 1.8 lakh new jobs here by 2011, a new study has said.

The worldwide KPO market is expected to grow to 16.7 billion dollar in revenues by 2010-2011 at an annual growth rate of 39 per cent. Of this, India would account for 11.2 billion dollars, according to the study by business research and analytics firm Evalueserve.

The industry would employ about 3.5 lakh professionals by March 2011 globally. This includes nearly 2.55 lakh in India, where only about 75,400 people are currently employed.

According to Evalueserve, the KPO industry in India had only 9,000 billable professionals in India, generating revenue of 260 million dollars during 2000-01. This number has grown to 75,400 by 2006-07 with 3.05 billion dollars in revenue at an annual growth rate of 51 per cent.

The anticipated success in KPO comes after the success of Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) in the country, which accounts for revenues of 15.8 billion dollar in 2006-07, a jump from just 7.7 billion dollar in 2003-04.

This huge growth in the global KPO space would be driven by the vast pool of educated and experienced professionals in countries like India, China, Russia, Poland, the Philippines, Hungary and many republics from the erstwhile Soviet Union, California-based Evalueserve's Chairman Alok Aggarwal said.

It is quite likely that companies -- both with their own captives and those using third-party vendors -- may use a "hub and spoke" model in which a provider in India may constitute the "centre" whereas other units in the world may provide appropriate "spokes", Aggarwal said.

Source: timesofindia

Friday, July 20, 2007

Feeling of Hopelessness May Be a Simple Short Circuit

Feeling of Hopelessness May Be a Simple Short Circuit
Experiments Suggest Depression May Spring From Problems in the Brain's 'Wiring'
Mental illness poses a particular challenge for medical researchers trying to understand what is going on in patients' brains. Exploratory surgery is a tough sell.

Instead, researchers turn to animal models of psychiatric ills, bearing in mind that a mouse will never show signs of hypochondria and a fruit fly will never buzz off to Vegas for a gambling addiction. Still, researchers have made headway against a lot of psychiatric ills by experimenting on animals, and a neuroengineering team led by Stanford University's Karl Deisseroth reports on a possible answer to one of the mysteries behind depression.

"Depression raises all kinds of questions," Deisseroth said. "It has all sorts of symptoms and responds to a variety of drugs that act in different ways." Almost 15 million people nationwide suffer from a "major depressive disorder," according to the federal National Institute of Mental Health.

The researchers looked at a rat known for exhibiting a symptom of depression — hopelessness. "They give up on tasks easily," he said. The same rats respond to treatment with fluoxetine, an antidepressant commonly given to people as well. The team treated some of their rats to five-to-seven weeks of stress, such as changing their sleeping and feeding schedules, tilting their cages and using strobe lights. Some of the rats received antidepressants and some didn't.

To measure the rat's hopelessness, the team then dunked them in water for a swimming test and loosed them in an open sandbox, very scary for rats. Then they did the tough sell part of their science, decapitating the rats and slicing up their brains, specifically a part called the hippocampus that has been tied to depression in past research. Researchers have observed shrinkage of the hippocampus in animal models of depression ranging from rats to tree shrews.

The team hooked the slices of rat hippocampus to a novel electronic circuit test called "voltage-sensitive dye imaging" that let them watch electrical circuits fire across the still-living brain tissue of the rats. (The tissue lives on for about five hours after death.) They found that in depressed rats, electrical circuits just died out in the hippocampus slices. "A lot like a river just flowing into a desert and petering out," Deisseroth said. Nonhopeless rat brains just sent the circuit straight through, as did the samples from rats treated with antidepressants before their demise.

Essentially the study — published online by the journal Science — suggests that hopelessness is just a short-circuit of a healthy process in the brain. "People may have genes, or life events, or other factors behind the short circuit, but it may all be tied to a common mechanism," Deisseroth said. Analysis suggests that antidepressants may help new brain cells grow in the hippocampus, allowing the circuit to connect, the study concludes.

For researchers looking for new drugs to treat depression that may be a key insight, he argues further. Researchers should just look for ways to fix the hippocampal circuit, rather than concentrating on individual causes behind its disruption, if the team's findings applies to people.
And while people likely won't volunteer for the hippocampal slicing analysis, improvements in medical imaging may allow researchers to view electrical brain circuits in coming years in sufficient detail to repeat the rat experiment. "Once we know all that, we can look at more targeted therapies for depression," Deisseroth said.

"It is important to note as we do in the paper that this is only the first step in probing depression circuitry with high-speed imaging, and we are cautious in our interpretations because there is much more work to be done to probe the possible convergence of other life experiences and treatments and genes on this and other brain circuits."

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Depression/Story?id=3358835&page=1

Get inspiration from Warren Buffet

CNBC interviews Warren Buffet, the third richest man who has donated $31 billion to charity. Some noteworthy aspects of his life:

1) He bought his first share at age 11 and he now regrets that he started too late!

2) He bought a small farm at age 14 with savings from delivering newspapers.

3) He still lives in the same small 3 bedroom house in mid-town Omaha that he bought after he got married 50 years ago. He says that he has everything he needs in that house. His house does not have a wall or a
fence.

4) He drives his own car everywhere and does not have a driver or security people around him.

5) He never travels by private jet, although he owns the worlds largest private jet company.

6) His company, BerkshireHathaway, owns 63 companies. He writes only one letter each year to the CEOs of these companies, giving them goals for the year. He never holds meetings or calls them on a regular basis.

7) He has given his CEOs only two rules. Rule number 1: do not lose any of your share holders’ money. Rule number 2: Do not forget rule number 1.

8) He does not socialize with the high society crowd. His past time after he gets home is to make himself some pop corn and watch television.

9) Bill Gates, the world’s richest man met him for the first time only 5 years ago. Bill Gates did not think he had anything in common with Warren Buffet. So he had scheduled his meeting only for half hour. But
when Gates met him, the meeting lasted for ten hours and Bill Gates became a devotee of Warren Buffet.

10) Warren Buffet does not carry a cell phone, nor has a computer on his desk.

11) His advice to young people: Stay away from credit cards and invest in yourself.

Karishma Kotak


UNPA

cartoon: The Asian Age

The third front leaders are third class leaders.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

politics

cartoon: deccan chronicl



what a politics!

advantage hotel business

Monday, July 16, 2007

costly higher education

We need 'Sivaji' in real life to help the needy to go for higher education. Government should sanction loans liberally for higher education. Nobody should be deprived the opportunity of higher learning due to want of finance.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Strength V Weakness

When you are not strong enough you will try to highlight your opponents to weakness. That is weakest trait in any human being.

cartoon: The Asian Age

Gemini

Gemini is the third Sign of the Zodiac, and those born under this Sign will be quick to tell you all about it. That's because they love to talk! It's not just idle chatter with these folks, either. The driving force behind a Gemini's conversation is their mind. The Gemini-born are intellectually inclined, forever probing people and places in search of information. The more information a Gemini collects, the better. Sharing that information later on with those they love is also a lot of fun, for Geminis are supremely interested in developing their relationships. Dalliances with these folks are always enjoyable, since Geminis are bright, quick-witted and the proverbial life of the party. Even though their intellectual minds can rationalize forever and a day, Geminis also have a surplus of imagination waiting to be tapped. Can a Gemini be boring? Never!

Since Geminis are a mix of the yin and the yang, they are represented perfectly by the Twins. The Gemini-born can easily see both sides of an issue, a wonderfully practical quality. Less practical is the fact that you're not sure which Twin will show up half the time. Geminis may not know who's showing up either, which can prompt others to consider them fickle and restless.

They can be wishy-washy, too, changing their mood on a simple whim. It's this characteristic which readily suggests the Mutable Quality assigned to this Sign. Mutable folks are flexible and go with the flow. Further, the Twins are adaptable and dexterous and can tackle many things at once. It's a good thing, too, when you consider their myriad interests. The downside of such a curious mind, however, can be a lack of follow-through. How much can any one person do, anyway?

source: http://www.astrology.com/allaboutyou/sunsigns/gemini.html


partial list of Geminis

21-May
Aditya Yash Chopra
9-Jun
amisha patel
17-Jun
Amrita Rao
4-Jun
Angelina Jolie
4-Jun
Anil Ambani
7-Jun
Anna Kournikova
12-Jun
Arun Govil
28-May
Ayesha Jhulka
10-Jun
Bala Krishna
13-Jun
Ban ki Moon
17-May
Charmi
31-May
Clint Eastwood
6-Jun
D. Ramanaidu
8-Jun
Dimple Kapadia
10-Jun
E.V.V.Satyanarayana
7-Jun
Ekta Kapoor
12-Jun
George H W Bush
2-Jun
Ilaya Raja
5-Jun
J M Keyns
3-Jun
Jaya Bachchan
23-May
jewel
28-May
Jim thorpe
29-May
john F Kennedy
20-May
Jr NTR
23-May
K. Raghavendra Rao
25-May
Karan Yash Johar
14-Jun
Kiran Anupam Kher
9-Jun
Kiran Bedi
1-Jun
Kodandarami Reddy A
28-May
Koti
31-May
Krishna
15-Jun
Lakshmi Nivas Mittal
11-Jun
Lalu prasad Yadav
17-Jun
leander paes
7-Jun
mahesh bhupati
2-Jun
Mani Ratnam
1-Jun
Marilyn Monroe
16-Jun
Mithun Chakravarty
21-May
Mohan Lal
22-May
Naomi Campbell
4-Jun
Neena Gupta
30-May
Ness Wadia
20-Jun
nicole kidman
28-May
NTR
30-May
Paresh Rawal
18-Jun
Paul McCartney
2-Jun
R. Madhavan
3-Jun
Rafael Nadal
19-Jun
rahul gandhi
22-May
Raja Ram Mohan Roy
24-May
Rajesh Roshan
20-May
Ramesh Rajaram Powar
4-Jun
S. P. Balasubramaniam
1-Jun
S.V.Krishna Reddy
19-Jun
salman rushdie
8-Jun
Shilpa Shetty
20-May
Sirivennela Sitaramasastry
26-May
stevie nicks
6-Jun
Sunil Dutt
20-Jun
vikram seth
28-May
Vināyak Dāmodar Sāvarkar

Citizen's basic right

Poor chaps unable to use their basic right. That's third class front for you.

cartoon: by Subhani Deccan Chronicle

Bhagavad Gita

Change is the Law of Nature.

Friday, July 13, 2007

13.7.2007 Indian Express cartoon

And here, Operation Maun Vrat?


Peace does not mean staying calm at the times of turbulence.

Reddy tops class at Osmania University journalism




Reddy tops class at Osmania University’s Journalism & Mass Communication.

Reddy topped the class in BCJ for the academic year 2006-07.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Door Darshan

The government should concentrate on quality content and attract viewers rather than burdening the common man.

http://pigmediacraft.sulekha.com

Loan Sharks


Loan sharks

Unlimited credit for that car you always wanted. Personal loans for the asking. The Indian consumer has never had it so good. But this rosy picture turns gloomy in the case of even a minor default. Yogesh Tiwari delves into the menace of unlawful loan recovery...
Y Yadaiah, a 42-year-old state government employee in Hyderabad, died when he was wrongfully confined and tortured by Elite Financial Services, a recovery agent of ICICI Bank. He was picked up from a bus stop near his office on June 22 and forcibly taken to the agent’s office for recovery of a loan of Rs 15,000.

Suresh Babu, a resident of Bangalore, took a two-wheeler loan from ICICI Bank and paid all the dues. In March 2007 the bank deducted the loan amount twice through the electronic clearance system (ECS). As they deducted money twice he did not clear the dues for the month of April. Then followed a visit by two people to his residence demanding money for the months of March and April. They did not have any identification card or any letter. They started harassing him and told him to pay the outstanding amount.

Iqbal Singh took a car loan from HDFC Bank in Delhi. Somehow, he defaulted on two installments. He later informed the bank officials that he now had sufficient funds in his account and he was willing to pay the outstanding amount. The officials asked him to visit their office. When his daughter-in-law went there the bank officials confiscated the car and told her to pay the total balance loan amount plus Rs 15,000 as crane charges. The officials harassed him over the phone and used filthy language.Now, even after paying all the dues the bank has not issued the no dues certificate (NOC) to Singh. He has filed a case to get the NOC and the amount he has overpaid.

Jatin Shah, a resident of Vadodara, Gujarat, took a credit card from ABN-AMRO Bank. He returned the same as per their advice. Since the last over 10 months he has been receiving phone calls on his mobile from Delhi. They are demanding Rs 4300. Shah asked them to furnish him the statement for the use of his credit card as he had cleared all the dues before returning it to the bank. Now the frequency of the phone calls has increased and the language is crude with threats of damage to his personal assets.


These cases present the true but hard-to-believe picture of the way Indian banks, especially those in the private sector, treat their customers by using the muscle power of the so-called recovery agents or goons. Increasing consumerism has led to people getting trapped in the web of credit offered by the banks in the form of credit cards, educational loans, personal loans and other soft loans. In case of a minor default (because of hidden charges which are very high and not explained to the consumers at the time of offering) these banks use strong arm tactics to recover their dues. The physical and mental harassment forces the customer to surrender. Sometimes the harassment is so much that it can cause a heart attack or may force the customer to com

of them was shot. An ICICI bank official clarified that the so-called goons were not associated with them. In response to a query by Sahara Time a bank official pointed out that Jitendra Singh was a customer of ICICI Bank and he has more than 10 overdue EMIs on his Hyundai Santro car bearing registration no. UP-32-AV-8492. According to the bank, notices have been sent to the customer to clear the dues. The car was earlier repossessed on February 9, 2006 on default of six overdue EMI’s and subsequently released back to the customer on clearance of pending overdue installments. “This incidence has nothing to do with the recovery process of the bank. The ICICI Bank has a well laid down code of conduct for the recovery of its overdue accounts”, the bank statement said.
There are millions of consumers trapped in the credit web designed by the so-called customer-friendly banks. According to a study conducted by CCHAI, credit card holders in the country who pay the highest rates of interest in the world, have been ripped off around Rs 6,000 crore as ‘extra charges’ by banks in a span of 10 years. These banks have extracted this huge amount in the name of late fee, cash advance fee, billed finance fee, overlimit fee, cash withdrawal fee, cheque pick up fee and service taxes on all these fees.
Gidappa said, “The RBI should take action against the banks who do forceful recovery. We have received thousands of complaints of credit card holders regarding harassment by the bank officials while doing the recovery of the outstanding money. We receive around 20 telephone calls per day in Bangalore alone and it is growing by the day.”
According to S C Khanna, co-ordinator, National Consumer Helpline (NCH), people should take less credit and within their capacity to pay. “If any harassment takes place consumers can make complaints to the Ombudsman set up by the banks. If the bank does not reply within one month of lodging the complaint then they can approach the RBI.”
There is a key difference in the recovery process and rule of law in foreign countries. A recovery agent in the US or UK is less likely to use violence out of fear of the law. Here the banks have the guts to beat the law in order to lower their bad debts. In this scenario the outsourcing of loan recovery is ethically questionable.
(Some of the above mentioned cases are taken from www.core.nic.in, an online consumer redressal forum)


Things to remember:

Do not answer the questions asked by the recovery agents over the phone.

Always keep a note of the identity proof of any agent coming to your house. Try to retain his photograph if possible.

Take the help of neighbours.

Take the help of the police and lodge a complaint.

Don't make any payment to the agent. Pay directly to the bank.

Source: http://saharatime.com/NewsDetail.aspx?newsid=1556&catid=80

Spend wisely, do not borrow when it is not necessary. Just for the sake of luxuries never borrow.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Here and Now by Sudhir Tailang (The Asian Age)

The government of India should give more importance to the safety. Always safety first should be the motto of any government, individual, organisation. For that matter anything the main motto should be safety first. Because you cannot regain lost life. That's as simple as...

AsiaPac's 284m net surfers browsing statistcis

AsiaPac's 284m net surfers browsing stats revealed

The comScore World Metrix study reveals that in May there were nearly 284 million people age 15 or older who accessed the Internet from either a home or work computer in the 10 countries covered by the study - Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan.

According to comScore, this represents 10 percent of the Asian-Pacific population 15 years of age and older. "The average person in the Asia-Pacific region visited the Internet on 13.8 days in the month and spent 20.2 hours viewing 2,171 pages. This compares to the global averages of 17.1 usage days per month, 25.2 hours per month, and 2,519 pages per month, indicating that the Asia-Pacific region's PC-based Internet usage is somewhat lower than the rest of the world.

The comScore study compares activity across the 10 countries "with a consistent panel-based measurement ensuring harmonised cross country comparisons." ComScore says it uses "a massive, global cross-section of more than two million consumers who have given comScore permission to confidentially capture their browsing and transaction behaviour, including online and offline purchasing." comScore panellists also participate in survey research that "captures and integrates their attitudes and intentions."

Other findings from the study include:

- South Korea boasts the greatest rate of Internet usage, with 65 percent of its population using the Internet in May (home and work locations, age 15 or older), followed by Australia (62 percent), New Zealand (60 percent) and Hong Kong (59 percent). India has the lowest penetration at just three percent.

China has the largest online population with 91.5 million people age 15 or older accessing the Internet from either a home or a work computer in May 2007. However, this translates to a penetration of only nine percent of the country's population. Japan had 53.7 million users (49 percent penetration) and South Korea 26.3 million (65 percent penetration). Combined, these three countries account for 60 percent of the region's Internet population.

South Korea has the most active online population, using the Internet an average of 17.4 days per person in May, and dedicating 31.2 hours to viewing 4,546 pages during the month – twice as many pages as the regional average of 2,171 pages per user.

New Zealanders constitute the smallest online population in the region (1,949 million people) but are online 16.4 days per month, versus the regional average of 13.8 days.

Source: http://www.itwire.com.au/content/view/13389/53/

A Thousand Places to See Before You Die


A Thousand Places to See Before You Die

Patricia Schultz's New Book Focuses on Travel in U.S., Canada


As people embark on their summer travel, many head overseas for relaxation. According to author Patricia Schultz's new book, "1,000 Places to See in the U.S. and Canada Before You Die," the states offer plenty of options. The best-selling author worked on the book for four years and visited 80 percent of the places in the book.

From family vacations to getaways with friends, Schultz gives recommendations on where you should visit. See some of her suggestions below.

Romantic Retreats
Little St. Simon's Island, Ga. It's called little St. Simon's Island and it's part of the Great Barrier Islands, which run for hundreds of miles off the southeast coast. You can find tons of developed places to play golf and tennis but, little St. Simon's Island is a one-of-a-kind place because it is privately owned and has been kept as a nature preserve. It's completely untouched and looks the way it did 200 to 300 years ago. No more than 30 guests are allowed at a time so it's almost like having the island to yourself. There is an old family estate, which is rustic, but it's amazing to have this pristine island to explore. You can take ecotours and you can horseback ride, canoe and fly-fish. The island is also on a major flyway, so it provides some of the best bird-watching anywhere in North America with more than 300 species.

Romantic River Song Inn-Estes Park, Colo. This special place is the Romantic River Song Inn at the gateway to the Rocky Mountain National Park. The hotel is on its own parcel of land with a stream running through it. There are massage tables for couples under a canopy of trees by the stream. So, if you're not in love when you arrive, you may be when you leave. The owners even are qualified to marry you if the spirit moves you. From the hotel, you can venture into the park, which is 400 square miles of Rocky Mountain grandeur.

The Northern Lights, Alaska One of the best places to view the aurora borealis or the northern lights is at Chena Hot Springs, Alaska. The best time is from October to March. If you see this once, you will never forget it. It's a true masterpiece of nature. There are greens and pinks in the sky and it swirls and moves. It is spectacular.

Incomplete…


Source: http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=3345170&page=1&GMA=true&GMA=true

Monday, July 9, 2007

Roger Federer 1,2,3,45
















Federer shows his mettle in thrilling final

He's as smooth as silk when moving side to side and he may not show much emotion when he's keenly constructing points, but if anyone is still questioning Roger Federer's guts, it's time to swallow those thoughts forever more

In the most difficult of all his 11 Grand Slam title runs, Federer dug deep into Wimbledon's Centre Court, yelled out to the ghosts of champions to come to his aid, and overcame his nemesis, Rafael Nadal, 7-6 (7), 4-6, 7-6 (3), 2-6, 6-2, in the Wimbledon final.
"It's my first Grand Slam final I won in five sets," said Federer, who wept in relief. "That alone is going to get emotions out of you because you're drained towards the end, mentally and physically. You fought your heart out the whole way. So in the end you want to come through as the winner because otherwise it's so disappointing because you came so close."

With Bjorn Borg nervously watching from the royal box, the Swiss tied the great Swede's record of five straight Wimbledon victories when on match point he courageously ripped an inside-out forehand return, followed it up with a vicious forehand down the line and then hammered an overhead for the victory.

Due to his artistic shotmaking and genius strategic maneuvering, Federer isn't often given credit for how tough he really is, but this final-round victory was all about heart and inner fortitude.

Much like Borg did when he had to go to 8-6 in the fifth set to overcome John McEnroe and win his fifth straight Wimbledon crown in 1980, Federer's back was firmly against the wall against Nadal. At times during the fifth set it looked like he might snap, but he kept tugging at his vast reserve and finally mentally out-toughed the muscular Spaniard.




"The record was on the line and everything just adds up and even puts more pressure on you," Federer said. "So for me, because I haven't played many five-set matches in the last few years, if you look at my statistics, because I've always been able to either win clearer and then would lose more clear. But I haven't lost many best-of-five set matches lately. I knew that was a big occasion, maybe the biggest occasion of my life so far on a big stage. I was very happy to come through as the stronger."

Nadal had tortured Federer all day long with wicked lefty slice serves and heavy topspinned forehands into his backhand, blinding speed and perfect passing shots.

While Federer served well most of the match, cracked more than a few blinding forehands of his own and contested headier tiebreakers, he looked like he might come undone after losing his cool in the fourth set due to a questionable call, even though Nadal was treated for a knee injury after the fifth game of the set.

But Federer never completely lost faith and continued to go for his shots, while three-time French Open champion Nadal let some critical chances slip. The Spaniard had two break point chances with Federer serving at 1-1, but couldn't handle a Federer serve on the first one and — in what he later said was his best opportunity — hooked a forehand just wide. Federer then held to 2-1.

At 2-2, Nadal had two other break-point chances, but Federer nailed a kick serve that Nadal couldn't get on top of quickly enough and then torched a service winner down the tee and held to 3-2.

The Spaniard seemed to know that his opportunity was gone and he faded in the next game, when Federer broke him to 4-2 with an amazing forehand winner down the line on the dead run. Nadal kept chugging, but Federer had already raised his game to another level. He stepped on his great rival to close the contest out with a series of blinding shots.

Had Nadal been able to stop Federer's streak, which now runs 34 matches at the Big W, the tennis universe would have been turned on its head. It would have been the first time that Nadal (who still owns a 8-5 lifetime edge over the Swiss) had taken him down at a fast-court major.

"I win my share. He wins his," Federer said. "It's a good rivalry. We've been at the top for over a hundred weeks together. It is like building up to one of maybe the great rivalries. But we sometimes haven't lived up to the expectations in the past, in our matches in majors especially. I think maybe that was maybe a bit of a problem. But you can't always play five-set match thrillers. I'm happy it happened today. I left as the winner. It was perfect."

Moreover, Nadal would have put down Federer at the location where the Swiss has shined the most, and for the first time could have legitimately called himself the world's finest all-around player.

But it was not to be, even though the 21-year-old Nadal played about as aggressive of a match as he ever has on grass. The outcome of the contest turned on that missed forehand in the third game of the fifth set. For the first time in his short career, Nadal had to go back to the locker room thinking that the steely armor that surrounds his large heart cracked a little.

"It was tough for me, no, because I have two 15-40s in the fifth," Nadal said. "One was big chance to have the break. I know if I have the break in the fifth I have very good chances to have the title. Well, he save some points with the serve. And later when he has to win, he has to break me, he played very good. So, well, just congratulate him. Good win for him."

With his 11th Slam title, Federer tied Borg and Aussie great Rod Laver for the third-most ever. He's just one behind Australian Roy Emerson, who owns 12 Slam crowns, and three behind all-time great Pete Sampras at the young age of 25.

He'll be favored going into the U.S. Open once again, where he'll be seeking his fourth straight title. He may not be the best ever yet, but he's making a serious push at the mantle. If he continues to out-tough fields like he did at Wimbledon, he could conceivably tie Sampras next year.

The American won his 11th Slam title just a month before he turned 27, while Federer won his just a month before he turns 26. The Swiss is now a year ahead of Sampras' pace. Whether he'll be able to avoid serious injury like Sampras, the seven-time Wimbledon champion, is an open question, but there's no doubt that he has the talent to break his record.

"The best player of history has 14," Nadal said. "He has 11. So he's very close. He's still playing unbelievable. Anyway, even if he's going to win 14 or 16 or 13, in my opinion, the tennis level is the best of the history."

Unlike many champions, Federer is quite aware of his place in history and just how far he has to go to achieve his goals. He has Sampras in his sights and he's taking dead aim at him, which shows just how serious he is about ending his career as the god of his sport.



"Obviously it's on my mind," Federer said. "But it's not like anything where I say I have to beat this record otherwise it's no good. Pete Sampras is maybe the greatest player we've ever had. So to come out and break his record, it's not the easiest thing, I know that. It takes me five Wimbledons and three Australian Opens and three U.S. Opens to just get close to him. So it just shows you what a great player he was.

"I don't know how much longer I can keep it up, you know, but I definitely feel like I'm mentally and physically still fit to go on for many more years to come. I'd love to equal his record, let's put it that way first. [But] to be on the same level as Pete Sampras, my former hero in a way, is already very nice, but I'm not there yet."

Source: http://msn.foxsports.com/tennis/story/7002748
1,2,3,45 what is this...
The final battle was between 1st seed and 2nd seed that lasted for 3 hours and 45 minutes.