Roger Federer easily negotiates first hurdle

The Swiss master is pursuing an eighth Wimbledon title at the All England club

Roger Federer has beaten Paolo Lorenzi of Italy during their first round match at Wimbledon. Photograph: Valdran Xhemaj
Roger Federer has beaten Paolo Lorenzi of Italy during their first round match at Wimbledon. Photograph: Valdran Xhemaj

Roger Federer began his latest quest for a record eighth Wimbledon title in style by brushing aside Paolo Lorenzi in straight sets.

The Swiss grass-court master failed to reach the quarter-finals of a grand slam for the first time in a decade last summer in London, bombing out in the second round to Ukrainian Sergiy Stakhovsky.

The 32-year-old offered Italian Lorenzi zero chance of an upset at the All England Club , easing through 6-1 6-1 6-3 in one hour and 33 minutes.

Federer was champion in 2012, seeing off Andy Murray for his seventh triumph.

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Just six weeks shy of turning 33, Federer launched this year’s tilt at history confident but untested, his evergreen craft and guile still decisive.

The 17-time grand slam winner still harbours the clear desire to surpass Pete Sampras’ seven Wimbledon victories: while the challenges ahead will rise dramatically, this was a comfortable opening.

After claiming the title at Halle this month, he made short work of world number 83 Lorenzi, who remains without a main-draw singles victory at a grand slam event after 13 attempts.

Federer wasted little time hitting his Wimbledon stride, stalking Court One with trademark panache and verve — claiming the first set in 25 minutes.

The unfazed All England Club favourite broke Lorenzi twice in the opening exchange, firing an ace to seal the set after surviving three break points in the seventh game.

Federer’s control hardly wavered, as he registered three service breaks to claim the second set with ease.

The decorated former champion wasted four match points in failing to steal a second break in the final set.

Summoning all his experience though, Federer served out for victory — typically closing with an ace.