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Tears flow as emotions rule at Roger Federer's farewell

Roger Federer stressed, between sobs, that his were happy tears - at first to the 17,500 spectators and then to his family, teenage daughters, Charlene Riva and Myla Rose. Beside him, on their court-side seat, was his great rival Rafael Nadal, he was dolorous. The Swiss covered the Spaniard's hand with his own, ostensibly to console him. Or to be consoled. The lines were smudged, it was that kind of an evening. Earlier Nadal and Federer went down 6-4, 6-7, 9-11 in the Laver Cup to the American pair of Frances Tiafoe and Jack Sock in what was the 41-year-old's farewell game. The result is irrelevant. While the match itself had moments of Federer magic, including one at the start of the campaign, where the 41-year-old on a dodgy knee threaded the needle, the hole-like gap between post and net. The Americans won the point, even if Federer got the applause.

When Federer entered the Arena, a little behind Nadal, a tempest of emotions blew across the Greenwich Peninsula. The acoustics of a love song. "We'll get through this somehow," Federer told spectators after the closing notes that accompanied his last dance. "Everything was for the last time (today), tying my shoelaces one more time… I didn't want to feel alone tonight. I wanted it to be a celebration at the end, it is exactly what I hoped for." Federer, who made crying an acceptable expression on the tennis court, was doing well until he came to address his wife Mirka. "She could've stopped me a long, long time ago, but she kept me going," he said.

Later in his last post-match media interactions, which finished past 2 am (BST), the Swiss gave himself a thumbs up for the way he handled emotions on the court. "I wanted to have an evening where I did not have to take the

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