Nadal, Federer more than familiar with one another

Roger Federer celebrates his semifinal victory over Russia's Marat Safin. The win set up Federer's third consecutive meeting in the singles finals against Rafael Nadal. The two will meet today in Wimbledon, England.

? After moving within a victory of his sixth consecutive Wimbledon title, Roger Federer found time to catch only a few games of Rafael Nadal’s semifinal.

Federer does have a DVD of Nadal’s match, but he wasn’t exactly rushing to use it for scouting purposes before they meet for the Wimbledon championship today.

“I know plenty already,” Federer said. “I’ll watch more if I think I have to, but at the moment, I think I know everything that I need to.”

He certainly should. After all, today’s encounter will be the sixth Grand Slam title match between the No. 1-ranked Federer and No. 2 Nadal, more than for any other pair of men in the 40-year Open era.

“I think it’s quite incredible, myself,” Federer said, “that we’ve played each other so many times on so many big occasions.”

While he isn’t exactly sure where their rivalry stands in tennis annals, when discussing it Saturday, Federer did toss around names such as Borg, Connors, McEnroe, Lendl, Becker, Edberg, Agassi and Sampras.

“I don’t know how it will be looked at in many years’ time, because at the moment, you are right in it, and you try to win the matches that come along against your main rival. It’s hard,” Federer said. “I know it’s something special what we’re going through at the moment.”

They met in the past three French Open finals, with Nadal winning each time.

And now they will meet in their third consecutive Wimbledon final, with Federer holding a 2-0 edge, part of his record-tying streak of five titles in a row at the All England Club.

Some significant milestones are at stake today.

Federer, who tied Bjorn Borg’s modern mark of five Wimbledon titles last year, is trying to become the first man since the 1880s to win six consecutive Wimbledon championships. When Willie Renshaw collected six successive titles from 1881-86, though, he had to play only one match during each of his defenses because the reigning champion was given a bye to the final then.

Nadal, for his part, is aiming to become the first man since Borg in 1980 to win the French Open and Wimbledon in the same season.

Nadal leads the head-to-head series 11-6, though away from clay, Federer leads, 5-2. It will be the 14th Federer-Nadal matchup in a tournament final, putting the pair fourth in Open era history, behind only Ivan Lendl vs. John McEnroe (20); Andre Agassi vs. Pete Sampras (16); Boris Becker vs. Stefan Edberg (16); and Jimmy Connors vs. McEnroe (15).

Given that Federer is only 26 years old, and Nadal 22, they could be adding to their total for some time.

Consider, also, just how much better Federer and Nadal have been than their contemporaries. Federer is in his record 231st straight week atop the rankings, while Nadal is in his record 154th straight week right behind him.

“Sure, it is a nice rivalry because we are No. 1 and No. 2. That’s the main rivalry because if someone is No. 1 and the other one is No. 5, (it) doesn’t matter, no?” Nadal said. “But for the last years we did well, and I hope (it continues) like this for a lot of years.”

They might not be the best of pals, but they do have a good relationship. Last year, when Nadal was having trouble arranging a commercial flight from a tournament in Montreal to another in Ohio, Federer gave him a lift on a private jet.

Both speak in glowing terms about the other’s game, even if Federer is not a huge fan of how much time Nadal takes between points.

Said Federer about Nadal: “He’s definitely made me more tough.”

Said Nadal about Federer: “He plays specially, very nice all the time, very easy.”