Roger Federer played over 1,500 singles matches.
He won almost 80% of them.
Impressive – but look closer.
On average, Federer won just 54% of the points in each match.
Barely more than half.
That means even the greatest player of his generation lost nearly every second point he played.
And that’s the lesson.
When you lose constantly – even while winning – you learn something critical:
you can’t afford to dwell on every shot.
You miss.
Move on.
Commit fully to the next point.
No sulking.
No whining.
No loss of enthusiasm.
Negative energy is wasted energy.
Federer wasn’t the best because he knew how to win.
He was the best because he mastered the space between points.
The ability to reset.
To stay composed in pressure moments.
To play the next ball with clarity, not baggage.
That’s not just tennis.
That’s performance.
Because greatness isn’t built on avoiding failure – it’s built on recovering faster than everyone else.