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Tiger, Federer domination unheard of

Rivalry of excellence has developed between two friends

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Roger Federer, left, and Tiger Woods talk after Woods played a round during the HSBC Champions tournament in Shanghai, China, last November. Federer and Woods are making history in their respective sports, owning tennis and golf the way very few ever have.
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updated 10:46 p.m. ET Feb. 2, 2007

They crisscross the globe, dominating on almost every continent, one whacking a small, white ball better than anyone in the world, the other whaling away on a fuzzy green one with equal aplomb.

Tiger Woods and Roger Federer are making history in their respective sports, owning golf and tennis the way very few ever have. Over the weekend, they wrote new chapters in their march toward sports history.

No. 1 in golf, Woods won his seventh straight PGA Tour event on Sunday in San Diego, a record eclipsed only by Byron Nelson back in the 1940s when the competition wasn’t as tough.

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No. 1 in tennis, Federer won the Australian Open a half a world away, marking his 10th grand slam victory and furthering his quest to become the best tennis player ever.

Their excellence has united them over the years. They have become friends, and neither lets his own accomplishment go unnoticed by the other.

“He’ll text me and say he won one there,” Woods said in an interview Sunday on ESPN. “Now, I’ve got to text him and say we’re all even.”

It’s a friendly rivalry between two men who never have to play each other — the 31-year-old golf star and a 25-year-old counterpart on the tennis circuit. They are athletes who dominate in individual, sometimes lonesome, sports — men who recognize the commitment and sacrifice that must be made, even if the games they play may seem foreign to the other.

Last year, Woods was in Federer’s box to watch his U.S. Open victory. A few months later, Federer walked the course with Woods at a golf tournament in China.

Though many wonder how the joys of fatherhood — his wife, Elin, is due with their first child this summer — might affect him, Woods conceded his charge toward the top of golf’s record book might be a more realistic quest than Federer’s.

“The only thing going for me, is I’ve got longevity in my corner,” Woods said, acknowledging the reality that golfers can play on a top level into their 40s, while tennis players fade out much earlier.

Not so long ago, Nelson’s record of 11 victories seemed untouchable. Nelson racked up those wins under very different circumstances, before golf reached the heights it’s at today and before seemingly every player had a swing guru and a personal trainer.

Though Nelson’s record suddenly appears reachable, Woods remains focused on another number: 18. That’s the number of majors Jack Nicklaus won. Woods entered 2007 with 12, and even if he misses the British Open to be on hand for his child’s birth, he’ll still be favored to win the other three this year.

“If you want to rate it ... you can’t compare four in a row in majors,” Woods said of the so-called ’Tiger Slam’ he won in 2000-01, compared to his current PGA Tour streak. “There’s no comparison in that. That’s what we play for.”

But as much as Nicklaus, maybe Woods really should be keeping his eye on Federer, who’s two majors short in tennis of where Tiger stands in golf.

As in golf, excellence in tennis can be judged either by dominance in the majors or by week-in, week-out success. Either way, Federer passes the test.

During the recently completed two weeks in Melbourne, he became the first man since Bjorn Borg in 1980 to go through a major without losing a set. Federer tied a 73-year-old record by making his seventh consecutive final in majors. He needs only four more Grand Slam wins to match the record held by Pete Sampras.

“Roger is dominating the game much, much more than I ever did,” Sampras told The Associated Press. “What he’s done the last three years hasn’t ever been done in the sport.”

Federer already has enough points in the tennis standings to ensure he will break Jimmy Connors’ record of 160 straight weeks atop the men’s rankings by the end of next month.

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“Breaking records and doing something that hasn’t been done for a long time, it’s really nice,” Federer said.

The only hole in his resume has been his inability to win the French Open, played on tricky clay courts in Paris each May.

“I think it’s going to be a very interesting French Open for me ... hopefully win the title,” he said. “That will be a dream come true. That’s the only way I can make this season a better one than last year. Otherwise it won’t be possible.”

But as the recently completed weekend proved, with these athletes, almost anything seems possible.

                         TIGER'S PGA WIN STREAK

Tiger Woods had won 7 consecutive PGA tournaments, the second-longest win streak in Tour history, before falling in the third round of the WGC Match Play Championship. Byron Nelson holds the record of 11 set in 1945.

2006 dateTournamentScoreEdgeSecond
1/25-1/28Buick Invitational-152Howell
7/20-7/23British Open-182DiMarco
8/3-8/6Buick Open-243Furyk
8/17-8/20PGA Championship-185Micheel
8/24-8/27WGC Bridgestone-10-Cink*
9/1-9/4Deutsche Bank-162Singh
9/28-10/1WGC AmEx-238Poulter, Scott
* In playoff

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