Roger Federer BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Roger Federer has been in the headlines all weekend, captivating San Francisco for the 2025 Laver Cup both on and off the court. Last week, he unveiled six newly renovated courts at John McLaren Park as part of the Laver Cup’s Community Legacy Project, dazzling kids with trick shots and playful rallies—and the kids could hardly believe they were hitting balls with a 20-time Grand Slam champion. Federer even teamed up with Yannick Noah, rallied with San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie, and worked the crowd with autographs and selfies, relishing the city he admits he wishes he’d visited more during his storied playing days, as covered by SFGate and the Associated Press. The legacy vibe is strong—Federer, now 44 and three years into retirement, says he’s happy to watch from the sidelines as the Laver Cup thrives at the $1.4 billion Chase Center, home of the Golden State Warriors, and jokes that he feels sad he can’t play on the iconic black court after seeing it in the flesh.
The Laver Cup is no longer just his post-career pet project; it’s blossomed into a sold-out global showcase, churning out north of $20 million just in ticket sales and a total commercial haul of around $50 million this year according to Racket Business. Matches featuring the likes of Alcaraz, Zverev, and Taylor Fritz underscore the stakes, but Federer’s presence continues to provide the event with a unique international cachet, even as blue-chip sponsors like Rolex, Mercedes-Benz, and new supporters such as Boss and Alipay+ expand the Cup’s reach beyond his own brand. This weekend’s star-studded atmosphere went up another notch as Warriors superstar Steph Curry joined Federer at center court for a viral pre-match coin toss—a lighthearted exchange between two GOATs that had fans eating it up all across social media, as reported by Heavy Sports.
Off the business court, Federer’s wealth remains the stuff of legend. Bloomberg and AOL note that his net worth is now approximately $1.3 billion, thanks in large part to landmark deals with Uniqlo and investments like his 3 percent stake in Swiss sneaker phenom On, now worth roughly $500 million.
However, Federer couldn’t escape a social media dustup this week. A candid appearance on Andy Roddick’s Served Podcast reignited the tennis community, thanks to Federer’s musings about tournament organizers slowing court surfaces—he suggested it gives an edge to players like Jannik Sinner and helps engineer marquee matchups with Carlos Alcaraz. This kicked off a wave of speculation, memes, and playful critique, with some fans poking fun at Federer’s age and nostalgia for his era. The debate highlights just how much Federer’s influence still stirs the pot, even in retirement, with his every word dissected in the tennis Twittersphere.
All told, Federer’s week in San Francisco was a masterclass in post-retirement relevance: championing youth initiatives, driving global sports business, grabbing headlines with fellow icons, and still managing to spark viral debates about the future—and past—of men’s tennis.
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