<p>Roger Federer has been feted by plenty of ovations at Centre Court. None quite like this one, though. This was not a celebration. It felt more like a "Thank you" or — just in case — a "Goodbye."</p>.<p>The eight-time Wimbledon champion lost 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-0 to 14th-seeded Hubert Hurkacz of Poland in the quarterfinals at the All England Club on Wednesday, a surprisingly lopsided finish to Federer's 22nd appearance in the tournament.</p>.<p>Federer underwent two operations on his right knee in 2020 and was sidelined for more than 12 months in all. He arrived at Wimbledon having played a total of eight matches this season.</p>.<p>Factor in age — Federer turns 40 on Aug. 8, so this was his last major in his 30s — and maybe it was just too much to ask that he make his way to the closing weekend, even if this is a tournament he's won more than any other man, and even if it’s contested on a surface, grass, on which he's best.</p>.<p>He simply never was able to summon the serving and shot-making that have carried him to 20 Grand Slam titles overall, tied with Rafael Nadal for the men's record.</p>.<p>Hurkacz, a 24-year-old from Poland, never had made it beyond the third round at any major; that's when he lost to Djokovic at Wimbledon two years ago.</p>.<p>Still, Hurkacz looked quite comfortable on this unfamiliar stage. He played sublimely, with three times as many winners, 36, as unforced errors, 12.</p>.<p>In the opening set, he didn't face so much as a single break point and was guilty of just four unforced errors to Federer's 10.</p>.<p>It appeared Federer finally was beginning to make some headway early in the second set, earning a trio of break points and nosing ahead 2-0 on a double-fault. After his second serve found the net, Hurkacz pointed an index finger at his temple, then shook his head.</p>.<p>Federer then weathered three break points in the next game to lead 3-0.</p>.<p>But Hurkacz conceded nothing. Undaunted by the setting, the stakes, the foe or the almost-uniformly-for-Federer fans, Hurkacz claimed four of the next fives game to pull even at 4-all, breaking along the way with a stinging forehand return of a 101 mph serve that rushed Federer and drew a backhand into the net.</p>.<p>In the tiebreaker — which was preceded by loud chants from the full-to-capacity stands of "Let's go, Roger! Let's go!" and rhythmic clapping — it was more of the same: Hurkacz hitting his spots and Federer stumbling.</p>.<p>On one foray to the net, Federer lost his footing and, in the process of catching his balance, missed what could have been a simple volley.</p>.<p>The third set went by in a blink, and when it ended with Federer missing a forehand well wide, he quickly packed his bags and hustled off toward the locker room with a wave and a thumbs-up.</p>.<p>Novak Djokovic and Denis Shapovalov also reached the semifinals with wins Wednesday.</p>.<p>If Djokovic beats Shapovalov and then goes on to claim a sixth Wimbledon title — and third in a row — on Sunday, that would allow the 34-year-old from Serbia to pull even with Federer and Nadal at 20 Slam trophies.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH latest videos:</strong></p>
<p>Roger Federer has been feted by plenty of ovations at Centre Court. None quite like this one, though. This was not a celebration. It felt more like a "Thank you" or — just in case — a "Goodbye."</p>.<p>The eight-time Wimbledon champion lost 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-0 to 14th-seeded Hubert Hurkacz of Poland in the quarterfinals at the All England Club on Wednesday, a surprisingly lopsided finish to Federer's 22nd appearance in the tournament.</p>.<p>Federer underwent two operations on his right knee in 2020 and was sidelined for more than 12 months in all. He arrived at Wimbledon having played a total of eight matches this season.</p>.<p>Factor in age — Federer turns 40 on Aug. 8, so this was his last major in his 30s — and maybe it was just too much to ask that he make his way to the closing weekend, even if this is a tournament he's won more than any other man, and even if it’s contested on a surface, grass, on which he's best.</p>.<p>He simply never was able to summon the serving and shot-making that have carried him to 20 Grand Slam titles overall, tied with Rafael Nadal for the men's record.</p>.<p>Hurkacz, a 24-year-old from Poland, never had made it beyond the third round at any major; that's when he lost to Djokovic at Wimbledon two years ago.</p>.<p>Still, Hurkacz looked quite comfortable on this unfamiliar stage. He played sublimely, with three times as many winners, 36, as unforced errors, 12.</p>.<p>In the opening set, he didn't face so much as a single break point and was guilty of just four unforced errors to Federer's 10.</p>.<p>It appeared Federer finally was beginning to make some headway early in the second set, earning a trio of break points and nosing ahead 2-0 on a double-fault. After his second serve found the net, Hurkacz pointed an index finger at his temple, then shook his head.</p>.<p>Federer then weathered three break points in the next game to lead 3-0.</p>.<p>But Hurkacz conceded nothing. Undaunted by the setting, the stakes, the foe or the almost-uniformly-for-Federer fans, Hurkacz claimed four of the next fives game to pull even at 4-all, breaking along the way with a stinging forehand return of a 101 mph serve that rushed Federer and drew a backhand into the net.</p>.<p>In the tiebreaker — which was preceded by loud chants from the full-to-capacity stands of "Let's go, Roger! Let's go!" and rhythmic clapping — it was more of the same: Hurkacz hitting his spots and Federer stumbling.</p>.<p>On one foray to the net, Federer lost his footing and, in the process of catching his balance, missed what could have been a simple volley.</p>.<p>The third set went by in a blink, and when it ended with Federer missing a forehand well wide, he quickly packed his bags and hustled off toward the locker room with a wave and a thumbs-up.</p>.<p>Novak Djokovic and Denis Shapovalov also reached the semifinals with wins Wednesday.</p>.<p>If Djokovic beats Shapovalov and then goes on to claim a sixth Wimbledon title — and third in a row — on Sunday, that would allow the 34-year-old from Serbia to pull even with Federer and Nadal at 20 Slam trophies.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH latest videos:</strong></p>