Roger Federer, one of the world’s top four tennis players with the highest number of Grand Slam wins ever, is playing at Wimbledon again this year. Now 35, when most players his age have retired, he believes he can win again. And as a Face Reader I would say, with those brows, I'm sure you'll survive.
In an interview with Guardian Weekend on 18 June he talks about his early years of stop-start progress, bad behaviour in practice, disorganised training, his parents worried that he had thrown away his talent and the media that he was psychologically flawed. Well, OK ...
In an interview with Guardian Weekend on 18 June he talks about his early years of stop-start progress, bad behaviour in practice, disorganised training, his parents worried that he had thrown away his talent and the media that he was psychologically flawed. Well, OK ...
He goes on to describe the ‘ice’ discipline and the emotional ‘fire’ that has got him through since 2003. Where did they come from? How did he manage to pull those two energies together and suddenly morph from bad-boy to head-boy?
One clue is in those wowzer browzers: long, dark and bushy. Those are power eyebrows! When you see them you know the person has oodles of whatever it takes. And loves the limelight.
One clue is in those wowzer browzers: long, dark and bushy. Those are power eyebrows! When you see them you know the person has oodles of whatever it takes. And loves the limelight.
That well-defined knife-edge shape on top makes them Top Dog brows in Chinese Face Reading and gives Federer the ambition and endurance to reach the highest goals he sets his mind on. Roger’s always had them and the boss edge they signify, but they’re refined and razor-sharp now for Wimbledon 2016 (top picture). Despite his self-deprecating and modest descriptions of early tantrums, he was always chasing the dream, now he’s living it - and still on fire.