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The long wait for Roger Federer's return is a reminder to cherish him

<span>Photograph: John Walton/PA</span>
Photograph: John Walton/PA

In the days leading up to his return to competition at the Qatar Open this week after two knee surgeries and a 13-month layoff, the longest of his life, Roger Federer made his first public appearance at the tournament in the humble surroundings of an Instagram Live Q&A session with a group of local children. He spoke as he often does, pleasantly and expansively, but there was one curiosity. Despite the fact he is the most popular tennis player in the world, who can organise an army of followers with the click of his fingers, just 150 people were watching.

Related: Novak Djokovic equals Roger Federer's record for weeks as world No 1

It is the type of audience he is going to have to get used to. The last time Federer was televised on a tennis court, he and his old rival Rafael Nadal hugged as they broke the record for the sport’s highest attendance when 51,954 spectators packed tightly together to watch his Match in Africa tennis exhibition in Cape Town in February last year. He returns to an entirely different world.

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All of the adjustments Federer will have to make as he grows accustomed to the realities of competing during a pandemic – the bubbles, quarantines, limited team members allowed to accompany players and the anxiety of catching the virus – have been of interest to many. However, as he prepared to face Britain’s Dan Evans or Jérémy Chardy of France in his first official match since January 2020, it was clear from his pre-tournament press conference on Sunday that the only thing that matters is his knee.

Roger Federer embraces Rafael Nadal after the Match in Africa in Cape Town in February 2020
Roger Federer embraces Rafael Nadal after the Match in Africa in Cape Town in February 2020 - the Swiss’s last match before this week’s Qatar Open. Photograph: Nic Bothma/EPA

It has taken a considerable effort for Federer simply to return to the courts. He has undergone two arthroscopic surgeries on his right knee, first in February and then in June after his recovery had not sufficiently progressed. When he decided that he had finally to address his eroding knee, he never imagined it would take so long for him to compete again. After the complications that followed, he had to “start from scratch, right from the bottom up” and the sharp decline of his knee after the first surgery took its toll.

“I was not doing well,” he said. “I would go for a walk with the kids, or go for a bike ride and come back, and I would have a swollen knee and I wouldn’t understand what was happening because training was actually going very well for the first four or five weeks and progress was quick. I was down. I couldn’t believe I had to do a second one. This is a moment when you question everything a little bit more.”

While Federer is now “injury-free, pain-free”, everything else is surrounded by questions he cannot answer until he returns to the court. Each flight, practice, and lengthy match will tell what his knee can handle and how long his career can endure. “That’s the only real concern I have: ‘Is the knee going to hold up?’ As of now I’m not sure. I did everything I possibly could otherwise I would not put myself in this position here in Doha but a lot to look forward to and some uncertainties which is normal when you’ve been out for so long.”

And so Federer returns to competition playing the long game. He intends to compete during the clay court season but he is only hoping to be at 100% by Wimbledon at the end of June. If his knee allows him to, Federer will continue to hope more success is possible, particularly on grass. His intentions were embedded in the congratulatory note to Rafael Nadal he published after the Spaniard equalled Federer’s record 20 grand slams by winning Roland Garros last October: “I hope 20 is just another step on the continuing road for both of us,” he wrote.

The tennis world has also changed since Federer’s last match. His first steps back into competition coincide with the loss of another of his treasured records. After Nadal’s victory in Paris, Monday marks Novak Djokovic 311th week as ATP No 1, moving him above Federer as the male player with the most weeks at the top.

If Djokovic wins his 19th major at Roland Garros, he will be breathing down Federer’s neck. Should Nadal win there again, their tie will be broken. Asked how he feels about seeing his records usurped, Federer shrugged off any suggestion of bitterness. He reasoned that he was chasing records to usurp Pete Sampras, which he achieved. He has moved on and he is focused on himself: “You want to leave with no regrets and from that standpoint we all sleep very well at night.”

Related: Roger Federer had the perfect excuse to walk away in 2020 – but he wants to go on | Tumaini Carayol

Whether or not some disappointment remains, he is certainly right to let it go and to concern himself with the magic he is still capable of producing in his career. The same could be said of those who love to watch him.

Sports have become so consumed with “greatest of all time” debates that the wonder of the best athletes’ abilities sometimes seem to be only of secondary importance to some. These arguments will endure for decades after the players all finally depart but the moments Federer and his rivals offer on the court will soon be gone. The battles. The fights. Both the sight of Federer’s game in full, seamless flow and when his shots are a mess and only his grit is enough to see him through. The past 13 months have underlined the limited time that remains. It would be smart to enjoy it while it lasts.