Roger Federer's coach, Severin Luthi, says that the 20-time Grand Slam champion is correct to delay starting his hard-court season.

Federer withdrew from the ATP Masters at Toronto, but plans to be back on court at the Cincinnati Masters and the US Open. Most top players are returning to competition at Toronto.

In an interview with Tages Anzeiger, Luthi said the No. 2 was back in the gym, but indicated he has yet to begin regular hitting sessions following his quarterfinal defeat to Kevin Anderson at Wimbledon.

"First he stopped for a few days, then began physical conditioning again in Switzerland," he said. "Meanwhile, he has played some tennis, but more as exercise."

The coach analysed Federer's quarterfinal exit, saying he had been too "conservative" upon going two sets up against Anderson, allowing the South African to lift his own game.

"Roger was too often behind the baseline, which is unusual, and Anderson began to dominate, launched by his serving," said Luthi, who was also asked about the scheduling of the encounter on Court No. 1 rather than Center Court. "Court No. 1 was definitely not an advantage -- the sun comes differently into the stadium, as does the wind. "But Roger is not someone who is looking for excuses in retrospect. He did not mention it either. Conversely, his opponents have the disadvantage that he was played a lot of times on Centre Court. It was probably a combination of things."

But Federer did not get injured, he added. "No, no. It produced none, there is nothing, all good," he said.

Roger Federer's press conference after his stunning loss to Kevin Anderson:

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Federer's withdrawal is another indication that his scheduling priorities have changed. "Would it be an advantage for him to play two tournaments before the US Open... not in my opinion," said Luthi. "Of course some people will say what if he falls in the first round of Cincinnati, but the most important thing for him is that he is fresh, motivated, inspired... with all his experience, he does not need 25 tournaments before a Grand Slam."

In 2017, Federer decided to add Montreal to his schedule and injured his back in the final, withdrawing from Cincinnati and exiting in the quarterfinals of the US Open. Luthi acknowledged that could have been a consideration, and also noted Federer's grass-court schedule, which included a title at Stuttgart and a final in Halle.

"In some circumstances it might have been smarter, following Stuttgart, to skip Halle before Wimbledon," he said. "But in retrospect, you know better and better. I really don't think it would be an advantage to play both Toronto, and Cincinnati. It might even be a disadvantage.''

ATP rules have reduced schedule requirements for older players.

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Federer's coach calls Rogers Cup withdrawal the right move

Federer's coach calls Rogers Cup withdrawal the right move

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