Showing posts with label DJOKOVIC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DJOKOVIC. Show all posts

July 12, 2022

Built to Be Flexible, Novak Djokovic Bounces Back

After forgoing a Covid-19 vaccine complicated his schedule, Djokovic’s elasticity this year has gone beyond the reactive shots that helped him win a seventh Wimbledon men’s singles title.

Novak Djokovic won Wimbledon after missing the first Grand Slam tournament of the year and losing in the quarterfinals at the French Open.Credit...Hannah Mckay/Reuters


By Christopher Clarey
July 10, 2022


WIMBLEDON, England — He is an elastic man, Novak Djokovic.

As he and Nick Kyrgios prepared to walk onto Centre Court for their Wimbledon men’s singles final on Sunday, Kyrgios paced in tight circles in the clubhouse. Djokovic stood a few paces behind him and stretched, just as he has since his early years in preparation for the challenges to come.

I made it to Belgrade, Serbia, once to speak with his childhood coach Jelena Gencic, the silken-voiced mentor with the pale blue eyes that discovered him on a remote hardcourt in the Serbian mountains when he was just 6 and taught him about much more than forehands and backhands.

They listened to classical music and discussed literature, all with an eye on the person and player he would become far down the road, when the courts would not have cracks running through them and NATO bombs would no longer interrupt their practice sessions.

Developing and preserving his flexibility was a part of her regimen and her vision.

“That’s the heaviest thing he had to handle when he was young,” she said in 2010, holding up a tennis racket. “We worked only on the legs, only quickness.”


Gencic, who died in 2013, was pleased during our interview with the results of her master plan, and she would have been prouder on Sunday to see Djokovic, now 35 and the father of two young children, still lunging and twisting like an acrobat into the corners of the court to deal with Kyrgios’s haymakers.

As he proved once more over the course of three hours and his 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (7-3) victory, Djokovic can absorb pace like perhaps no man in tennis history. And he can clearly absorb adversity, as well, even when it is much of his own making.

A year ago at Wimbledon, he was flying particularly high, defusing another taller, bigger server in Matteo Berrettini to win the third leg of the Grand Slam and extend his winning streak at the All England Club.

But he would fall short of completing the Grand Slam at the U.S. Open and then become a magnet for international debate and plenty of opprobrium by declining to be vaccinated against Covid-19, a decision that led to his detention after he arrived in Melbourne in January to play in the Australian Open.


When his appeals failed, he was deported on the eve of 2022’s first Grand Slam tournament. When he returned to action briefly in Dubai in late February, he said it was uncomfortable to deal with the looks of disapproval from those who had watched what had unfolded in Australia from afar.

As the tour continued in March, he was unable to enter the United States, because of his unvaccinated status, to compete in the Masters 1000 events in Indian Wells, Calif., and Miami Gardens, Fla. Back in action, he struggled in the early events on clay before winning in Rome and then failed to hit the high notes required in his quarterfinal loss at the French Open to Rafael Nadal, his longtime rival.

“Certainly, this year has not been the same like the last years,” Djokovic said. “It has started the way it has started, and it has affected me definitely in the first several months of the year. I was not feeling great generally. I mean mentally, emotionally, I was not at a good place.

“I wanted to play, but at the same time when I went out on the court in Dubai, which was the first tournament of the year, I just felt so much pressure and emotions happening. I wasn’t feeling myself on the court. I realized at that point that it’s going to take some time, that I have to be patient and that sooner or later I will get myself in the state, the optimal state, where I would like to be.”

Wimbledon, once again, turned out to be the tonic. It was where he regained his mojo when he broke out of the biggest slump of his career to win in 2018. And though he continues to play precious little grass-court tennis, skipping all the official lead-in tournaments on the surface, he was once again able to find his footing and range in a hurry to win his 21st major singles title, one behind Nadal's record.

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Goran Ivanisevic, Djokovic’s coach and a former Gencic student and Wimbledon champion, was with Djokovic in Australia though he was never detained himself.

“This was a huge thing that happened to him,” Ivanisevic said, explaining that though many expected him to return to the practice court right after the deportation, “it’s not happening like this.”

“For some people, they don’t recover,” he said. “They will never play tennis. This was a big shock. Was a shock for me, and I was there. I was free. Imagine for him.”

But stubbornness, one of Djokovic’s traits, can cut both ways, keeping him on paths of greater resistance even when better options might be available, but also providing the kind of strength of mind and purpose required to, say, save two match points and prevail against Roger Federer in the 2019 Wimbledon final.

“People like him you don’t doubt,” Ivanisevic said. “They say maybe it took him a long time, but it didn’t take him a long time. Took him the exact time that he needed to recover and to digest all the things what happened to him.”

This was hardly Djokovic’s most dominant Wimbledon. He was pushed to five sets by Jannik Sinner in the quarterfinals and to four sets by four other opponents, including Kyrgios.

But he was never in genuine danger of elimination, and with seven Wimbledon singles titles, including four in a row, he now belongs in the same paragraph on grass as his boyhood idol Pete Sampras, who also won seven times at the All England Club, and his longtime rival Federer, who, for now, holds the men’s record all alone with eight.


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Djokovic won his seventh Wimbledon men's singles title and fourth in a row.Credit...Toby Melville/Reuters


The comparisons should start now,” said Patrick McEnroe, an ESPN analyst and former player. “There are very few players who I think even have a chance to beat Novak on grass, whereas on a hardcourt there are quite a few guys. He’s still obviously great on a hardcourt, but it just seems like over the last five, six years he’s just that much better on grass. It’s the fact that he covers the court so well. You have to play so big so often to get it past him because of his skills and how the court has changed.”


The bounces at Wimbledon are slightly higher and more consistent now even if there are still bad breaks when balls skid off the patches where grass has given way to dirt. But Djokovic, so quick and reactive and so bent on staying low, can adjust and improvise.

Sampras was the first player Djokovic remembers watching on television, and one of Sampras’s early victories at Wimbledon was the reason Djokovic asked his parents for a tennis racket and was in a position to meet Gencic and the moment at age 6.

“It always has been and will be the most special tournament in my heart, the one that motivated me and inspired me to start playing tennis in a little mountain resort in Serbia,” he said to the Centre Court crowd Sunday. “My first image of tennis was grass.”

And yet he is hardly a traditional grass-court player in the Sampras mold. He served and volleyed just 27 times in the tournament this year. But he is not simply a new-age baseline camper, either. He came to the net 212 times and won a hefty 73 percent of those points, often showing off the deft touch that was missing in his early years as he produced drop volley winners under off-balance duress.

He is a hard man to pass in any part of the court, even if his sliding open-stance backhand from the backcourt out of a near split remains his signature shot.

It is the stroke that he and Gencic were striving for all those years ago, and it fits the great champion he has become: dangerous under duress and resilient enough to turn even a compromised situation into a winner.

He bends but does not break, Djokovic, unless we’re talking about another man’s serve.

January 7, 2022

 

Novak Djokovic Down Under, and Out

The men’s tennis No. 1 finds himself under siege again, this time over a vaccine exemption to play the Australian Open

Novak Djokovic is a nine-time winner of the Australian Open men’s singles title.

PHOTO: WILLIAM WEST/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
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Novak Djokovic has built an indisputable case as one of the greatest tennis players ever—a resilient, elastic-limbed dynamo who possesses lifetime winning records over both Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, and stands with those two as the only men to win 20 major tournament singles titles. 

He’s very likely to add to that historic mark, and should one day stand alone. On the court, Djokovic faces very few threatening adversaries.

His only true rival, it appears, is himself. 

The latest episode concerns the 2022 Australian Open, a tournament the 34-year-old Serbian won last year, and presumed he’d start playing in later this month, especially when tournament officials apprised him that he had been granted an exemption to play the vaccine-requiring tournament. Djokovic has expressed his opposition to getting vaccinated in the past.

But being allowed to play the tournament was one thing; being permitted to cross the border was apparently another. News of Djokovic’s exemption riled Australians, who have faced strict lockdowns, and contend with rigid vaccine requirements to enter the country. 

As Djokovic flew to the continent, Australian political leaders pledged to look into the matter. On Wednesday at the Melbourne Airport, Djokovic’s entry into Australia was delayed, until his visa was ultimately canceled.

Djokovic’s representatives, who believe the player is being singled out for political reasons, are appealing his case in court. At the moment, the defending Australian Open champion is confined to a quarantine hotel. 

“Rules are rules,” said Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic decried what he called the “harassment of the best tennis player in the world.” 

It’s an extraordinary series of events, with no shortage of questions: 

Australian Open officials claimed that Djokovic passed a blind review process to receive his vaccine exemption—why did it pass muster with those authorities, but not at the border?

“Mr. Djokovic failed to provide appropriate evidence to meet the entry requirements to Australia,” said Health Minister Greg Hunt. Why was there such a baffling breakdown between the tournament and the host nation? 

The tournament has granted vaccine exemptions to other players. Did those players supply proper evidence to pass through the border—or was Djokovic’s entry given more scrutiny because of the brewing outcry? 

For Djokovic, it’s another high-profile fiasco in a career with more than a few. 

To state the obvious: Djokovic could have simply complied with the tournament’s vaccine requirements in order to play. He has not publicly stated his medical reason for seeking the exemption, and is under no obligation to do so. Still, tennis luminaries including Aussie legend Rod Laver have urged him to clear the air: “If he’s got a reason for [the exemption] then…we should know it. Yes, you’re a great player and you’ve performed and won so many tournaments, so it can’t be physical. So what is the problem?”

This could have been Djokovic’s time to shine. The sinewy baseliner has long stood in the shadow of the ever-popular Federer and Nadal, despite his historical advantage over both. A nine-time winner in Australia, Djokovic would have entered the 2022 tournament as the No. 1 seed, and a title would have given him 21 majors, the most ever by a men’s player. 

Djokovic won the first three tennis majors last year—the Australian, French and Wimbledon—closing in on becoming the first man since Laver to win the calendar “Grand Slam.” He wound up losing to Daniil Medvedev in the final of the U.S. Open, but the historically antagonistic New York crowd bathed him in encouragement, chanting his name throughout.  

It was a much better finish than the year prior, when Djokovic was thrown out of the U.S. Open after slapping a tennis ball out of frustration and accidentally striking an on-court official. His temper has occasionally gotten the best of him: Djokovic appeared to emotionally unravel during the Tokyo Olympics this past summer, where he was under heavy pressure to add a gold medal to his Grand Slam bid, and wound up out of medal contention altogether. 

In conversation, Djokovic can be engaging and witty, with a keen respect for the game’s history and his contemporaries. His rise from humble beginnings to the game’s summit is a marvel of steady determination.

At times, however, he can be his own worst enemy, and it has cost him with tennis fans who remain attached to the far less mercurial Federer and Nadal. Tennis has seen its share of combustible talents, and has valorized a few, but Djokovic has never sought to be a villain. There’s a mystifying disconnect between a player who wants very badly to be loved, and then leans into self-sabotage. 

Nadal, who is vaccinated, cut to the heart of the matter during a news conference this week: “If [Djokovic] wanted, he would be playing here in Australia without a problem…he made his own decision, and everyone is free to [make] their own decisions, but then there are some consequences.”

This story is certain to ripple further. Djokovic’s legal team is due back in court early next week. There will surely be questions about the embarrassing breakdown in communication between the tournament and the government, and the degree to which politics and the pressures of lockdowns and vaccinations may have played a role. 

As it stands, the Australian Open is set to begin Jan. 17, without the top men’s player on the planet. 

In the meantime, Novak Djokovic doesn’t play tennis. And it’s he who loses the most. 


July 14, 2019




Novak Djokovic beats Roger Federer in epic match to win fifth Wimbledon title. 

Serena Williams Was on a Roll at Wimbledon. Simona Halep Stopped Her.

With a chance to tie the record for Grand Slam titles, Williams was blown out by a fast-moving Halep in straight sets.
The Romanian’s work on her mentality as well as groundstrokes paid dividends as she dismantled Serena. 

Crowd Roars for Federer, Djokovic Tunes Out the Noise.

 Djokovic wins 7-6 (5), 1-6, 7-6 (4), 4-6, 13-12 (3)
 Federer had two match points in the final set