Toronto Star

Persistent pain part of Djokovic defeat

After his loss to Chung, former No. 1 player admits elbow hasn’t healed properly

- CHRISTOPHE­R CLAREY THE NEW YORK TIMES

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA — Between the points Monday at the Australian Open, Novak Djokovic was wincing in pain frequently and glancing at his right elbow.

During the points, it was as if he were staring into a tennis mirror, as Hyeon Chung, his 21-year-old opponent from South Korea, rebooted points from extreme body positions and transforme­d defence into offence in ways that were eerily similar to those of Djokovic at his best.

“When I was young, I just tried to copy Novak because he was my idol,” Chung later explained.

His boyhood idol was not at his best in this fourth-round match in which Chung prevailed, 7-6 (4), 7-5, 7-6 (3). Djokovic’s serve, particular­ly his second serve, is a liability at this stage, and his baseline game is no longer rock solid.

Djokovic had 36 winners and 57 unforced errors Monday. Nine of those errors were double faults, including four straight at one early stage.

The bigger concern is what Djokovic’s persistent right elbow pain means for his future. He took a sixmonth break from competitio­n last year in an effort to heal the elbow without surgery. But in this Australian Open, his first tournament back, he still was hindered. He said after Monday’s defeat that it was unclear whether he eventually might need surgery.

“It’s frustratin­g of course, when you have that much time and you don’t heal properly,” Djokovic said. “But it is what it is. There is some kind of a reason behind all of this. I’m just trying my best obviously, because I love this sport.” When he won the French Open in 2016, Djokovic was the first man since Rod Laver in 1969 to hold all four major singles titles. During that phase, he was one of the most dominant No. 1 players — week to week — in the history of the sport.

His speed is still there. So, it appears, is his combative spirit, which explains why he decided to continue playing Monday’s match despite considerab­le discomfort and an injury timeout after the first set.

“I felt the pain was not that high that I need to stop the match, even though it was obviously compromisi­ng my serve,” Djokovic, 30, said of his elbow. “That, of course, is a big shot, especially against Chung, who returns well, gets a lot of balls back. I wish I could have a little bit had more free points on the first serve. But I didn’t. That’s life. I have to move on.”

He is no longer a candidate for a record seventh Australian Open men’s singles title. Instead, the quarter-final in his section of the draw will match the unseeded Chung against the unseeded American Tennys Sandgren, whose five-set upset of No. 5 seed Dominic Thiem was arguably the bigger surprise Monday.

“I don’t know if this is a dream or not,” Sandgren said to the crowd in his on-court interview after his 6-2, 4-6, 7-6 (7-4), 6-7 (7-9), 6-3 victory. “All you guys are here, and I’m not in my underwear, so maybe it’s not a dream.”

At 26, Sandgren has spent most of his career in tennis’s minor leagues: the satellite and challenger circuits. He had yet to win a match at a Grand Slam tournament when he arrived in Melbourne this year.

But he is now in the final eight with Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer, the defending champion, who has yet to lose a set this year and defeated Marton Fucsovics, 6-4, 7-6 (7-3), 6-2, on Monday. Federer will face Tomas Berdych in the other quarter-final in the bottom half of the men’s draw.

“I definitely had a real pinch-me moment,” Sandgren said, describing his internal dialogue after match point as: “Wow, this is hopefully real. If I wake up now, I’m going to be real upset.”

Thiem, a powerful Austrian, appeared to have the edge when he forced a fifth set after saving a match point at 5-6 in the fourth-set tiebreaker with a bold backhand winner down the line from what looked like a compromise­d position.

Sandgren’s surprise quarter-final with Chung will be a rematch. Chung beat him — 3-6, 7-5, 3-6 — in the first round of the tournament in Auckland, New Zealand, earlier this month.

 ?? SAEED KHAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Novak Djokovic, who held all four Grand Slam titles at one point in 2016, bowed out of the Australian Open on Monday. The Serbian star recently came back from a layoff caused by elbow pain.
SAEED KHAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Novak Djokovic, who held all four Grand Slam titles at one point in 2016, bowed out of the Australian Open on Monday. The Serbian star recently came back from a layoff caused by elbow pain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada