Jamaica Gleaner

‘Say that to my face’

Djokovic challenges heckler in testy second-round win

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ALREADY SICK and tired in another early round slog, Novak Djokovic unloaded on a heckler who crossed the line at the Australian Open.

Defending champion Djokovic angrily challenged the spectator to “say that to my face”and gestured to the man to come down onto the Rod Laver Arena Court, the venue for 10 of his record 24 Grand Slam titles.

He then went on a roll, winning three straight games from 2-2 in the fourth set before finishing off Alexei Popyrin 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (4) 6-3.

The 36-year-old Serb then turned to the crowd again and yelled, pumping his fist to celebrate the victory.

Asked later what triggered his rage, Djokovic responded: “I mean, you don’t want to know.”

“I was tolerating it for most of the match. At one point I had enough,” he said. “He didn’t have the courage to come down. That’s what I was asking him: ‘If you have courage, if you’re such a tough man, tough guy, come down and tell it to my face’.”

That didn’t happen. Djokovic didn’t ask for the man to be removed. Stadium security didn’t intervene.

Djokovic moved on to the third round, still simmering a little bit about the episode.

“I’m not going to sit and say ‘it’s all good.’ It’s not good,” he said. “Of course, it upsets me. I’m frustrated. I don’t want to be experienci­ng that, but I have to accept it as it is.

“Sometimes I don’t tolerate when somebody crosses the line. That’s it.”

Djokovic has been dealing with a sore wrist and said after his opening match – a four-hour, four-set win over 18-year-old qualifier Dino Prizmic – that he hasn’t been well. He was struggling against Popyrin, who is ranked 43rd.

So was it the kind of spark that he needed?

“Look, I don’t want to be in those types of situations. Yeah, I was flat I guess emotionall­y. Game-wise I was quite flat,”he said.“Maybe that was needed for me to be shaken up a bit and start to find the kind of intensity that I needed to have all match.”

Last year’s losing finalist, Stefanos Tsitsipas, also had a tough time against an Aussie with the crowd behind him on an adjacent court.

Tsitsipas wasted match points in the 10th game of the fourth set and then had to save four set points to force a tiebreaker, which he clinched for a 4-6, 7-6 (6), 6-2, 7-6 (4) win over Jordan Thompson.

Women’s champion Aryna Sabalenka and US Open winner Coco Gauff avoided the early Day 4 upsets in their draw to advance to the third round, along with 16-year-old Mirra Andreeva.

Three-time major finalist Ons Jabeur lost 6-0, 6-2 in 54 minutes to Andreeva on Rod Laver, and then 2018 champion Caroline Wozniacki also lost to a young Russian on the No. 3 show court.

Two other 16-year-old players lost on centre court to highly ranked players: No. 10 Beatriz Haddad Maia accounted for Alina Korneeva 6-1, 6-2, and Sabalenka overpowere­d Brenda Fruhvirtov­a 6-3, 6-2.

Gauff, still a teenager herself, extended her winning streak to nine matches at Grand Slams with a 7-6 (2), 6-2 win over fellow American Caroline Dolehide.

She will next play Alycia Parks, who beat 2021 US Open runner-up Leylah Fernandez 7-5, 6-4.

 ?? AP ?? Serbia’s Novak Djokovic points to a spectator during his second-round Australian Open match against Alexei Popyrin at Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia yesterday.
AP Serbia’s Novak Djokovic points to a spectator during his second-round Australian Open match against Alexei Popyrin at Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia yesterday.

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