Otago Daily Times

Djokovic gathers his strength for easy win

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LONDON: Novak Djokovic has 834 tour match wins in his storied career but the latest, a 64, 61 rout of young German Alexander Zverev at the ATP Finals yesterday, will not be one for his scrapbook.

There were few moments to test the 02 Arena’s crowd decibellev­el monitor — a new gimmick this year — but despite not feeling well, Djokovic had too much guile for Zverev.

His ability to play the percentage­s and churn out wins in third gear has been a key component in his rise to one of the all time greats and that was all he needed yesterday.

It was the 31yearold Serb’s second comfortabl­e win in the Gustavo Kuerten group and combined with Marin Cilic’s 67 (2), 63, 64 defeat of American John Isner later in the day, he sealed his place in the semifinals at the yearender for the eighth time.

Djokovic appeared to be suffering with a cold and grabbed a tissue from his pocket on occasions, but after some fierce resistance in the opening set he ran away with the match.

‘‘A win is a win,’’ the world number one, bidding for a recordequa­lling sixth title at the ATP’s blueriband event, told reporters.

‘‘Somehow I managed to gather the strength when I needed it. It wasn’t a great quality tennis match, to be honest.’’

Zverev blazed 15 winners in the first set and for a while his baseline firepower kept Djokovic under pressure, especially at 44 in the first set when he had a couple of break points.

Djokovic saved the first with a heavy serve but then doublefaul­ted, offering Zverev another glimpse.

This time Zverev traded blows from the baseline before drawing Djokovic to the net, but he just missed the target with a topspin lob that landed in the tramlines.

Zverev was never the same after that.

He doublefaul­ted to concede the set and despite hanging on to level at 11 in the second, his resistance crumbled quickly as Djokovic reeled off the last five games.

What had promised to be a real battle petered out into a another onesided affair and the seventh consecutiv­e group match this year not to go the distance.

‘‘I guess winning the first set really counts this year. Then, I guess, you have mentally quite an edge,’’ Djokovic, who has won 33 of his last 35 matches, said.

The scrap is now on for second place with Zverev targeting a win over Isner on Saturday to reach the semifinals for the first time, after falling in the group phase last year.

He, Cilic and Isner can all still join Djokovic in the semis and calculator­s might be needed on Saturday.

‘‘I think I’ll take it as a normal quarterfin­al match at a normal tournament,’’ said the German, who beat Croatia’s Cilic in his opening match.

Cilic kept his hopes of a semifinal berth alive as he came through this year’s first threesette­r — improving his record at the tournament to a still dismal 29.

When he lost the opener to the American on a tiebreak it looked like more misery for Cilic, but he responded in superb fashion, even if he needed some help from Isner’s mighty serve.

Debutant Isner doublefaul­ted to hand Cilic a decisive

break in the eighth game of the second set, then did the same to gift Cilic a break at the start of the third.

Cilic wobbled briefly, handing the break back with a woeful game, but struck again with some bludgeonin­g ground strokes and kept his composure to claim the win.

‘‘There was a little bit of luck involved,’’ Cilic, who could have to beat Djokovic for just the third time in 19 meetings on Saturday to progress, said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Full stretch . . . Serbia’s Novak Djokovic in action during his group stage match against Germany’s Alexander Zverev
Full stretch . . . Serbia’s Novak Djokovic in action during his group stage match against Germany’s Alexander Zverev
 ?? PHOTO: ACTION IMAGES VIA REUTERS ??
PHOTO: ACTION IMAGES VIA REUTERS

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