The Citizen (KZN)

Djokovic finally finds his groove

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– Novak Djokovic (right) found his groove to cruise through to the fourth round of the Australian Open yesterday, brushing aside 30th seed Tomas Martin Etcheverry with minimum fuss in his 100th match at the tournament.

The 10-time champion needed four sets to progress in each of his first two matches, against Dino Prizmic and Alexei Popyrin, but was never in trouble against the Argentine, cruising to a 6-3, 6-3, 7-6 (7/2) win.

“It was a great match, I think the best performanc­e I have had during this tournament and I’m pleased with the way I played throughout the entire match,” he said as cheers rang out on Rod Laver Arena.

The world No 2 has been under the weather in Melbourne, regularly blowing his nose during changeover­s, and admitted he has not been at his best.

But there was no drama in last night’s match on centre court as the Serb produced a trademark focused performanc­e full of control.

He did not face a single break point in the match, which lasted just under two-and-a-half hours.

Djokovic, chasing a historic 25th Grand Slam title, which would break his tie with Margaret Court, drew first blood when he broke in the sixth game of the first set for a 4-2 lead and he closed out the set.

The 36-year-old was quickly back on the attack in the second set, breaking for a 2-1 lead against his 24-year-old opponent, who ousted Andy Murray and Gael Monfils from the tournament, and he broke again to take the set.

Etcheverry dug deep in the third set and took it to a tie-break but there was a sense of inevitabil­ity about the outcome, with Djokovic firing an ace to seal victory in style.

The top seed has reached a century of appearance­s at his most successful major and is now behind only Roger Federer (117) and Serena Williams (105).

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