The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Djokovic intent on keeping his crown

- ELEANOR CROOKS

Novak Djokovic maintained his position as the king of Melbourne after what he described as the most emotionall­y challengin­g of his 18 grand slam titles.

Half of those trophies have come at the Australian Open, where Djokovic extended his perfect record in finals with a dominant 7-5 6-2 6-2 victory over Daniil Medvedev.

The world number one’s record seemed to be under considerab­le threat given the form of his Russian opponent, who went into his second grand slam final on a run of 20 successive victories, but Djokovic struck yet another blow against the younger generation.

The outcome may have been familiar but this was anything but a straightfo­rward trip for Djokovic, who was heavily criticised for seeking better conditions for players during the two-week quarantine period and then suffered what he confirmed yesterday to have been an abdominal muscle tear during his third-round victory over Taylor Fritz.

The 33-year-old said: “It has been definitely emotionall­y the most challengin­g grand slam that I ever had, with everything that was happening, injury, off-thecourt stuff, quarantine­s.

“It has been, least to say, a rollercoas­ter ride in the last four weeks.”

Djokovic will go down in history as arguably the best player of all time, but he has had to face persistent negative publicity over the last year, from his disastrous Adria Tour, which caused a coronaviru­s outbreak, to his disqualifi­cation from the US Open for hitting a line judge with a ball, and establishm­ent of a new player associatio­n.

Requesting quarantine leniency in a city that was heavily sceptical of the decision to stage the tournament went down like a lead balloon.

Djokovic said: “Of course, it’s not nice to hear that. It also seems unfair from some people that criticise and judge without really checking before.

“But it’s not really the first time. I have so much experience with this because it happened so many times in my life.

“It will probably not be the last one. I didn’t allow it to hinder my performanc­e. I think winning the trophy is in a way my answer.”

Djokovic is guaranteed to reach one of his major career goals by surpassing Federer’s record of 310 weeks at world number one.

He remains two slam titles behind Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer, and winning the biggest trophies will be his clear priority for the rest of his career, with Djokovic set to play sparingly while Covid related restrictio­ns prevent him travelling with his young family.

Coach Goran Ivanisevic described Djokovic’s performanc­e as a masterpiec­e and said this was a title the Serbian needed after the disappoint­ments of the US Open and his heavy final loss to Nadal at the French Open.

“He needed (it), if he wants to break the record, if he wants to catch Roger and Rafa,” said the former Wimbledon champion.

“Rafa is going to win one more, maybe two for sure, French Opens. You need to keep going, winning.”

It was a disappoint­ing evening for Medvedev, who fought back from two sets down to push Nadal to five in his first slam final at the US Open in 2019 but never looked capable of staging a repeat.

“I feel like it’s the kind of matches I won throughout this tournament that he won today,” said the 25-year-old, who had his serve broken seven times.

“I didn’t play bad but I didn’t play my best level. Probably he made his game that good today that I couldn’t stay at my best level.”

 ??  ?? KING’S KISS: Novak Djokovic of Serbia with the trophy after winning his ninth Australian Open singles title.
KING’S KISS: Novak Djokovic of Serbia with the trophy after winning his ninth Australian Open singles title.

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