Chattanooga Times Free Press

Novak Djokovic captures men’s Wimbledon crown in straight sets

Djokovic reaches end of comeback trail, wins fourth Wimbledon title

- BY HOWARD FENDRICH

LONDON — Novak Djokovic acknowledg­ed he was worried. His coach was, too.

Could he ever return to the top of tennis? To the heights he had already reached? Could he put aside the time lost to a painful right elbow that required surgery and the disappoint­ment of poor-for-him results? Could he end a Grand Slam drought that lasted more than two years?

All of that fretting seemed misplaced Sunday night. Back at his best, Djokovic became Wimbledon’s men’s singles champion for the fourth time, grabbing a lead right away against a weary Kevin Anderson in the final and holding off a too-late challenge to win 6-2, 6-2, 7-6 (3).

“There were several moments where I was frustrated and questionin­g whether I can get back (to the) desired level or not. But that makes this whole journey even more special for me,” Djokovic said. “It’s easy to talk now and look back at it and be kind of grateful, but I really am grateful to go through this kind of, so to say, mixed emotions, turbulence­s as well, mentally, moments of doubt and disappoint­ment and frustratio­n, anger.”

Djokovic now has 13 major championsh­ips, the fourth-highest total in the history of men’s tennis, trailing only Roger Federer’s 20, Rafael Nadal’s 17 and the 14 won by Pete Sampras, his childhood idol. On Sunday, though, he won a major tournament for the first time since he completed a career Grand Slam at the 2016 French Open.

“It was a long journey,” the 31-year-old Serb said. “I couldn’t pick a better place, to be honest, in the tennis world to peak and to make a comeback.”

A year ago at the All England Club, Djokovic quit during his quarterfin­al because of his right elbow, then took the rest of 2017 off. After the operation in February, Djokovic’s results were mediocre. He realized later he tried to come back too soon.

“I really was impatient,” he said.

In April, he reunited with Marian Vajda, the man who

had coached him for years before Boris Becker and Andre Agassi did.

“I always had doubt,” Vajda said. “I was thinking really negative.”

They built “the new Novak,” as Vajda explained it. Retooled his serve. Made adjustment­s to other strokes. Still, Djokovic was so dispirited by his upset loss at the French Open last month that he vowed, in the heat of the moment, to skip the grasscourt circuit.

Good thing he didn’t stick to that. After falling out of the top 20 for the first time in more than a decade, the No. 21-ranked Djokovic became the lowest-ranked Wimbledon winner since Goran Ivanisevic in 2001. On Sunday, under a pale blue sky interrupte­d by only the occasional soft white puff of cloud, Djokovic looked far more like a guy who used to be No. 1.

“The first two sets,” said Anderson, who played college tennis at the University of Illinois, “Novak beat up on me pretty bad.”

Anderson could be excused for exhaustion. His semifinal was the second-longest Grand Slam match in history, lasting more than 6 1/2 hours until he edged John Isner 26-24 in the fifth set. That match followed another extended fifth set in his 13-11 upset of eighttime champion Federer in the quarterfin­als.

Anderson also blamed nervousnes­s. This was, after all, the 22nd Grand Slam final for Djokovic, and the second for the 32-year-old Anderson, the runner-up at last year’s U.S. Open who was aiming to become the first South African man to win Wimbledon.

He was so out of sorts, his strokes so off the mark, Djokovic took eight of the first 10 games even though he only conjured up two winners. Anderson gifted him 15 unforced errors in that span.

“I didn’t really find my form the way I wanted to,” said Anderson, whose right elbow was massaged by a trainer after the first set. “Of course, my body didn’t feel great.”

Somehow, Anderson raised his game late and nearly managed to extend the match, five times standing just a point away from forcing a fourth set. Djokovic held steady on each one, then was as superior in the tiebreaker as he was most of the afternoon.

“You can definitely see the improvemen­ts he’s made since coming back from injury,” Anderson said.

By the end, Djokovic’s new serve had saved all seven break points he faced. His groundstro­kes were a big reason he only made 13 unforced errors, while Anderson had 32.

When Anderson pushed a forehand return into the net to end it, Djokovic exhaled.

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 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Novak Djokovic celebrates after beating Kevin Anderson 6-2, 6-2, 7-6 (3) on Sunday at Wimbledon to win his 13th Grand Slam championsh­ip. A troublesom­e right elbow slowed him the past two years, but he was outstandin­g in London.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Novak Djokovic celebrates after beating Kevin Anderson 6-2, 6-2, 7-6 (3) on Sunday at Wimbledon to win his 13th Grand Slam championsh­ip. A troublesom­e right elbow slowed him the past two years, but he was outstandin­g in London.

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