Daily Press

Bumpy ride, safe landing

Djokovic ‘always believed’ he’d rally for quarterfin­al win

- By Howard Fendrich

WIMBLEDON, England — It says a lot about Novak Djokovic that a two-sets-tonone hole at Wimbledon on a day he was hardly at his best never seemed insurmount­able. Not to him. Not to anyone watching.

Says a lot about his history of overcoming that sort of deficit. A lot about his ability to adjust, to adapt and to right himself. A lot about his preeminenc­e at the All England Club in recent years.

Djokovic spotted 10th-seeded Jannik Sinner of Italy the huge lead Tuesday, then worked his way back to win 5-7, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 at Centre Court, earning an 11th semifinal berth at Wimbledon with his 26th consecutiv­e victory at the grass-court Grand Slam tournament.

“I always believed,” said Djokovic, who faces ninth-seeded Cam Norrie of Britain next, “that I could turn the match around.”

Among men, only Roger Federer has made more semifinal appearance­s at Wimbledon with 13 and won more championsh­ips (eight) than the seven Djokovic could reach by lifting the trophy Sunday for what would be a fourth year in a row.

“He makes you play differentl­y — well, not differentl­y, but in a way that he likes,” Sinner said.

Djokovic was responsibl­e for just one of Wednesday’s comebacks: In all four singles quarterfin­als on a sunny day, the player who dropped the first set ended up victorious. Norrie edged David Goffin of Belgium 3-6, 7-5, 2-6, 6-3, 7-5; No. 3 Ons Jabeur of Tunisia beat Marie Bouzkova of the Czech Republic 3-6, 6-1, 6-1; Tatjana Maria defeated Jule

Niemeier 4-6, 6-2, 7-5 in an all-German matchup.

Norrie, Jabeur and Maria all earned the right to make their Slam semifinal debuts.

“Can’t enjoy it too much now,” said Norrie, 26, who was born in South Africa to British parents, grew up in New Zealand and played college tennis at Texas Christian University. “Just get ready for Novak in a couple days.”

The 103rd-ranked Maria is, at 34, the oldest first-time women’s semifinali­st at a major and only the sixth woman at least that old to get this far at Wimbledon in the profession­al era, which began in 1968. The others? Quite a list: Martina Navratilov­a, Billie Jean King, Chris Evert, Serena Williams and Venus Williams.

Djokovic, a 35-year-old from Serbia, managed his seventh career comeback in a match in which he trailed by two sets — he last did it in the 2021 French Open final against Stefanos Tsitsipas — and improved to 37-10 in five-setters. That includes a 10-1 mark in matches that go the distance at Wimbledon, including nine straight victories; the lone loss came in 2006.

“He’s been in this situation many times,” the 20-year-old Sinner said. “That helps.”

Tuesday’s match brought Sinner’s major quarterfin­al appearance total to three, which is exactly 50 fewer than Djokovic’s.

Sinner has shown enormous potential, reaching the quarterfin­als at the 2020 French Open before losing to Rafael Nadal and the 2022 Australian Open before losing to Tsitsipas. As for grass? Sinner was 0-4 until last week. But he got win No. 1 at Wimbledon by eliminatin­g three-time major champion Stan Wawrinka and then beat a pair of seeded foes: No. 20 John Isner and No. 5 Carlos Alcaraz.

On Tuesday, Sinner went up a set and a break when Djokovic sailed a backhand long, then bowed his head. Sinner broke again for 5-2, and soon enough, 1 hours in, was a set from the biggest triumph of his career.

Before the start of the third, Djokovic headed toward the locker room for a bathroom break, just like he did at Roland Garros against Tsitsipas 13 months ago.

“You approach these particular situations when you’re two sets down a bit more calmly, a bit more confident,” Djokovic said, “with more self-belief.”

When play resumed, Djokovic was so much better than he had been.

“Two different matches,” he said.

After 19 unforced errors over the initial two sets, he made 14 over the final three. After getting broken four times over two sets, he won all 13 of his service games the rest of the way.

 ?? SEBASTIEN BOZON/AFP-GETTY ?? Novak Djokovic reacts after hitting a winner while sliding to the ground during his victory Tuesday at Wimbledon.
SEBASTIEN BOZON/AFP-GETTY Novak Djokovic reacts after hitting a winner while sliding to the ground during his victory Tuesday at Wimbledon.

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