Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Djokovic wins Rome title: ‘I moved on’ after defeault at U.S. Open

- By Andrew Dampf

ROME » For four or five days after being defaulted from the U.S. Open, Novak Djokovic did some serious soul searching.

Then he got back on the tennis court — and since then it’s been fairly straightfo­rward, at least in terms of results.

Dropping only one set all week, Djokovic won his fifth Italian Open title on Monday after beating Diego Schwartzma­n 7-5, 6-3 in the final, and restored his confidence heading into Roland Garros, which starts in six days.

“I did experience mentally some kind of ups and downs in the first four-five days after that happened. I was in shock,” Djokovic said of the default 15 days ago for unintentio­nally hitting a line judge in the throat with a ball in a fit of anger.

“But I moved on and, really, I never had an issue in my life to move on from something. Regardless how difficult it is I try to take the next day and hope for the best and move on. Having a tournament a week after that happened helped a lot ... just because I really wanted to get on the court and just get whatever traces of that — if there’s any — out, and I think I had a really good week.”

The only real issue for Djokovic this past week was his behavior again.

He received warnings from the chair umpire for smashing a racket in the quarterfin­als and for foul language in the semifinals.

Still, Djokovic improved to 31-1 this year — with his only loss against Pablo Carreño Busta in the match where he was defaulted. He also passed idol Pete Sampras for the second-most weeks at No. 1 with 287 — and trails only Roger Federer’s 310 in the top spot.

In the women’s final, top-seeded Simona Halep won her first Rome title when 2019 champion Karolína Plíšková retired midway through their match with a left thigh injury.

Halep was leading 6-0,

2-1 when Plíšková stopped after just 31 minutes.

The only player to take a set off Djokovic this week was German qualifier Dominik Koepfer in the quarterfin­als.

“I don’t think I played my best tennis, to be honest. I don’t want to be arrogant here — of course I’m very, very satisfied and pleased to win a title — but I know that I still have a couple of gears,” Djokovic said. “Hopefully, I’ll be able to raise that level for the French, because that’s going to be necessary if I want to go deep in the tournament. This gives me even more confidence that is absolutely necessary for a grand slam.”

Against Schwartzma­n, who was playing his first Masters 1000 final, Djokovic recovered from a 3-0 deficit in the opening set and eventually wore down the steady Argentine to finish off the match in just under two hours — and just before it resumed raining.

With his 36th Masters

1000 title, Djokovic moved one ahead of Rafael Nadal atop the all-time list.

Schwartzma­n had beaten nine-time Rome champion Nadal in the quarterfin­als then edged Denis Shapovalov in a long three-setter in the semifinals.

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