Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Djokovic survives, wins Australian Open

- Howard Fendrich

MELBOURNE, Australia – Novak Djokovic was looking weary and worn down. He felt dizzy and trailed Dominic Thiem in the Australian Open final – miscues mounting, deficit growing.

Djokovic did what he does, though. He refused to lose, waited for a chance to pounce and found his best tennis when absolutely necessary. Even threw in a wrinkle, serve-and-volleying twice when facing break point.

Regaining his stamina and strokes, and showing some gutsy creativity, Djokovic came back to edge Thiem, 6-4, 4-6, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4, Sunday night for an eighth Australian Open title, second in a row, and 17th Grand Slam trophy overall.

“I was on the brink of losing the match. Dominic … disrupted my rhythm in my game at one point. He was a better player,” Djokovic said. “Probably one point – and one shot – separated us tonight.”

Nonetheles­s, Djokovic improved his record in semifinals and finals at Melbourne Park to 16-0 and assured himself of returning to No. 1 in the rankings, replacing Rafael Nadal.

No other man in the history of tennis has won this hard-court tournament more than six times. Only Roger Federer, with 20, and Nadal, with 19, have won more men’s Grand Slam singles trophies than Djokovic.

“Amazing achievemen­t. Unreal what you’re doing throughout all these years,” said the fifth-seeded Thiem, who is 0-3 in major finals. “You and also two other guys, I think you brought men’s tennis to a complete new level.”

Both finalists spoke about the devastatin­g wildfires that have killed dozens of people and millions of animals around Australia. Djokovic also mentioned the recent deaths of NBA star Kobe Bryant and one of his daughters in a helicopter crash.

Addressing Thiem, Djokovic said: “I am sure you will definitely get one of the Grand Slam trophies. More than one.”

A little more than six months after saving a pair of championsh­ip points against Federer en route to winning a five-set Wimbledon final, Djokovic again showed that he can’t ever be counted out, coming back from twosets-to-one behind in a Grand Slam title match for the first time.

It didn’t come easily for the 32-yearold from Serbia. He lost six games in a row in one stretch to Thiem, who plays a similar baseline game and eliminated Nadal in the quarterfinals.

Djokovic visited by a doctor and trainer in the third set and, desperate to hydrate, guzzled bottles of water and energy drink. He lectured the chair umpire about time violations.

“My energy dropped significantly,” Djokovic said at his news conference, sipping an anti-oxidant drink instead of Champagne.

This was not the dominant Djokovic who made a hard-to-believe total of nine unforced errors during his straightse­t triumph over Nadal in the final a year ago. Djokovic eclipsed that total in the first set alone Sunday, finishing with 57.

It was a physical test offering plenty of entertaini­ng exchanges, with 61 points lasting at least nine shots apiece. “Very demanding,” Thiem said. “Of course,” he said, “I just feel a lot of emptiness right now.”

At two key moments, Djokovic abandoned his usual grind-points-out script and went on the attack, rushing to the net after a serve when facing a break point – first, at 2-1 in the fourth set, then again at 2-1 in the fifth.

Paid off both times.

“Not characteri­stic of me,” Djokovic said. “Kind of all-or-nothing.”

Making a charge as his less-experience­d foe faltered, Djokovic broke to lead 5-3 in the fourth set, helped by a sloppy volley into the net tape, a double-fault and a bad forehand by Thiem.

A break early in the fifth helped Djokovic clutch the silver Australian Open trophy he also won in 2008, 2011-13, 2015-16 and 2019.

He adds that haul to his five titles from Wimbledon, three from the U.S. Open and one from the French Open.

Thiem, an Austrian who is 26, was the runner-up to Nadal at Roland Garros each of the past two years and was trying to become the first man born in the 1990s to win a major singles title.

Instead, the Big Three have won 13 consecutiv­e Slams and 56 of the last 67.

“It’s unique in sports history that the three best players – by far – are playing in the same era,” Thiem said. “That’s what makes it very, very difficult for other players to break through.”

The status quo appeared in peril in the third set, when Djokovic merely watched and shook his head as a lob by Thiem curled over him and in. Djokovic didn’t chase it. Wasn’t entirely clear right then what the problem was, but perhaps he knew he needed to save some strength.

Not surprising­ly, given his experience and expertise, Djokovic came out loose, limber and locked in. Of the initial half-dozen points lasting at least nine strokes, he won all six. Within 13 minutes, he was ahead 3-0.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Serbia's Novak Djokovic (in green) embraces Austria's Dominic Thiem after winning the Australian Open men's singles title Sunday. It was Djokovic's eighth Australian Open title and second in a row.
GETTY IMAGES Serbia's Novak Djokovic (in green) embraces Austria's Dominic Thiem after winning the Australian Open men's singles title Sunday. It was Djokovic's eighth Australian Open title and second in a row.

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