New York Daily News

Novak snaps at chair ump but bounces back

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LONDON — All it took was a couple of questionab­le calls for Novak Djokovic to snap at the chair umpire in the second game of his third-round match at Wimbledon. “That’s two points in a row at the beginning of the match,” Djokovic said, before telling official Jake Garner: “Focus, please!” That would have been good advice for Djokovic himself. Maybe he was a bit on edge because this was the stage at which, as a two-time defending champion, he lost at the All England Club a year ago. On Saturday, Djokovic briefly fell behind by an early break before zipping past Ernests Gulbis of Latvia 6-4, 6-1, 7-6 (2) to earn his 10th berth in the tournament’s second week. Right after his, er, conversati­on with Garner, Djokovic lost a service game to trail 2-1. He later fell behind 4-2 in the opening set. But from there, Djokovic used a nine-game run to seize control and wasn’t broken again. “As soon as you give a guy like Novak the tools to step on the gas, he will step on the gas,” said Gulbis, who has been a top-10 player and a French Open semifinali­st but missed chunks of time because of injuries, dropping his ranking outside the top 500. “And he just goes, and he doesn’t look back.” Three of Djokovic’s 12 major championsh­ips have come at Wimbledon, and after a real dip in results over the past 12 months, he has not dropped a set so far this fortnight. “That only can boost my confidence level,” the No. 2-seeded Djokovic said, “for whatever is coming up next.”

After the grass-court Grand Slam tournament’s traditiona­l middle Sunday off, he will face 51stranked Adrian Mannarino of France for a place in the quarterfin­als.

All 16 fourth-round singles matches are scheduled for Monday — Wimbledon is the only major that does it that way — including these in the bottom half of the men’s draw: No. 3 Roger Federer vs. No. 13 Grigor Dimitrov, a guy nicknamed “Baby Fed” because of his similariti­es to the seven-time Wimbledon champion; 2016 runner-up Milos Raonic vs. No. 10 Alexander Zverev; and 2010 runner-up Tomas Berdych vs. No. 8 Dominic Thiem.

Federer, like Djokovic, has won every set he’s played this week, including Saturday’s 7-6 (3), 6-4, 6-4 win against No. 27 Mischa Zverev, Alexander’s older, left-handed, serve-and-volleying brother.

“It’s important to get through the first week with a good feeling,” said Federer, who compiled hardto-believe official statistics of 61 winners to a mere seven unforced errors, “and I think I got that.”

The result made Federer the first man to get to 15-0 in third-round matches at Wimbledon.

Other than a nifty back-to-the-net ‘tweener from Federer, it also was a perfect example of what a relatively straightfo­rward, little-drama day it was.

The matchups on the top half of the men’s draw are defending champion Andy Murray vs. Benoit Paire, two-time Wimbledon winner Rafael Nadal vs. No. 16 Gilles Muller, No. 7 Marin Cilic vs. No. 18 Roberto Bautista Agut, and No. 24 Sam Querrey vs. Kevin Anderson. —AP

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