Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Djokovic wins fifth Wimbledon title

World No. 1 beats Federer in tiebreaker, repeats in London

- By Sam Farmer

WIMBLEDON, England — It was more a canvas than a court.

For nearly five hours Sunday afternoon, Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer, rivals atop the tennis world, were nothing short of artists, placing the ball with surgical precision, sliding across the grass, somehow getting their rackets on dropshots that should have been out of reach.

In the end, it was topseeded Djokovic who won the thriller, 7- 6 ( 5), 1- 6, 7- 6 ( 4), 4- 6, 13- 12 ( 3), for his fifth Wimbledon singles title in the first championsh­ip decided by final- set tiebreak — a rule put in place by the tournament in October.

“It was probably the most mentally demanding match I’ve ever been a part of,” said Djokovic, who was nearly flawless as he defended his Wimbledon title.

“It was one shot away from losing the match,” he said. “This match had everything, and could have gone [ Federer’s] way.”

The final was the longest ever — four hours, 57 minutes — nine minutes longer than the 2008 classic between Federer and Rafael Nadal.

Sunday’s match also had the longest rally on record during a final, at 35 strokes.

But when asked in the aftermath if this is a match that everyone will remember, a dejected Federer cracked a half- smile and said, “I’ll try to forget.”

That isn’t just because he lost, but because he blew a golden opportunit­y to win,

leading, 8- 7, in the fifth set and serving, 40- 15.

Djokovic saved consecutiv­e match points to stay alive and eventually set up a third tiebreaker — and he was 3- 0 in those on the day.

“I just feel like it’s such an incredible opportunit­y missed,” Federer said. “I can’t believe it.”

Djokovic triumphed despite most of the crowd pulling for the 37- year- old Federer, such an overwhelmi­ng fan favorite that his headband might as well have been a halo.

“It’s hard to not be aware,” Djokovic said of the rooting disparity. “You have that kind of electric atmosphere, that kind of noise, especially in some decisive moments where we’re quite even. It’s one way or another. The crowd gets into it.

“Of course, if you have the majority of the crowd on your side, it helps, it gives you motivation, it gives you strength, it gives you energy. When you don’t, then you have to find it within, I guess,” he said.

Djokovic said he tries to ignore the cheers sometimes, and that he tries to trick his mind when absolutely necessary.

“I like to transmute it in a way,” Djokovic said.

“When the crowd is chanting ‘ Roger’ I hear ‘ Novak.’ It sounds silly, but it is like that. I try to convince myself that it’s like that.”

In winning his fifth Wimbledon championsh­ip, Djokovic draws even with Bjorn Borg ( 1976- 80) in the tournament. The only men who have more are Pete Sampras ( seven) and Federer ( eight).

“When I was a boy, 4 or 5 years old and dreaming to become a tennis player one day, this always has been the tournament for me, where I wanted to participat­e, where I wanted to win one day,” the Serbian star said. “I used to make the trophies out of different materials in my room, and just imagining one day I’d be standing here.”

The match ran at top dollar on the secondary market, with the cheapest tickets on Stubhub. com going for $ 5,500. Among the celebritie­s, other than the royal family, watching from the royal box were Jeff Bezos, Benedict Cumberbatc­h, Stefan Edberg, Chris Evert, Rod Laver, John Newcombe, Ed Norton and Stan Smith.

This was the 16th career meeting between Djokovic and Federer at a major championsh­ip, an Open Era record for men at Grand Slam tournament­s.

With the victory, Djokovic tied Nadal for the most career victories over Federer ( 10) at majors. Overall, the two were playing each other for the 48th time, with Djokovic holding a 26- 22 edge — including 3- 1 on grass courts, all at Wimbledon.

At 37 years and 340 days, Federer was looking to become the oldest player to win a Grand Slam event in the Open Era ( since 1968).

He was asked to compare Sunday’s match with his marathon loss to Nadal in the 2008 final, widely regarded as the greatest match in tennis history.

“Well, this one is more straightfo­rward maybe in some ways because we didn’t have the rain delays, we didn’t have the night coming in and all that stuff,” Federer said. “But sure, epic ending, so close, so many moments.

“Yeah, I mean, sure there’s similariti­es. But you got to go dig, see what they are. I’m the loser both times, so that’s the only similarity I see.”

 ?? Clive Brunskill/ Getty Images ?? Novak Djokovic savors his win against Roger Federer: “It was probably the most mentally demanding match I’ve ever been a part of,” he said.
Clive Brunskill/ Getty Images Novak Djokovic savors his win against Roger Federer: “It was probably the most mentally demanding match I’ve ever been a part of,” he said.

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