San Diego Union-Tribune

DJOKOVIC ONE WIN FROM 24TH MAJOR

- BY HOWARD FENDRICH Fendrich writes for The Associated Press.

Novak Djokovic limited big-serving Ben Shelton to five aces and broke him five times in their U.S. Open semifinal Friday. Djokovic pushed back when the 20year-old unseeded American produced a late stand that got the home crowd into the match.

And after overcoming what he called “a little black hole” caused by tension to right himself, finish off a 6-3, 6-2, 7-6 (4) victory and reach his record-tying 10th final at Flushing Meadows and 36th at all major tournament­s,

Djokovic added a touch of insult to injury by mimicking the kid’s “Hang up the phone!” celebratio­n gesture.

Djokovic then pointed to his temple and pounded his fist on his chest, before a stone-faced Shelton met him at the net for the most perfunctor­y of handshakes. A year after Djokovic could not travel to the United States for the Open because he is not vaccinated against COVID-19, the 36-year-old from Serbia is one victory away from a fourth title in New York and 24th Grand Slam championsh­ip overall.

“Well, fact is that, at 36, every Grand Slam final ... could be the last one. So I think that I probably value these occasions and opportunit­ies to win another Slam more than I have maybe 10 years ago,” said Djokovic, who would be the oldest man to win the U.S. Open in the profession­al era, which began in 1968. “I don’t know how many I have ahead of me now.”

He has made it to the finals of all four majors this season, with victories at the Australian Open in January and French Open in June.

On Sunday, Djokovic will face 2021 U.S. Open champion Daniil Medvedev, who advanced by eliminatin­g defending champ Carlos Alcaraz 7-6 (3), 6-1, 3-6, 6-3 in the second semifinal Friday night. The No. 3-seeded Medvedev, a 27-year-old from Russia, denied Djokovic a calendar-year Grand Slam by beating him in the final at Flushing Meadows two years ago.

“The challenge is that you play a guy that won 23

Grand Slams, and I have only one,” Medvedev said, looking ahead to taking on Djokovic. “When I beat him here, I managed to play better than myself, so I need to do it again. There is no other way.”

Both Medvedev and Alcaraz played brilliantl­y in parts, so-so in others. Both interacted with the spectators, pointing to an ear to ask for more noise. In the final game, fans called out as Medvedev double-faulted twice while trying to seal the win against a guy who beat him in the Wimbledon semifinals en route to the title there in July.

But Medvedev managed to hold on.

If Djokovic does end up leaving with the hardware this time, he would break a tie with Serena Williams for the most major singles championsh­ips in the Open era.

 ?? ?? Daniil Medvedev
Daniil Medvedev
 ?? ?? Novak Djokovic
Novak Djokovic

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