The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Djokovic out after lopsided loss

- By Howard Fendrich

PARIS » His French Open title defense nearing an end, Novak Djokovic stumbled and tumbled to his knees on the red clay, his racket flying from his right hand as his opponent’s backhand zipped past.

Even Djokovic found it hard to fathom how far he’s fallen, only a year removed from leaving Roland Garros as a player nonpareil, the first man in nearly a halfcentur­y to win four consecutiv­e Grand Slam titles.

That he departed this time with a surprising­ly lopsided 7- 6 (5), 6-3, 6- 0 quarterfin­al loss to sixthseede­d Dominic Thiem of Austria on Wednesday left everyone, including Djokovic, pondering the answers to difficult questions.

Did he give up in the last set? What has happened to his once-impervious play? Can he summon that again? Does he need a break from the grind of the tour?

“It’s a fact that I’m not playing close to my best, and I know that,” Djokovic said after his first straightse­t loss at a major since the 2013 Wimbledon final. “For me, it’s a whole new situation that I’m facing.”

Since completing his career Grand Slam at the French Open 12 months ago, Djokovic has participat­ed in four majors in a row without earning a trophy. He also lost his No. 1 ranking to Andy Murray.

Djokovic was runner-up at the U.S. Open but lost in the third round at Wimbledon, the first round at the Rio Olympics and the sec- ond round at the Australian Open.

“The win here last year has brought a lot of different emotions. Obviously, it was a thrill and complete fulfillmen­t, I guess,” Djokovic said during an expansive and frank news conference. “I have lived on that wave of excitement, I guess, ‘til the U.S. Open or so. And at the U.S. Open, I just was emotionall­y very flat and found myself in a situation that I hadn’t faced before in (my) profession­al tennis career.”

The 23-year-old Thiem next faces nine- time French Open champion Rafael Nadal, who advanced when No. 20 Pablo Carreno Busta stopped while trailing 6-2, 2-0 after injuring an abdominal muscle late in the first set.

“I mean, it’s a joke how tough it is to win a Slam,” said Thiem, the only player who beat Nadal in one of his 23 clay-court matches this season. “Now I beat Novak. On Friday, (it’s) Nadal. In the finals, there is another top star.”

On the other half of the draw, 2015 champion Stan Wawrinka reached his third major semifinal in a row by eliminatin­g Marin Cilic 6-3, 6-3, 6-1, while Murray and Kei Nishikori met in the last quarterfin­al.

With the wind whipping at more than 15 mph (25 kph), and the temperatur­e in the low 50s (low teens Celsius), Djokovic was out of sorts in so many ways even before that 20-minute third set in which he won only 8 of 34 points. It’s only the second time Djokovic lost a final set by the score of 6-0 in his 937 career tour-level matches.

“It’s hard to comment (on) the third set. Obviously, nothing was going my way and everything his way,” Djokovic said. “Just pretty bad set.”

But both men thought the match was decided in the first set, when Djokovic held two set points at 5- 4, 15- 40 on Thiem’s serve. Thieme rased the first with a forehand volley and the other with a service winner that prompted Djokovic to roll his eyes.

Djokovic’s backhand really let him down in the tiebreaker: All seven points won by Thiem ended with that stroke.

In all, Djokovic made nearly twice as many unforced errors, 35, as winners, 18.

“More or less, all the parts of my game are kind of going up and down. I’m feeling like I’m missing consistenc­y,” Djokovic said. “I play a great match or two in a row, and then I play a completely opposite match. That’s what happened today.”

Still, how unlikely was this result? Djokovic had won all five previous matches — and 11 of 12 sets — against Thiem, including in the French Open semifinals a year ago.

Plus, Djokovic had appeared in a record six consecutiv­e semifinals in Paris.

Now he is at a crossroads of sorts. He just turned 30. He split from coaches Boris Becker and Marian Vajda and other members of his team, bringing aboard Andre Agassi for Week 1 of the French Open.

On Wednesday, he wouldn’t rule out some time off.

“It’s obviously tough to get out of it and figure out the way how to move ahead. At least I’m trying,” Djokovic said. “I know that I have achieved the biggest heights in this sport, and that memory and that experience gives me enough reason to believe that I can do it again.”

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Serbia’s Novak Djokovic falls as he plays Austria’s Dominic Thiem during their quarterfin­al match the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Wednesday in Paris.
CHRISTOPHE ENA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Serbia’s Novak Djokovic falls as he plays Austria’s Dominic Thiem during their quarterfin­al match the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Wednesday in Paris.

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