The Reporter (Vacaville)

Djokovic makes more history with 1st-round win

- By Howard Fendrich

WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND >> Novak Djokovic's play was not particular­ly, well, Djokovic-esque, at Wimbledon on Monday.

Even he acknowledg­ed as much.

He got broken early and trailed 3-1 as he began his bid for a fourth consecutiv­e championsh­ip and seventh overall at the grass-court Grand Slam tournament. He recovered to take that set, then dropped the next. He slipped and fell to the grass. He accumulate­d more unforced errors than his opponent. Maybe he was a bit under the weather; he grabbed tissues from a black box on the sideline and blew his nose. Maybe he was simply a bit off, not having played a match that mattered in nearly a full month.

This, though, is the topseeded Djokovic, and there's a reason he extended his winning streak at the All England Club to 22, and his career victory total there to 80 — making him the first player in tennis history with at least that many at each major — by beating Kwon Soonwoo of South Korea 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 at Centre Court under the retractabl­e roof.

And there's a reason that friends of the wife of Kwon's coach, Daniel Yoo, held up decorated signs in a player guest box bearing Korean messages that Yoo said meant “Fight!” and “Don't get hurt!”

So Kwon walked on court jittery. But after just two games, the 81st-ranked Kwon said through Yoo's translatio­n, “I felt like, `Oh, this is doable . ... I can hang with him a little bit.'”

With the exception of a loss for No. 7 seed Hubert Hurkacz, a semifinali­st at the All England Club a year ago, Day 1 signaled a

fairly routine return to prepandemi­c normal, with capacity crowds, zero masks, the Wimbledon Queue in full effect and, of course, on-and-off-and-on-again showers.

Hurkacz, coming off a grass title over the weekend, lost 7-6 (4), 6-4, 5-7, 2-6, 7-6 (10-8) to Alejandro Davidovich Fokina in a match that featured Wimbledon's new final-set format: women's third sets and men's fifth sets that get to 6-all will go to a first-to-10-and-win-by-two tiebreaker.

That might as well be called the John Isner Rule, owing to the American's 70-68 fifth-set victory over Nicolas Mahut in 2010 and 26-24 fifth-set loss to Kevin Anderson in 2018, both at Wimbledon, both before the tournament adopted decidingse­t tiebreaker­s.

On Monday, Isner was back on Court 18, the site of the Mahut marathon, and smacked 54 aces in a 6-7 (6), 7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 victory over Enzo Couacaud. Isner's next match figures to be held at a bigger court, because he'll be facing Andy Murray, who has won two of this three major championsh­ips at Wimbledon.

Murray's 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 win over James Duckworth came at Centre Court and followed another triumph there by a British major title winner, reigning U.S. Open champ Emma Raducanu.

“From the moment I walked out through those gates, I could really just feel the energy and the support and everyone was behind me from the word `go,'” the 19-year-old Raducanu said after defeating Alison Van Uytvanck 6-4, 6-4. “I just really tried to cherish every single point out there. Played every point like it could have been one of my last on that court.”

Djokovic, a 35-year-old from Serbia, had not played since losing to rival Rafael Nadal in the French Open quarterfin­als and it seemed to show. Kwon's piercing, flat groundstro­kes and soft drop shots were effective for stretches.

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