China Daily (Hong Kong)

Becker praised

World No 1 grateful for coach’s low-key, calming influence

- By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE in Dubai

Novak Djokovic lauds head coach Boris Becker’s calming influence in 14 months of working together. >

Novak Djokovic previewed his defense of the Dubai Open title with a tribute to the role of his head coach Boris Becker in the spectacula­r advances made in the 14 months they have been working together.

During that time the Serbian has won two Grand Slam titles, taking his total to eight, and built an overwhelmi­ng lead as world No 1 — now nearly 4,000 ranking points.

Some of the credit, he claims, should go to Becker, whose experience in winning six Grand Slam titles and two Davis Cups with Germany has helped Djokovic cope with the psychologi­cal stress of continuous­ly playing at the highest level of the game.

“Especially in the second half of 2014 things started to get together and clicked for us in the relationsh­ip, on and off the court,” Djokovic said. “We never had an argument, we never had a fight.

“Now it’s been a little bit over a year and I learn constantly something new from him from a psychologi­cal point of view, mostly because he has been in these situations before.

“So he understand­s what I go through, the challenges I face, the obstacles that I need to overcome to win big titles and to be No 1 in the world, because he was there.”

By happy coincidenc­e their similar paths on the tennis court have an important parallel off it as well. Both became fathers at a similar age, while each was trying to maximize exceptiona­l talent at its peak.

“We talked a lot about that and how that is influencin­g your tennis and your career and how you can organize your life in order to get that flow moving,” Djokovic said. “Obviously that gave him a new energy, new motivation.

“He tried to use it not as anything negative, as a distractio­n, or something similar, but as a source of happiness, a source of new motivation, something that gave him a way of going out there and being calmer and even better on the court.

“It requires obviously more people, and a better organizati­on because a baby is not easy to handle — but it is possible.

“It’s a challenge but it’s all a matter of organizati­on with your close ones and understand­ing what your priorities are, and the support that you get.

Baby talk

“Roger Federer’s the best example of this. We are talking about one baby — and he’s got four!”

The only problems which emerged in Djokovic’s relationsh­ip with his head coach came with a slip of the tongue.

Attempting to explain how Becker had contribute­d something new to his success, Djokovic managed instead to utter: “He contribute­d something new to my sex ...”

That was a blooper from which he eventually recovered from by saying: “I guess my PR’s hands are sweating now,” before correcting himself with: “As I say he contribute­d a lot — yeah!”

Djokovic concluded: “We still want to achieve a lot, Boris and I. We feel like it’s only a beginning. We have won two Grand Slams together and played a final at the French Open, and so there is a lot of good success there but, of course, there is always high expectatio­ns for him and for myself.”

Djokovic will start his bid for a fifth title in Dubai on Tuesday, with his nearest rival being secondseed­ed Federer, who has a record six titles.

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