Herald on Sunday

Djokovic closes in on 20 club

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The victories keep adding up for Novak Djokovic: 20 in a row at Wimbledon since the start of the 2018 tournament, 20 in a row in all Grand Slam matches since the start of this season.

Get both streaks up to 21 tomorrow by beating Matteo Berrettini in the final at the All England Club, and Djokovic will tie rivals Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal with a 20th major championsh­ip, the most for a man in tennis history.

“It would mean everything,” No 1ranked Djokovic said. “That’s why I’m here. That’s why I’m playing.”

He worked his way in and out of trouble against a much younger, less experience­d opponent yesterday until eliminatin­g No 10 Denis Shapovalov 7-6 (3), 7-5, 7-5 in the semifinals at Centre Court. Each set was tight and intense. Each appeared within Shapovalov’s grasp — until it was in Djokovic’s.

“He was serving for first set. He was better for most of the second set; had a lot of opportunit­ies and just didn’t close it out when he needed to,” said Djokovic, who at 34 is 12 years older than Shapovalov. “In important moments, I probably held my nerves better and just [made] him play an extra shot, do an unforced error.”

Djokovic made just 15 unforced errors, Shapovalov 36. The other key stats: Djokovic saved five of five break points in the second set, then three of three in the third.

“What hurt so much this time was just that I felt like the game is there and it’s possible to go and play for the trophy,” said Shapovalov, who walked off in tears after falling to 0-7 against Djokovic. “It’s a feeling I’ve never had before, so that’s why it just hurt so much. I felt like I was outplaying Novak in parts of the match. If you’re outplaying Novak, you can beat anyone.”

So true. Now another new-tothese-stages foe, No 7 seed Berrettini, will give it a shot as Italy’s first Grand Slam male finalist in 45 years.

With booming serves delivering 22 aces, and powerful forehands helping compile 60 winners, Berrettini used an 11-game run to grab a big lead and held on to beat No 14 Hubert Hurkacz 6-3, 6-0, 6-7 (3), 6-4.

Djokovic is trying to collect a sixth championsh­ip at Wimbledon — and third straight — to go along with nine Australian Opens, three US Opens and two French Opens. And then there’s this: After collecting trophies on the hard courts of Melbourne Park in February and the red clay of Roland Garros in June — defeating Berrettini in the quarter-finals there — Djokovic seeks a triumph on the grass of the All England

Club to get threequart­ers of the way to a calendarye­ar Grand Slam, with only the US

Open remaining.

No man has pulled off that three-title stretch in one year — let alone all four — since Rod Laver won the Grand Slam in 1969.

This will be Djokovic’s 30th major final, Berrettini’s first. Much as it was Djokovic’s 41st major semifinal, Shapovalov’s first.

“Obviously, the job is not done yet,” said 25-year-old Berrettini, who lost his only previous Slam semifinal, at the 2019 US Open. “I want to get the trophy now that I’m here.”

He owns an 11-match winning streak on grass courts, including the title at the Queen’s Club tune-up last month, when he became the first man since Boris Becker in 1985 to win the trophy in his debut at that event.

“Matteo played an unbelievab­le match,” said Hurkacz, who arrived at Wimbledon on a six-match losing streak but beat Federer and No 2 Daniil Medvedev to reach his first Slam semifinal. “I didn’t have many chances, basically. Probably zero.”

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Novak Djokovic has won his last 20 matches at Wimbledon and in all Grand Slams.
Photo / Getty Images Novak Djokovic has won his last 20 matches at Wimbledon and in all Grand Slams.

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