Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Djokovic beats Medvedev to win ninth Australian Open

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Peerless world number one Novak Djokovic demolished Russia's Daniil Medvedev in straight sets to win his ninth Australian Open title and extend his record-breaking reign at Melbourne Park Sunday. Djokovic overpowere­d the fourth seed 7-5, 62, 6-2 in front of 7,400 fans on Rod

Laver Arena to end the Russian's unbeaten run at 20 matches.

In winning a third straight Australian Open for the second time, the Serb claimed his 18th Grand Slam title to move within two of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal who have 20 each, while denying Medvedev his first.

Rarely has a player been so dominant at a single tournament with the Serb's record-extending ninth title moving him past Federer's eight at Wimbledon but still a long way behind the 13 Nadal has won at Roland Garros. But it was a rollercoas­ter ride to get there, with Djokovic dropping five sets en route to the final and battling an abdominal injury that nearly forced him to pull out after the third round. Despite admitting it was a gamble to keep playing, with a risk the injury could get worse and affect the rest of his season, the 33-year-old chose to continue and it paid off. Medvedev, 25, is one of the smartest players on tour, keeping his opponents guessing with his flat and low groundstro­kes, changing up the pace and angles, as he blends impenetrab­le defence with opportunis­tic offence. But the Serb, who held a 4-3 head-to-head record against him but had lost three of the previous four, had his measure.

Wild Backhand: In front of a pro-Djokovic crowd, Medvedev overcooked two forehands on his opening service game then sent one into the net to hand the Serb the first break points, then a wild backhand saw him immediatel­y on the back foot. Djokovic consolidat­ed with a serve to love before the Russian finally got off the mark with a wobbly hold for 1-3. But then a failed drop shot and net volley from the top seed allowed the Russian to break back. Long rallies ensued and it went with serve until some brilliant groundstro­kes from Djokovic earned three break points at 6-5. Medvedev saved two but not the third to lose the opening set. Undeterred, the tall, pencil-thin Russian kept coming and dialed up the pressure to break Djokovic's opening serve in set two, only for the Serb to immediatel­y strike back.

Djokovic won three games in a row, despite the disruption of two fans being ejected in an apparent refugee protest, as he took control.

He raced to a 5-2 lead with Medvedev smashing his racquet in frustratio­n as the set and the championsh­ip began slipping away.

Deflated, Medvedev dropped his opening serve in set three and never looked like finding a way back as Djokovic, in his 28th Grand Slam final compared to the Russian's second, drew on his experience to close out the match, dropping to the court in celebratio­n.

WORLD NUMBER ONE DEMOLISHES RUSSIAN 735, 632, 632 IN FINAL TO CLAIM 18TH GRAND SLAM TITLE

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