Daily Dispatch

Djokovic – from sicknote Serb to Grand Slam warrior

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Novak Djokovic was once the sick-note Serb whose undoubted promise was at the mercy of a variety of frustratin­g aches, pains and assorted strains.

But, with a third US Open title to go with the Wimbledon crown he secured in July, he has matched American Pete Sampras on 14 Grand Slam titles and there is little doubt that the 31year-old is one of the sport’s greats.

Djokovic, playing in his eighth US Open final, delivered a businessli­ke 6-3 7-6 (7/4) 6-3 victory over third-seeded Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina.

Since a quarterfin­al exit at Roland Garros left him threatenin­g to skip Wimbledon, he has lost just one match, claiming not only a third title at the All-England Club but also a first Cincinnati Masters title in the build-up to the US Open.

From his lowest ranking in 12 years, he continues to rise. Sixth coming into the Open he is projected to rise to three in the world.

Now, Djokovic is three behind Rafael Nadal’s total of 17 Slams, six shy of Roger Federer’s record of 20.

But he has time on his side – Federer has already celebrated his 37th birthday.

“Of course he can,” Del Potro said when asked if Djokovic can claim the record over Federer.

“He has 14 already. He’s healthy. He has a great team working with him.

“Novak has everything to make records in this sport.”

Djokovic’s ability to thrive among the greats has never been in doubt, but the size of his heart led to questions in his early days.

At Wimbledon in 2007, he retired with a back injury in the third set of his semifinal against Nadal.

He also quit at the 2006 and 2007 French Opens at the third round and quarterfin­al stages respective­ly, while at the 2009 Australian Open, where he was defending champion, he pulled out of his quarterfin­al with Andy Roddick citing heat exhaustion.

But at the 2012 Australian Open, nobody was questionin­g his courage anymore when he beat Nadal in the longest Grand Slam final of all time, a draining 5hr 53min masterpiec­e.

Djokovic captured the first of his 12 majors in Melbourne in 2008, but it was three years before he added his second.

He dropped gluten from his diet, his lithe physique allowing him to chase down lost causes, transformi­ng him into the rubber man of tennis.

After leading Serbia to a maiden Davis Cup in 2010, he raced through the first half of 2011, building up a 48-1 winning run.

Only a semifinal defeat at the French Open prevented him from becoming just the third man to capture a calendar Grand Slam.

Despite that, he still finished 2011 with a 70-6 win-loss record, a haul of 10 tournament victories and year-end number one for the first time.

Back-to-back Australian Opens followed in 2012 and 2013, although the French Open remained frustratin­gly out of reach with three heartbreak­ing losses until his 2016 breakthrou­gh. In Paris that year, he became the first player to break through the $100m barrier in prize- money.

Djokovic has also not been afraid to innovate, bringing in Boris Becker as part of his coaching team for the start of the 2014 season. He then became a vegetarian.

Off-court, Djokovic married long-time girlfriend Jelena Ristic in July 2014.

They have two children – a son, Stefan, and daughter, Tara.

However, despite his achievemen­ts, Djokovic appears doomed never to be held in the same esteem as Federer and Nadal, the “people’s champions”. There are those that see something a little more calculatin­g in the Djokovic makeup, a player prone to affectatio­n.

In the 2015 French Open semifinals, he was castigated for taking an eight-minute medical time-out after dropping the third set against Andy Murray.

At Indian Wells in 2016, he was roundly criticised for his comments on equal prizemoney for women.

Even at Wimbledon this year, he criticised some Centre Court fans for lacking respect towards him while schedulers exiled him to Court Two for his third round match.

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