Eastern Eye (UK)

Djokovic and Federer seek to make history

BOTH PLAYERS PROGRESS TO LANDMARK QUARTER-FINALS

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NOVAK DJOKOVIC and Roger Federer remained on course for a Wimbledon title showdown, when they were scheduled to make landmark appearance­s in the quarter-finals on Wednesday (7) .

World number one Djokovic, chasing a sixth title at the All England Club and recordequa­lling 20th Grand Slam, will play his 50th quarter-final at the majors. The Serb was set to take on Marton Fucsovics, the first Hungarian man to get this far since 1948.

Federer,, who is five weeks shy of his 40th birthday, was in his 18th Wimbledon quarter-final and 58th at the majors. He was set to face 18th-ranked Hubert Hurkacz, only the fourth Polish man to make the lasteight after knocking out world number two Daniil Medvedev.

Having already become just the third man to win all four Slams more than once by lifting his second French Open last month, Djokovic now has another record in his sights. He is halfway to a rare calendar Grand Slam, a feat only achieved by two other men – Don Budge in 1938 and Rod Laver in 1962 and 1969.

As a result, the 34-year-old is already being hailed as the greatest player of all time, surpassing even Federer and the absent Rafael Nadal.

“I feel privileged and honoured of course, and very happy to be in this position to make history in the sport,” said Djokovic. “At the same time I need to go about my everyday routines and everyday life on the tour pretty much the same way that I feel it has reaped a lot of success for me.”

Djokovic enjoys a 2-0 headto-head record over 29-year-old Fucsovics, who has made the last-eight of a Slam for the first time. Fucsovics knocked out fifth seed Andrey Rublev in the fourth round after the Russian had swept their previous four matches in a nine-month spell.

Worryingly for the Hungarian, Djokovic has only faced nine break points through four rounds at the tournament.

Federer, chasing a ninth Wimbledon title, won his only meeting against Hurkacz, in straight sets in the Indian Wells quarter-finals in 2019.

“We’ll see how much more I have got left in the tank,” said 39-year-old Federer, the oldest man to make the quarter-finals in the Open Era.

He struggled in his opener against Adrian Mannarino who had to retire injured when the match was tied at two sets each.

“I felt like now I’ve had some good progress. I’m taking the ball earlier. Obviously I’ve gotten used to the conditions, gotten used to the balls, the court speed,” said Federer whose comfortabl­e last-16 win against Lorenzo Sonego was the 105th of his Wimbledon career.

Should Federer reach the semi-finals, he will face either Italian seventh seed Matteo Berrettini or Felix Auger-Aliassime, the 16th-seeded Canadian.

Berrettini, the Queen’s Club winner, has emerged as a champion-in-waiting should Djokovic or Federer falter.

He has fired a tournament­leading 67 aces and dropped serve just twice.

Berrettini reached his maiden Slam quarter-final at the French Open last month where he lost to Djokovic.

Auger-Aliassime, 20, is in the last-eight of a Slam for the first time after knocking out German fourth seed Alexander Zverev in five sets.

The two are close friends while their respective girlfriend­s are cousins.

Auger-Aliassime is dating Nina Ghaibi while Berrettini is romantical­ly involved with Australian player Ajla Tomljanovi­c who reached the women’s quarter-finals.

Berrettini defeated his friend in the final of the Stuttgart grass court final in 2019.

“Both our girlfriend­s are cousins, so it just happens that we spend a lot of time together,” said Auger-Aliassime.

 ??  ?? BOX-OFFICE DRAW: Novak Djokovic (left) beat Roger Federer to become the 2019 Wimbledon champion
BOX-OFFICE DRAW: Novak Djokovic (left) beat Roger Federer to become the 2019 Wimbledon champion

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