Novak sets up bad-boy showdown for the ages
The men’s singles final at Wimbledon is tomorrow and it is now time to pick your villain. Going for his first Grand Slam will be Nick Kyrgios, the gifted but often wayward son of Canberra who, as ever, has come through the draw with controversy in hot pursuit.
Against him will be the insanely formidable Novak Djokovic, desperately trying to get back within one Grand Slam title of the absent Rafael Nadal.
It takes a lot to force a booing sound out of the genteel Centre Court crowd, but both of them inadvertently managed it at the end of the Serb’s clinical dismantling of Cam Norrie.
Djokovic blowing kisses to a barracker in the crowd in the moment of victory set them off yesterday. It happened just when the arena seemed prepared to accept that the home favourite had been beaten by the better player.
Then came a further expression of disapproval — again mixed with some support — when on-court interviewer Rishi Persad mentioned the name of Kyrgios in his polite interrogation.
So it will be a strange men’s Wimbledon final in terms of allegiances. You have to go back to 1984, when John Mcenroe crushed Jimmy Connors, to find a pair who inspire such loathing mixed in with the usual admiration.
Djokovic and Kyrgios are even more of an odd couple in the context of a sport which, if anything, often sees an excessive amount of respect among its leading protagonists.
No Roger and Rafa love-ins here, and it might be all the more exciting for it.
Djokovic has been relatively well received at Wimbledon this year, much more so than would have been expected a few months ago.
his refusal to be vaccinated against Covid — which saw him deported from Kyrgios’s homeland only six months ago amid a firestorm of bad publicity — has barely merited a mention this fortnight.
Djokovic is desperate for the win, and not just because there will be £2million on the table tomorrow.
As it stands, his position on vaccination means that he will not be able to compete at a Grand Slam until next year’s French Open. The United States will not allow him in, and he is serving a ban from entering Australia.
he needs a 21st Slam to keep in touch with Nadal’s 22. It explained his nerves at the start, and how he was never going to meekly submit in the face of Norrie’s impressive opening.
That is the problem in beating these titans of the modern game in the biggest tournaments.
The best-of-five format allows them to regroup and use their experience, as the young Italian Jannik Sinner learned brutally in the quarter-finals against Djokovic.
Norrie could never get that close, although he can walk away with his head held high after a run which has introduced him to far a wider constituency beyond tennis fans.
Djokovic paid him the compliment afterwards of comparing the British No 1’s professionalism to his own.
he told of how his opponent had brought his own set of scales into the locker room to measure his weight exactly before the match, which he considered impressive.
That kind of attitude has seen Norrie go from 71 in the world at the start of last year to the cusp of the top 10 now.
There will come a day quite soon when the powers of Djokovic and Nadal will diminish.
While not as naturally blessed with talent as some, at his rate of improvement there is no reason why the 26-year-old Norrie should not be in the shake-up that will naturally come about at the top of the game.
It has been a decent summer for the Brits, who can now field a football team’s worth of names on tour that are recognisable to the public. If you were appointing a captain, it would be Norrie.