The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Djokovic’s coach admits surprise over victory at Wimbledon

Vajda works his magic as Djokovic returns to former greatness

- ELEANOR CROOKS

Novak Djokovic’s coach described his Wimbledon triumph as the biggest surprise of their long partnershi­p.

The 31-year-old put two years of struggles with motivation, confidence and fitness behind him by beating Kevin Anderson 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7/3) to win his 13th grand slam title.

The presence of Marian Vajda in Djokovic’s box was no doubt a factor after the pair reunited in April

The Slovakian coached Djokovic from 2006 to May 2017, when the former world No 1 made the shock announceme­nt that he had parted company with his whole team.

He subsequent­ly began working with Andre Agassi but elbow problems put him off the tour for the second half of last season and Djokovic was unable to return to anything like top form when the pair split.

Djokovic had just suffered dispiritin­g back-to-back losses to Taro Daniel and Benoit Paire in Indian Wells and Miami when Vajda began putting the pieces back together.

He said: “When we met first time I explained to him the process of self-belief, it has to be done a certain way. He understood that. We stuck to the routine. Obviously he found out he has to go through the matches and he has to really start fighting and get the mental strength .”

There was not instant progress but his game began to come together on clay before a painful quarter-final loss to Marco Cecchinato at the French Open, after which he said in a tetchy press conference he might not even play on grass.

“He had really tough times, doubting himself,” said Vajda.

“Eventually I was thinking it would take a longer time, maybe three, four, five months, maybe the US Open will be the right time.

“After his terrible interview after Paris, almost not playing the grass court, he found himself right away from the first day in Queen’s.

“I didn’t believe so much during the (Wimbledon) semi-final he can beat Rafa (Nadal) because Rafa was mentally much better and winning grand slams but something amazing happened in the fifth set.

“I didn’t expect to win Wimbledon. This is the biggest surprise from all the years I was with him.”

Hard work and getting back to basics were the virtues that Vajda impressed on Djokovic.

“He stopped for six months, and if you play violin and you stop for six months, you cannot play any songs,” said the 53-year-old.

The next major target for Djokovic will be to try to add another slam title at the US Open, where he had made at least the semi-finals every year since 2006 before missing out last year through injury.

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Novak Djokovic returned to his former glories when he won his fourth Wimbledon title – his 13th grand slam success – after a two-year barren spell.
Picture: PA. Novak Djokovic returned to his former glories when he won his fourth Wimbledon title – his 13th grand slam success – after a two-year barren spell.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom