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			Melbourne maestro Djokovic wary of over-confidence 
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			 [January 14, 2017] 
			By Ian Ransom 
 MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Novak Djokovic 
			has dominated the blue courts of Melbourne Park for the best part of 
			a decade but the defending champion still fears over-confidence 
			could prove his undoing at the Australian Open.
 
 Set to bid for a record seventh title and a second hat-trick of 
			trophies after his 2011-13 run, the Serb has often seemed invincible 
			in Australia.
 
 This time, however, he has arrived Down Under in a more humble 
			position, without the top seed for the first time in three years 
			after conceding the number one ranking to Briton Andy Murray.
 
 "I never had an invincibility, although I thank you for the 
			compliment," he told reporters at Melbourne Park on Saturday, two 
			days before the first grand slam of the season starts.
 
 "Nobody is invincible. I never thought of myself as a superior 
			player on the court, even though of course at times I
 
 was very confident, I was winning a lot of matches.
 
			 
			"But, you know, knowing how it feels on the court, if you get 
			overconfident, that's why I don't want to get into that kind of 
			state of mind.
 "I still want to put myself in a position where I'm quite even to 
			other players, fight for this trophy as anybody else, even though 
			I'm defending champion."
 
 After completing a sweep of the grand slam titles at last year's 
			French Open, Djokovic suffered a form slump and Murray poached his 
			number one ranking at the World Tour finals, but winning back the 
			top spot was not the Serb's "main priority".
 
 "As a consequence of the results, if I become number one, that's 
			great. Of course, that's what I want," he added.
 
			 "I 
			really would like to take one tournament at a time and try to win as 
			many matches as possible. Then, as I said, as a consequence to that, 
			if I become number one, I'll be thrilled."
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			Serbia's Novak Djokovic is given a large tennis ball during a 
			promotional event ahead of the Australian Open tennis tournament in 
			Melbourne, Australia, January 14, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su 
            
			 
			While hardly putting him back in the pack, 29-year-old Djokovic's 
			second seeding has resulted in a tougher draw than in years past.
 He faces a stern opening test against Spanish veteran Fernando 
			Verdasco, who dumped Rafa Nadal out of the first round last year and 
			held five match points over the Serb at the Qatar Open.
 
 A possible fourth round match against Bulgarian talent Grigor 
			Dimitrov, in red-hot form after upsetting Kei Nishikori and Milos 
			Raonic to win the Brisbane International, follows.
 
 But Djokovic has also enjoyed sound preparation and landed a 
			psychological blow against Murray by beating him in the final at 
			Qatar last week to snap the Scot's 28-match winning streak.
 
 "I couldn't ask for a better start of the season," Djokovic said. "I 
			still haven't had any nightmares, so I can't call it a nightmare 
			draw. I just see it as a huge challenge. I hope I'll be able to 
			deliver."
 
 (Editing by ....)
 
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