Djokovic says injury showed him how impatient he was
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[August 23, 2018]
By Amy Tennery
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Novak Djokovic
heads into the U.S. Open in sizzling form after collecting a fourth
Wimbledon title and completing a sweep of Masters series events over
the last month, but the Serb admits there were times when the long
road back from injury brought "more than a few moments of doubt"
about his future.
An elbow injury forced Djokovic to retire against Czech Tomas
Berdych in the quarter-finals of Wimbledon in 2017. After that came
a series of early tournament exits and, finally, surgery.
"I think one of the biggest things I’ve learned about myself is how
impatient I was," the 13-time Grand Slam winner told reporters on
Wednesday, reflecting on his recovery process.
"That was probably one of the hardest ways for me to learn to be
patient.
"I’ve never faced any major injury in my career – (for) which I was
very fortunate," Djokovic added. "But I guess even with the care
that I had the body took a lot of beating and eventually I had to
address the elbow injury more seriously."
With the world's best players descending on Flushing, Queens next
week, Djokovic is aiming to add a third U.S. Open title to his name
-- and to perfect his serve.
"It’s still a work in progress with the serve, to be honest,"
Djokovic said. "I’m aware that I can’t serve as the guys who are
6’10” obviously can. I’m not looking for that speed – I’m looking
more for precision and accuracy."
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Novak Djokovic (SRB) reacts after defeating Roger Federer (SUI)
during the finals in the Western and Southern tennis open at Lindner
Family Tennis Center. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY
Sports
Even so, the 6'2" (1.88m) Serbian said his serve worked well for him
against 6'8" South African Kevin Anderson, whom he beat this year to
clinch his fourth Wimbledon men's singles title, ending his two-year
Grand Slam drought.
He defeated Roger Federer on Sunday in the Cincinnati Masters final,
becoming the first player to complete a sweep of Masters series
tournaments.
That kind of success would be thrilling under any circumstances but
Djokovic said the hard road back made it even more satisfying.
“The Wimbledon win and the Cincinnati win now are much sweeter, more
special," Djokovic said, "because of the journey.”
(Deletes extraneous word in seventh paragraph)
(Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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