"I won't play in Paris as I can't add to my
points tally but I will go to Vienna and London," Djokovic told
Wednesday's edition of Belgade daily Sportski Zurnal.
"I can win up to 500 points in Vienna as I didn't play there
last year and there are also a lot of points available in
London."
Djokovic clinched a record 36th ATP Masters crown when he won
the Italian Open title in Rome last month, surpassing Rafael
Nadal who confirmed he would enter the Paris Masters after
winning his 13th French Open title on Oct. 11.
Nadal, who equalled Roger Federer's record haul of 20 Grand Slam
titles when he blew Djokovic away in the French Open final, has
not entered the Oct. 26 - Nov. 1 tournament in Vienna but is
expected to take part in the ATP Finals in London, Nov. 15-22.
Djokovic, who won the Paris Masters last year, will not lose any
points over skipping the event because the ATP Tour's revised
ranking system due to the COVID-19 pandemic allows players to
retain points from last year.
Asked if he was content to allow world number two Nadal to catch
up with him in the Masters race, Djokovic said: "It's not my
priority. My immediate task is to collect as many points as I
can in a bid to put as much distance between myself and the
chasing pack ahead of next season.
"I want to go down in history as the world number one with the
most weeks at the top of the ATP Tour and I will do all I can to
make it happen.
"Whether Nadal plays in Paris or not changes nothing because
it's all in my hands."
Djokovic, who claimed his 17th major honour when he won this
year's Australian Open, was confident upcoming Serbian talents
would follow in his footsteps one day.
"The last 10 or 15 years have been fruitful and the success has
yielded players like Laslo Djere, Miomir Kecmanovic and Hamad
Medjedovic. It's great to see our youngsters winning
tournaments," he said.
(Writing by Zoran Milosavljevic; Editing by Christian Radnedge)
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