Djokovic started the year by winning a record ninth Australian
Open title and by the time the season reached the final of the
fourth and last major of the year at the U.S. Open, the Serbian
was standing on the verge of history.
A title at the Arthur Ashe Stadium would have made Djokovic the
first man to win all four majors in a calendar year since Rod
Laver in 1969 and also helped him break a three-way tie for a
men's record 20 Slam titles with Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal.
It was Russian Daniil Medvedev who created a little bit of
history of his own, however, when he clinched a first major
nL1N2QE0HP by demolishing Djokovic in straight sets at Flushing
Meadows.
The Serbian did have another tie to break in 2021, though, and
this time he succeeded as he surpassed his childhood idol
American Pete Sampras by clinching the year-end world number one
ranking for a record seventh time.
Djokovic also won a record 37th ATP Masters title and surpassed
Federer's record for most weeks as the ATP number one.
Medvedev, Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece and German Alexander
Zverev - the Tokyo gold medallist - were worthy challengers but
Djokovic left no one in any doubt that he would remain the man
to beat next term.
"I'm really, really tired from this season and this whole year,"
said Djokovic after Serbia's semi-final loss to Croatia in the
Davis Cup, adding that he will return hungry for more.
In team tennis, Russia were unmatched as they won the ATP Cup,
the Davis Cup and the inaugural Billie Jean King nL1N2RX0GM Cup
with the pair of Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Andrey Rublev also
clinching the mixed doubles gold at the Tokyo Games.
STUNNING RADUCANU
Raducanu took the newcomer of the year title for her spectacular
few months on court that started with her fourth-round
appearance at Wimbledon and culminated with the then 18-year-old
winning a maiden major at the U.S. Open.
The 18-year-old Raducanu entered the hardcourt major as a
150th-ranked qualifier, going on to become Britain's first
female Grand Slam champion for 44 years.
Raducanu and Canadian Leylah Fernandez -- born two months apart
in 2002 -- generated frenzied hype as they swept all before them
on unlikely runs to the title decider in New York.
The year, however, ended on a sour note for the sport with the
WTA suspending its 2022 tournaments nL1N2SM2GY in China due to
concerns over the treatment of Peng, who had accused a former
vice premier of sexual assault.
China has been the epicentre of the WTA's aggressive expansion
in Asia for more than a decade and the women's tour hosted nine
events in the country when the last full season before the
COVID-19 pandemic was held in 2019.
But approaching the turn of the year the future of tennis in
China appeared grim.
"Unless China takes the steps we have asked for, we cannot put
our players and staff at risk by holding events in China," WTA
chief Steve Simon said.
DUO INJURED
For the legions of Federer and Nadal fans it was a year to
forget as both lost a chunk of the season to injuries while the
Spaniard also relinquished his French Open claycourt crown which
was claimed by his great rival Djokovic.
Also struggling was 23-time major winner Serena Williams, who
retired from her first-round match at Wimbledon with a right
hamstring injury and was sidelined for the rest of the season.
Her heir apparent, Naomi Osaka, missed a couple of Grand Slams
for a different reason.
Osaka began the year by picking up her fourth major at Melbourne
Park but the Japanese player stunned the world by pulling out
ahead of her second-round match at the French Open following a
row over skipping press conferences.
The 24-year-old revealed that she had struggled to cope with
depression for a number of years before also opting out of
Wimbledon for the sake of her mental well-being.
After opting to stay in Australia for much of last year because
of the COVID-19 pandemic, Ash Barty made the most of her six
months away from home in 2021 by winning a tour-leading five
titles, including a second major at Wimbledon.
She skipped the Billie Jean King Cup and season-ending WTA
Finals due to Australia's border restrictions but had done
enough to secure her third straight year-end number one ranking.
The most improved player of the year award was bestowed upon
Czech Barbora Krejcikova for a stellar season in which she won
the French Open title for her first singles major.
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Ken Ferris)
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