Djokovic on a mission as he glides past Anderson
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[July 01, 2021]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) -Top seed Novak
Djokovic has begun Wimbledon like a man on a mission, which
considering the history the Serb is trying to create should come as
no surprise.
The 34-year-old described his 6-3 6-3 6-3 second-round win over
twice Grand Slam runner-up Kevin Anderson as "almost flawless" and
no one on Centre Court would disagree.
His only slight issue was keeping his feet on the still-greasy turf,
but his game was at its immaculate best as he appeared to be able to
land each shot on a sixpence.
Djokovic made only five unforced errors in a masterful display
against the South African he also beat in the 2018 final.
And while he did lose the first set of his opening round match
against inspired British teenager Jack Draper, what has followed has
been an ominous statement of intent.
Djokovic is not only chasing a sixth Wimbledon title and third in a
row, he can also match Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal's men's record
haul of 20 Grand Slam titles.
If that is not enough, he is also halfway to the calendar-year sweep
of all four majors last achieved by Rod Laver in 1969 and could also
be on for the Golden Slam if you add the Tokyo Olympics into the
mix.
Quite simply, by the end of the year Djokovic could well have
settled the GOAT (greatest of all-time) debate.
But we have been here before.
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In 2016, Djokovic had also arrived at Wimbledon as a hot favourite
having won the Australian and French Open titles that year to hold
all four slams simultaneously.
Then, at Wimbledon, he was stunned by American Sam Querrey in the
third round.
So Djokovic will certainly not be letting his guard
slip when he plays American Denis Kudla on Friday.
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Serbia'a Novak Djokovic celebrate
winning his first round match against South Africa's Kevin Anderson
REUTERS/Toby Melville
Looking back to 2016, Djokovic said he
had come in feeling a little deflated after the high of winning his
first French Open.
"I'm going to try to learn from that experience that I had in 2016,"
Djokovic, bidding to become the fifth man in history to win the
first three Grand Slam tournaments of the season since Laver in
1969, told reporters.
"This time I'm probably, I would like to think, a bit wiser and a
bit more experienced as a player and person. But it's only two
matches into the tournament, there's still a long way to go."
Anderson, on the comeback trail after knee injuries, played
high-level tennis, but Djokovic broke serve with ease once in each
set for a clean cut victory.
"I've done things on and off the court to make myself feel that I'm
focused, yet at the same time calm and composed and clear with my
game plan," he said.
Only when he slipped over did he look at all ruffled, glaring
angrily at the offending lawn, although he later refused to
criticise the courts on which numerous players have fallen.
"Hopefully as the tournament progresses I'll also fall less," he
said. "But I don't mind falling more if the result is
winning a match."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman, editing by Ed Osmond)
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