Relieved Djokovic resumes quest to boost Grand Slam tally at French Open
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[May 20, 2022] By
Shrivathsa Sridhar
(Reuters) - Novak Djokovic was ready to skip Grand Slams rather than
take a COVID-19 vaccine following the Australian Open fiasco, but
the world number one has been building up steam in a stop-start
season to peak in time for his French Open title defence.
The 20-times Grand Slam champion was unable to defend his Australian
Open title in January after being deported from the country, having
initially been admitted to the tournament despite not taking the
vaccine.
Djokovic began his season late in Dubai and was knocked off top spot
following a shock loss to qualifier Jiri Vesely in the
quarter-finals before pulling out of Indian Wells and Miami as he
was unable to gain entry into the United States.
The Serbian risked being frozen out of Roland Garros as well due to
his vaccine stance but earned a reprieve when France lifted
restrictions in almost all public spaces in March.
The claycourt swing in April produced mixed results as the
34-year-old was stunned by Alejandro Davidovich Fokina early in
Monte Carlo and Andrey Rublev in the Belgrade final, before he fell
to red-hot Carlos Alcaraz in the Madrid semis this month.
But after capturing his first title in over six months without
dropping a set at the Italian Open last week, Djokovic showed he was
one of the top contenders ahead of his bid for a 21st Grand Slam
crown to move level with Rafa Nadal.
"To some extent it's a relief because after everything that happened
at the beginning of the year, it was important to win a big title,"
said Djokovic, who won his sixth crown in Rome and sealed his
1,000th tour-level win along the way.
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"Especially with Grand Slams coming up, where I
want to play my best and be at the level of confidence ... to have a
chance to win the title."
'PERFECT PREPARATION'
Djokovic reiterated that he would use his hardship in a tumultuous
year as fuel for the remainder of the season after he dismantled
Stefanos Tsitsipas 6-0 7-6(5) in the Rome final.
"Anything I was really looking for in Rome I got," said Djokovic,
who also beat world number four Tsitsipas in last year's French Open
title clash.
"It's the perfect preparation and lead-up to Roland Garros. I'm
going to Paris with confidence and good feelings about my chances.
With the rankings and the way I've been playing in the last few
weeks, I'd rate myself as one of the favourites."
Nadal's foot injury before the year's second Grand Slam may
reinforce Djokovic's claims, but Spanish 19-year-old Alcaraz -- who
beat both players en route to the Madrid title and looks primed for
major success -- represents a hurdle.
"I don't obviously spend too much time thinking who's going to win
it or who might have the best chance," Djokovic said. "I always
think about myself.
"I go there with the highest ambitions... Obviously the draw is not
something you can affect, but it's going to determine my trajectory
to the later stages.
"Best of five sets, you play every second day. It's a Grand Slam.
It's different ... you have to approach it differently."
(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Ken
Ferris)
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