The Serbian, who suffered the hamstring injury
en route to winning the warm-up title in Adelaide, won the
season-opening major after beating Stefanos Tsitsipas in
Sunday's final for a men's record 22nd Grand Slam title,
matching Rafa Nadal's haul.
"This guy I did see, he had a three-centimetre tear in his
hammy," Tiley told SEN Sportsday. "Absolutely (I saw the scans),
the doctors are going to tell you the truth.
"There was a lot of speculation about whether it was true or
not, it's hard to believe that they can do what they do with
those kinds of injuries.
"He's remarkable, to deal with it extremely professionally."
Djokovic's coach Goran Ivanisevic said after the final that the
world number one battled the injury, which would have forced
most players to quit.
"He's so focused on everything he does, with every single minute
of the day," Tiley added. "That's what he eats, what he drinks,
when he does it, how he does it.
"There's no breakdown or mental breakdown in anything that he
does. He's been through a lot and to win 10 Australian Opens, I
don't think that's ever going to be repeated... He'll hold a
significant place in the history of the Australian Open."
(Reporting by Manasi Pathak in Bengaluru; Editing by Raissa
Kasolowsky)
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