Ageless Djokovic aiming to silence young guns again at Wimbledon
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[June 29, 2023]
By Shrivathsa Sridhar
(Reuters) - A seemingly invincible Novak Djokovic playing some of
the best tennis of his career at 36 heads to Wimbledon seeking to
tighten his stranglehold on the men's game and its next generation
by winning a record-extending 24th Grand Slam crown.
The Serbian scaled the summit by claiming his 23rd major at the
French Open earlier this month, staving off younger rivals including
the ailing Carlos Alcaraz in the semi-finals and Casper Ruud in the
title clash.
Djokovic, who leapfrogged the injured Rafa Nadal in the all-time
men's majors list, has won 11 of his 13 Grand Slam finals after
turning 30 and the defending Wimbledon champion is in no mood to
slow down on the biggest stage.
"Of course, the journey is still not over," Djokovic said following
his Paris success. "I feel if I'm winning Grand Slams why even think
about ending the career that already has been going on for 20 years.
"So I still feel motivated, still feel inspired to play the best
tennis in these tournaments the most - Grand Slams. Those are the
ones that count I guess the most in the history of our sport. I look
forward already to Wimbledon."
With Nadal out for the rest of the year, last year's runner-up Nick
Kyrgios battling for fitness and world number one Alcaraz
inexperienced on grass despite his Queen's Club success, few will
look past Djokovic as favourite to lift the trophy.
The Serbian's only limitation could be a lack of practice in another
stop-start season, with the exhibition tournament at Hurlingham his
only tune-up for the year's third Grand Slam.
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Djokovic has triumphed at the All England Club in the last four
editions, excluding 2020 when the grasscourt Grand Slam was not held
due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and has a chance to now equal Roger
Federer's men's record of eight Wimbledon titles.
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Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros -
Bir-Hakeim Bridge, Paris, France - June 12, 2023 Serbia's Novak
Djokovic poses with the trophy after winning the men's singles
French Open title REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File photo
The Australian Open champion can also take another
big step towards completing a calendar Grand Slam - winning all four
majors in a year - having fallen short in 2021 after losing the U.S.
Open final to Daniil Medvedev.
Those achievements could further cement Djokovic's
status as the GOAT (Greatest Of All Time) in the eyes of his fans,
pundits and many former players.
His former coach Boris Becker, however, has no doubt the ageless
Serbian is already in a league of his own.
"Every generation had its stars. It would be unfair to now say one
is better than the other. But in any case, he's the most
successful," former Wimbledon champion Becker said.
"That determination, ambition, passion. What we have seen in the
end, how easily he beats the guys. The young guys are tired, not the
36-year-old.
"That's extraordinary ... 23 Grand Slams in an era where we had
Federer, Nadal not to mention Andy Murray and Stan Wawrinka. No one
would have expected this from him, except himself.
"He spoke about this dream he had as a boy. I believe that dream is
far from being dreamt to its end."
(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Ken
Ferris)
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