Wimbledon has become a place of solace for Novak Djokovic in
the last two years; he may have been denied the career Grand Slam at the French
Open a month ago, but the curse of Roland Garros is once again a thing of the
past thanks to the Serb’s growing enchantment at SW19.
Novak Djokovic with the Wimbledon trophy |
For the second year running Djokovic shook off the disappointment
after not winning in Paris, which remains the only major to elude him, to pull
off a memorable victory over the great Roger Federer on the headline stage of
Centre Court.
It wasn’t quite the 5 set epic of 12 months ago where Djokovic
squandered a match point and break of serve in the fourth set before winning
the title in the fifth. There were
similarities as Federer was left with the task of recovering from 2 sets to 1 down,
yet this time the Serb was too canny to let the match unravel into a deciding
set.
Even so there was no shortage of drama and after Djokovic
convincingly secured the first set tie break by 7 points to 1, he blinked in
the second as seven set points came and went. Six of which came in a classic
breaker which Federer acquired 12-10, that could have been the cue for sudden momentum
swing but after recomposing himself in the manner of a champion Djokovic reeled
his way through the next two set before closing out a 7-6 (1) 6-7 (10) 6-4 6-3
victory.
It’s a result which moves the Serb onto 9 major titles,
surpassing the likes of Ivan Lendl, Andre Agassi and Jimmy Connors on 8. That’s
the sort of company the Serb is mixing with right now and at 28 he appears to
be at the peak of his powers.
Djokovic still has some way to go to catch Federer on 17,
but if the Serb continues to play like this over the next couple of years he
could yet join the Swiss in the conversation about the greatest ever player.
This was Djokovic’s third Wimbledon title, but for all his assets
you still get the impression he isn’t as treasured in the same way that Federer
and even Rafael Nadal are upheld.
Nevertheless none can question the resolution and drive the
Serb has shown in the past few weeks, after seemingly cracking his jinx at the
French he came up against an inspired opponent in Stanislas Wawrinka who
wrestled the title away from him. He didn’t play a warm up tournament before
Wimbledon and had to recover from two sets down against the giant serving South
African Kevin Anderson. Yet his best match came in the final and in the end he
was more than a worthy champion.
"I have to say it's a big challenge playing against
Roger," said the Serb after the match. "A lot of players of my
generation have looked up to him and followed his lead. He makes you push your
limits, work hard and win every single point."
As for Federer, this tournament has shown that there is
still plenty of life left in him, especially on grass. His statistic in the
final didn’t quite match the immaculate ones he produced in Friday’s victory
over Andy Murray, where his first serve percentage reached 76%. Here it
finished at 67% which against any other player would probably have got the job
done. Not Djokovic.
"I had my chances in the first set. I got lucky to win
the second, had chances in the third. Said the Swiss "But he was better on
the bigger points. He was rock solid, I didn't play badly myself. That's how it
goes."
The first break of serve went Federer’s way in the first
set, however Djokovic broke back immediately. The Serb went on to save a total
of six out of seven break points in the opener, including two set points, before
dominating the tie break which ended with a Federer double fault.
Serving first in the second Djokovic quickly applied some
scoreboard pressure. He had two set points before the tie break and five more
in it; however Federer saved them all with some fearless tennis including a
second serve which checked the line and an incredible 21 shot rally.
After finally levelling the match Federer had break point at
the start of the third but it was Djokovic who broke through a couple of games
later. At 3-2 to the Serb, the match was temporarily stopped due to a brief ran
delay. Went they resumed it was all Djokovic as he calmly converted his third
set advantage while keeping Federer at the back of the court with his relentless
depth.
An early break for Djokovic in the fourth gave the match an inevitable
feel as the Serb’s energy sapping performance appeared to leave Federer on the
edge. Djokovic broke serve again to seal the victory, before following his
tradition when winning the title by eating some of the Centre Court grass.