Novak Djokovic vs Dominic Thiem AO 2020 Final Preview and Prediction
Novak Djokovic can move to 17 grand slams if he beats Dominic Thiem in the Australian Open Final on Sunday. The Serbian’s…
Novak Djokovic can move to 17 grand slams if he beats Dominic Thiem in the Australian Open Final on Sunday. The Serbian’s…
2020 Australian Open |
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Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February |
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app; Watch highlights on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer. |
American Sofia Kenin fulfilled her potential by winning a first Grand Slam title with victory over Spain’s Garbine Muguruza at the Australian Open.
Kenin won 4-6 6-2 6-2 against two-time major winner Muguruza in Melbourne.
The 21-year-old was a child prodigy, who started making television appearances from the age of five and hitting with the stars soon after.
“My dream has officially come true,” said Kenin, the eighth first-time women’s champion in the past 12 Slams.
“Dreams come true. If you have a dream then go for it – it will come true.
“These two weeks have been the best two weeks of my life.”
Kenin, who turned 21 in November, is the youngest Australian Open champion since Russian Maria Sharapova in 2008.
The American 14th seed was gifted victory when Muguruza produced a double fault on the second match point – the Spaniard’s third of the game and eighth of the match.
Kenin dropped her racquet to the court and covered her face in shock, before going over to the opposite corner where her dad – and coach – Alex was sitting.
The pair warmly cupped hands before she returned to the court, spinning around and lifting her arms up towards him again in a gesture which summed up her shock.
Kenin was born in Russia but was a few months old when she moved with her parents to the United States, where she picked up a racquet at the age of five.
Raised in New York and sent to Florida to train, she quickly became a star in the States, featuring on television programmes and the covers of magazines which predicted a successful professional career ahead.
Famously, aged five, she claimed she would be able to return a serve from hard-hitting American star Andy Roddick, then practised with Grand Slam champions John McEnroe, Venus Williams and Kim Clijsters.
Two years later she spoke of her ambition to win one of the sport’s biggest prizes.
Now she has achieved her dream. And that confidence illustrated while still at primary school remains one of her key attributes.
Kenin never gives up and never shies away from a fight on court, which is what she found herself in after Muguruza won the opening set.
Demonstratively frustrated, she came out punching in the second, returning even more relentlessly than usual. Muguruza could not cope.
Breaks at 2-1 and 5-2 enabled Kenin to take the match into a decider, before she swung the momentum of a tight third set her way with a monumental hold for 3-2.
Trailing 40-0, she fought back with five points of the highest quality. Two backhands down the line under the most intense of pressure were outrageous, a third winner – this time down the other flank – almost ridiculous.
An ace out wide and a crosscourt forehand winner – after drawing Muguruza into the net – clinched the hold. It also virtually clinched the championship.
From that point, Muguruza’s confidence waned, with the Spaniard losing serve in the next game and again – in the most painful of circumstances – in what proved to be the final game.
Unseeded Muguruza, 26, was aiming to cap a remarkable return to form with a third Grand Slam title to follow victories at the 2016 French Open and Wimbledon a year later.
Some may have thought the former world number one was the favourite to beat Kenin at Melbourne Park, based on her previous success and the way she powered through the draw by beating four seeded players.
Three of those victories came against top-10 opponents in Wimbledon champion Simona Halep, Ukrainian fifth seed Elina Svitolina and Dutch ninth seed Kiki Bertens.
However, the streaky nature of Muguruza’s game appeared when she needed it least.
Four unforced errors surrendered a 40-15 lead in the fifth game of the final set, gifting a crucial break which Kenin would not give up.
Muguruza’s serving was erratic throughout, but particularly illustrated by the final game where two aces on the way to 40-15 were undone by the costly double faults.
The Venezuelan-born player was crestfallen as she lost the match in the worst possible way, apologetically pledging to keep her runners-up speech short because she was “going to get very emotional”.
“I’m not very happy about my performance,” said Muguruza, who was playing in her first Grand Slam final on a hard court.
“I had to play better because she came up with a great level. At the important moments I didn’t find my shots. She found her shots.”
At the end of the second set, Muguruza called on the trainer and said afterwards she was “feeling” her body after “many tough matches”.
“I did feel a little bit of a lack of energy after so many matches. Physically it was a tough battle out there,” she added.
Former Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli on BBC Radio 5 Live
I was extremely impressed by the way Kenin dealt with the pressure of playing her first Grand Slam final.
She held her nerve extremely well, she was the best player out of the two. Her fitness level really proved that she could stay out there and compete so hard for as long as she needed to win this match.
She was the most composed, especially in crucial moments. I am extremely impressed by her performance.
It shows that someone who competes and fights for every single ball can go a very long way in today’s tennis.
It shows when you just don’t beat yourself, put a lot of balls in the court, she doesn’t have a massive shot – maybe one, her backhand down the line – and you don’t miss many balls, you can win a Grand Slam.
It sends a message to the rest of the field, the way she plays, some girls can take some bits and pieces and add it to their games.
2020 Australian Open |
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Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 20 January to 2 February |
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra and online; Live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website and app; Watch highlights on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer. |
Briton Andy Lapthorne said hearing cries of his name during his Australian Open quad wheelchair singles final defeat would live with him forever.
Australian Dylan Alcott made it six successive titles with a 6-0 6-4 win.
US Open champion Lapthorne, 29, said: “If there’s one disabled person at home that’s watching this and wondering whether to go for their dreams, we are proof down here that you should.
“Gutted to lose but it has always been about the bigger picture.”
Lapthorne added: “I’ve been coming here for years watching Andy Murray and hearing, ‘Come on Andy’. For that to be me today, that will live for me forever.”
50-year anniversary of tournament, final year in London
Tickets to the 2020 Nitto ATP Finals are now on public sale. From today, fans can secure their place at the prestigious season-ending showdown from 15-22 November at The O2 in London, featuring only the best eight qualified singles players and doubles teams, by purchasing tickets at www.NittoATPFinals.com.
Buy Your Tickets Now
The 2020 Nitto ATP Finals marks the 50th anniversary of the season finale and will be the final edition held in London, concluding a successful 12-year run before it moves to Turin, Italy, in 2021.
The season finale attracted 242,883 fans to The O2 across the eight days of competition in 2019, bringing the tournament’s cumulative attendance since 2009 to 2.8 million.
Stefanos Tsitsipas capped off a memorable week at The O2 when he prevailed against Dominic Thiem 6-7(6), 6-2, 7-6(4) in the singles final – only the third time in tournament history that the championship match came down to a final set tie-break. In doubles, the French pairing of Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut captured the season-ending title for the first time.
The four-week ‘Golden Swing’ through Latin America gets underway with the second edition of the Cordoba Open in Argentina. Diego Schwartzman, Guido Pella and Juan Ignacio Londero started 2020 by leading Team Argentina into the Final Eight in Sydney, but will now vie for the first clay-court title of the season.
World No. 14 Schwartzman, a winner of two clay-court titles, fell to Pella in the 2019 Cordoba quarter-finals. Pella went on to finish runner-up to Londero, with his countryman going from winless in tour-level matches to claiming his maiden ATP Tour title during his dream run.
The 2020 Cordoba field also includes Rio Open presented by Claro champion Laslo Djere, Uruguay’s Pablo Cuevas, and Spaniards Albert Ramos-Vinolas and Fernando Verdasco.
Here’s all you need to know about the Cordoba tennis tournament: when is the draw, what is the schedule, where to watch, who has won and more.
Established: 2019
Tournament Dates: 3-9 February 2020
Tournament Director: Mariano Ink
Draw Ceremony: Saturday, 1 February 2020 at 4pm
Are You In? Subscribe To Get Tournament Updates In Your Inbox
Schedule (View On Official Website)
* Qualifying: Saturday and Sunday at 3:30m
* Main draw: Monday to Friday at 3:30pm and not before 7pm, Saturday at 5pm
* Doubles final: Sunday, 9 February at 5pm
* Singles final: Sunday, 9 February at 7pm
How To Watch
Watch Live On Tennis TV
TV Schedule
Venue: Kempes Stadium
Central court capacity: 4,750
Prize Money: US $546,355 (Total Financial Commitment: US $610,010)
View Who Is Playing, Points & Prize Money Breakdown
Tickets On Sale: Buy Now
2019 Finals
Singles: [WC] Juan Ignacio Londero (ARG) d [8] Guido Pella (ARG) 36 75 61 Read & Watch
Doubles: [3] Roman Jebavy (CZE) / Andres Molteni (ARG) d [1] Maximo Gonzalez (ARG) / Horacio Zeballos (ARG) 64 76(4) Read More
Social
Hashtag: #CordobaOpen
Facebook: Córdoba Open
Twitter: @CordobaOpen
Instagram: @cordobaopen
Did You Know… The city of Cordoba, 435 miles northwest of Buenos Aires, has hosted a number of international sporting events, including FIFA World Cup football qualification matches.
Frenchmen have triumphed at all but two editions of the Open Sud de France, and former champions Gael Monfils and Richard Gasquet will be among those looking to continue the tradition as Montpellier celebrates the 10th edition of the ATP 250 tournament.
Monfils, who is set to be the top seed, captured the title at the inaugural edition in 2010 (d. Ljubicic) and again in 2014 (d. Gasquet). Gasquet reached six consecutive Montpellier finals from 2013-18, and won his tournament-record three singles titles in 2013 and 2015-16. The duo will be joined in the field by countrymen Gilles Simon, Adrian Mannarino, recent ASB Classic titlist Ugo Humbert, 2019 finalist Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Gregoire Barrere.
Belgium’s David Goffin, #NextGenATP Canadians Denis Shapovalov and Felix Auger-Aliassime, Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta and Next Gen ATP Finals champion Jannik Sinner also feature.
Here’s all you need to know about the Montpellier tennis tournament: when is the draw, what is the schedule, where to watch, who has won and more.
Established: 2010
Tournament Dates: 3-9 February 2020 (10th edition)
Tournament Director: Sebastien Grosjean
Draw Ceremony: Saturday, 1 February at 12pm in the VIP Village
Are You In? Subscribe To Get Tournament Updates In Your Inbox
Schedule
* Qualifying: Sunday at 10:30am and Monday at 12pm
* Main draw: Monday – Friday at 12pm and 7pm, Saturday at 1pm
* Doubles final: Sunday, 9 February at 12pm
* Singles final: Sunday, 9 February not before 2:30pm
How To Watch
Watch Live On Tennis TV
TV Schedule
Venue: Arena Montpellier
Main Court Seating: 7,500
Prize Money: €524,695 (Total Financial Commitment: €606,350)
Tickets On Sale: Buy Now
View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown
Honour Roll (Open Era)
Most Titles, Singles: Richard Gasquet (3)
Oldest Champion: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, 33, in 2019
Youngest Champion: Alexander Zverev, 19, in 2017
Highest-Ranked Champion: No. 7 Tomas Berdych in 2012
Lowest-Ranked Champion: No. 30 Gael Monfils in 2014
Most Match Wins: Richard Gasquet (24)
2019 Finals
Singles: [WC] Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (FRA) d [7] Pierre-Hugues Herbert (FRA) 64 62 Read & Watch
Doubles: [1] Ivan Dodig (CRO) / Edouard Roger-Vasselin (FRA) d [WC] Benjamin Bonzi (FRA) / Antoine Hoang (FRA) 64 63 Read More
Social
Hashtag: #OSDF20
Facebook: @opensuddefrance
Twitter: @OpenSuddeFrance
Instagram: @opensuddefrance
Seven-time champion Novak Djokovic has lifted the Australian Open trophy more times than anyone else in history, and he has enjoyed one of his most dominant runs ever to reach the final this year. But Austrian superstar Dominic Thiem has been on a tear in Melbourne, lashing his groundstrokes through anyone standing in his way of a maiden Grand Slam championship. The question is, will Djokovic maintain his iron grip on the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup with another flawless performance, or will Thiem soar to new heights and complete his dream run?
Djokovic and Thiem will meet for the 11th time in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series on Sunday evening on Rod Laver Arena, but the stakes have never been higher. The Serbian, who leads their series 6-4, is trying to extend his record to eight Australian Open crowns, earning his 17th major title to claw closer to Roger Federer (20) and Rafael Nadal’s (19) all-time marks. Although Thiem has won four of their past five clashes, defeating Djokovic in Melbourne is an entirely different challenge.
“I won more of the [most recent] encounters than he did. But I think it doesn’t count so much. It’s absolutely his comfort zone here. He always plays his best tennis in Australia since many, many years. So I’m expecting that as well in the final,” Thiem said. “All I can do is do my best, play great tennis again, and of course take a look at the past matches we had… try to repeat the good stuff that I did there.”
If Djokovic becomes the third man to win at least eight titles at the same Grand Slam, joining Nadal (Roland Garros, 12) and Federer (Wimbledon, 8), he will also regain the No. 1 FedEx ATP Ranking on Monday. But the second seed, who has never lost an Australian Open semi-final or final (15-0), knows he will face one of the most dangerous players on the ATP Tour.
Most Australian Open Titles (All-Time)
Novak Djokovic | 7 |
Roger Federer | 6 |
Roy Emerson | 6 |
Andre Agassi | 4 |
Jack Crawford | 4 |
Ken Rosewall | 4 |
Thiem earned his first hard-court victory against Djokovic at last year’s Nitto ATP Finals, where he raised his aggression to incredibly high levels to do something few players are able to, hitting through the Serbian’s defences. “Probably it was maybe the best match I ever played. It was a real classic and epic match,” Thiem said at the time.
Djokovic has followed Thiem’s run in Melbourne, where he is into his maiden Slam final on hard court, and the World No. 2 knows he will have to be at his best in a match that projects to be between one of the most relentless attackers in the game and its best defender.
“Dominic won our last match we played against each other, a close one in London. He played a terrific match against Rafa last night. I watched that. Definitely one of the best players in the world. Deserves to be where he is,” Djokovic said. “It seems like he’s improved his game a lot on hard courts, because his game is more suitable to the slower surfaces.”
Thiem won three of his five titles in 2019 on hard court, including his first ATP Masters 1000 victory at Indian Wells. And if he is to become the second player (Wawrinka, 2014 Australian Open) to beat both Djokovic and Nadal at the same major, the Austrian will need to continue flattening out his shots and stepping into the court, which has helped his improvement on the surface.
“I think I have to keep a good balance. Of course, I have to risk a lot. I have to go for many shots. At the same time, of course, not too much. That’s a very thin line. In the last match against him, hit that line perfectly in London,” Thiem said. “But for sure he’s the favourite. He’s won seven titles here, never lost a final, going for his eighth one. I’m feeling good on the court. I’m playing great tennis. So [I’ll] try to be at my absolute best on Sunday.”
Most Grand Slam Wins Against Djokovic
Rafael Nadal | 9 |
Roger Federer | 6 |
Stan Wawrinka | 3 |
Dominic Thiem | 2 |
Tomas Berdych | 2 |
Andy Murray | 2 |
Marat Safin | 2 |
Djokovic is not in new territory, getting set to play in his 26th Grand Slam final (16-9). But Thiem, a two-time Roland Garros finalist, is trying to make his biggest breakthrough yet. If he springs the upset, he will become the first player born in the 1990s to win a major, and just the second Austrian to do so, joining former World No. 1 Thomas Muster. A victory will also send him to a career-high World No. 3.
“It’s just a matter of one match here and there that can potentially give him a Grand Slam title, that he can actually get in the mix of top three in the world,” Djokovic said. “He definitely has the game. He has the experience now. He has the strength. He has all the means to really be there. He has improved in the past 12 months playing on the hard court without a doubt, and the results are showing that.”
Thiem has proven to play as physical of a game as anyone on the ATP Tour. But Djokovic (12 hours, 29 minutes) has spent nearly six hours less than his opponent (18 hours, 24 minutes) on court throughout the tournament, and he will look to wear the fifth seed down with his elastic defence. Thiem, however, feels ready for the occasion.
“With all the adrenaline and everything, it’s going to be fine. I played two super intense matches against Rafa and now against Sascha. So of course I’m going to feel it, especially tomorrow,” Thiem said. “But [I’m] going to have great treatment, [an] easy hit tomorrow, and then of course try everything to be 100 per cent on Sunday night.”
Most Appearances Before Winning Australian Open Title (Open Era)
Petr Korda | 9 |
Stan Wawrinka | 9 |
Thomas Johansson | 8 |
Dominic Thiem | 7? |
Ivan Lendl | 7 |
Marat Safin | 7 |
Djokovic presents plenty of challenges, no matter what Thiem brings to his table. The 32-year-old shrinks the court, forcing even his most aggressive opponents to go for more than they are comfortable with. In the meantime, he waits for any short balls to pounce and take control of rallies himself. This fortnight, Djokovic has been serving tremendously well, too, winning 82 per cent of his first-serve points.
Djokovic remains undefeated in 2020, after winning all six of his singles matches at the inaugural ATP Cup to work his way into form and gain confidence heading into the Australian Open.
“I’m pleased with the way I’ve been feeling and playing,” Djokovic said. “I thought the ATP Cup went really well for me. I got a lot of hours spent on the court, singles and doubles. It was a great lead-up for the Australian Open. Obviously, I got a lot of positive energy from that competition. I dropped only one set so far up to the final.”
To be the best, you’ve got to beat the best, and in Melbourne, that has long been Djokovic. Will Thiem be up for the challenge?
Frenchman Benoit Paire leads the charge at the Tata Open Maharashtra, one of three ATP 250 tournaments held in the week following the Australian Open. Paire, 30, is making his eighth tournament appearance and is a two-time semi-finalist (2017, 2018). He has made a strong start to his 2020 campaign, reaching his ninth tour-level final at the ASB Classic in Auckland (l. to Humbert).
The Pune singles field also includes Ricardas Berankis, Philipp Kohlschreiber, Stefano Travaglia, Soonwoo Kwon, Ivo Karlovic and Cedrik-Marcel Stebe. Last year in Pune, a 39-year-old Karlovic became the oldest player to reach a tour-level final since a 43-year-old Ken Rosewall in 1977 (Hong Kong).
Former champions of the event, which used to be held in Chennai, include former World No. 1s Pat Rafter and Carlos Moya. Stan Wawrinka owns a record four singles trophies at this tournament. Home favourite Leander Paes leads the way in doubles with six titles.
Here’s all you need to know about the Pune tennis tournament: when is the draw, what is the schedule, where to watch, who has won and more.
Established: 1996
Tournament Dates: 3-9 February 2020 (25th edition)
Tournament Director: Prashant Sutar
Draw Ceremony: Saturday, 1 February at 3pm
Are You In? Subscribe To Get Tournament Updates In Your Inbox
Tickets On Sale: Buy Now
Schedule (View On Official Website)
* Qualifying: Saturday and Sunday at 3pm
* Main draw: Monday to Friday at 3:30pm, Saturday at 5:00pm
* Doubles final: Sunday, 9 February at 3pm
* Singles final: Sunday, 9 February not before 5pm
How To Watch
Watch Live On Tennis TV
TV Schedule
Venue: Balewadi Stadium
Main Court Seating: 4,000
Prize Money: US $546,355 (Total Financial Commitment: US $610,010)
View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown
Honour Roll
Most Titles, Singles: Stan Wawrinka (4)
Most Titles, Doubles: Leander Paes (6)
Oldest Champion: Gilles Simon, 33, in 2018
Youngest Champion: Marin Cilic, 20, in 2009
Highest-Ranked Champion: No. 4 Patrick Rafter in 1998 and Stan Wawrinka in 2015-16
Lowest-Ranked Champion: No. 96 Michal Tabara in 2001
Most Match Wins: Stan Wawrinka (23)
2019 Finals
Singles: [1] Kevin Anderson (RSA) d Ivo Karlovic (CRO) 76(4) 67(2) 76(5) Read More
Doubles: [1] Rohan Bopanna (IND) / Divji Sharan (IND) d Luke Bambridge (GBR) / Jonnny O’Mara (GBR) 63 64 Read More
Social
Hashtag: #AdvantagePune #TOM2020
Facebook: @maharashtraopen
Twitter: @MaharashtraOpen
Instagram: @MaharashtraOpen
Did You Know… The tournament debuted in 1996 in New Delhi before relocating to Chennai the following year. It found its new home in Pune in 2018.
Dominic Thiem digs deep to beat German seventh seed Alexander Zverev and will meet defending champion Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open final.
Dominic Thiem has already enjoyed two shots at Grand Slam glory, at Roland Garros in 2018 and 2019. Now, after battling past 2018 Nitto ATP Finals champion Alexander Zverev in four sets on Friday evening, the Austrian superstar will get his chance at the Australian Open trophy.
But in his way stands as difficult of an obstacle as you’ll find in tennis: seven-time champion Novak Djokovic in Melbourne.
“We are playing in tough times, [we] young players. We always have to beat all these unbelievable legends. But I think it’s a complete different situation,” Thiem said. “Rafa won Paris 12 times, Nole here seven times. That’s [an] unbelievable achievement. But I try to take my experience that I made in the past two major finals and try to improve myself even more. I think I did that from ’18 to ’19 in Paris, and I tried to improve even more now.
“In this one I have the feeling that I have great experience now. I’m feeling that I can really keep up my level for all the two weeks, which was not the case maybe in my first Roland Garros final. So that’s what I’m taking, [and I’m going to] try to be in the zone straightaway on Sunday night.”
At last year’s Australian Open, Thiem was upset in the second round. At the time, he was known for his success on clay. But two months later at Indian Wells, Thiem broke through for his first ATP Masters 1000 title — perhaps surprisingly, on hard courts — and from there, he has become a force on hard, too. Three of his five titles in 2019 came on the surface (Indian Wells, Vienna, Beijing), and he finished the year by reaching the championship match at the Nitto ATP Finals, which is also on hard.
“Indian Wells, that victory gave me so much relief and so much confidence because [I] finally got my first Masters 1000 title on hard court,” Thiem said. “Then I think last fall in Asia, then in the indoor season, I made this huge step forward. I really developed my game I think in the right direction. I got more aggressive on hard courts, started to serve smarter and to return better. That also gave me a lot of confidence for this new year and for Australia because I told myself, ‘If I can be in the finals in London, the [Nitto] ATP Finals, why not as well in a hard-court Slam?’ Since then I know that I’m also playing very well on the faster surfaces.”
Djokovic is on a roll, winning 16 consecutive sets dating back to the fourth set of his first-round win against German Jan-Lennard Struff. Thiem, however, has had to battle this fortnight, going five sets in the second round against Alex Bolt, four hours and 10 minutes against top seed Rafael Nadal in the quarter-finals and three hours and 42 minutes against Zverev in the last four.
“With all the adrenaline and everything, it’s going to be fine. I played two super-intense matches against Rafa and now against Sascha. So of course I’m going to feel it, especially tomorrow,” Thiem said. “But I’m going to have great treatment, an easy hit tomorrow, and then of course try everything to be 100 per cent on Sunday night.”
Thiem showed some of his best form to defeat Nadal on Wednesday, winning three tie-breaks under pressure against the Spanish legend. And he did not suffer a letdown against Zverev, rallying after dropping the first set and going after his shots when it mattered most.
“I had big issues with that two, three years ago, when I was beating a big guy. Almost all the time I lost my next match. But with experience and with more times when you are facing that situation, it got better,” Thiem said. “Today in the beginning, I had some troubles. I was not in the zone straightaway in the match like against Rafa. It took a while, maybe 20, 30 minutes. But I think that’s normal. You just have to fight through and stay full in the match.”
Thiem lost his first five ATP Head2Head meetings against Djokovic, winning just one set in those matches. But he has won four of their five clashes since, including a victory at last year’s Nitto ATP Finals.
“I won more of the last encounters than he did. But I think it doesn’t count so much. It’s absolutely his comfort zone here. He always plays his best tennis in Australia since many, many years. So I’m expecting that as well in the final,” Thiem said. “All I can do is my best again, playing great tennis again, and of course take a look at the past matches we had as well in Paris and also London, try to repeat the good stuff that I did there.”
Thiem knows that history is on Djokovic’s side in Melbourne, where the Serbian has never lost from the semi-finals on. But the World No. 5 carries good form and a dangerous game into the championship match.
“For sure he’s the favourite. I mean, he’s won seven titles here, never lost a final, going for his eighth one,” Thiem said. “I’m feeling good on the court. I’m playing great tennis. So [I’ll] try to be at my absolute best on Sunday.”