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Djokovic Matches Federer On 'Big Titles' Leaderboard

  • Posted: Jul 15, 2019

Djokovic Matches Federer On ‘Big Titles’ Leaderboard

Serbian pulls even by retaining his Wimbledon title

Novak Djokovic beat Roger Federer for his fifth Wimbledon title on Sunday, and now the Serbian is dangerously close to also surpassing Federer on the all-time “Big Titles” leaderboard.

Djokovic saved two match points to beat the eight-time champion in an epic final, 7-6(5), 1-6, 7-6(4), 4-6, 13-12(3), the first fifth-set tie-break in Wimbledon singles history.

The 32-year-old won his 16th Grand Slam crown and 54th Big Title, a combination of Grand Slam, Nitto ATP Finals and ATP Masters 1000 titles.

Federer, the all-time Grand Slam championships leader with 20, still has four more major victories than Djokovic, and the Swiss has celebrated one more Nitto ATP Finals title (six) than the Serbian (five). But Djokovic has won five more Masters 1000 titles (33-28), creating the tie atop the Big Titles leaderboard.

Most impressively, the World No. 1 has the best Big Title conversion rate of anyone. Djokovic wins a Big Title about one out of every three opportunities (3.3), better than Rafael Nadal (3.5) and Federer (4.2).

Djokovic has especially been on a tear the past 12 months. Since July 2018, he has won seven Big Titles – four Grand Slams and three Masters 1000 titles. In that same time period, Federer has captured one Big Title (2019 Miami), Nadal three (2018 Toronto, 2019 Rome, 2019 Roland Garros).

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The trio compete against each other for the biggest titles in the game, but they also motivate each other with their accomplishments.

After the final, Federer, who turns 38 in a few weeks, said he hopes his lengthy career inspires others. “I hope I give some other people a chance to believe at 37 it’s not over yet,” he said before laughing. “I gave it all I had and I still feel alright, I still stand. It’s good, and I wish the same for the other 37-year-olds.”

Djokovic, who turned 32 in May, said he’s one of those people. “Roger really inspires me with his effort at his age,” he said.

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The two, along with Nadal, will be competing for Big Titles and inspiring each other for years to come.

We’re making each other grow and evolve and still be in this game. Those two guys [are] probably one of the biggest reasons I still compete at this level. The fact that they made history of this sport motivates me as well, inspires me to try to do what they have done, what they’ve achieved, and even more,” Djokovic said.

Whether I’m going to be able to do it or not, I don’t know. I’m not really looking at age as a restriction of any kind for me.

It just depends how long I’m going to play, whether I’m going to have a chance to make historic No. 1 or Slams. It depends not only on myself, it depends on circumstances in life.

I’m not just a tennis player, I’m a father and a husband. You have to balance things out. Obviously you need to have the right circumstances, the right support for things to play out in the right way.”

Current and Former Champions’ Big Titles Won (Records Since 1990)

Player Grand Slams Nitto ATP Finals 1000s Total (Avg)
Roger Federer 20/77 6/16 28/135 54/229 (4.2)
Novak Djokovic 16/58 5/11 33/111 54/180 (3.3)
Rafael Nadal 18/56 0/8 34/116 52/180 (3.5)
Pete Sampras 14/52 5/11 11/83 30/146 (4.9)
Andre Agassi 8/61 1/13 17/90 26/164 (6.3)
Andy Murray 3/47 1/8 14/96 18/151 (8.3)
Boris Becker* 2/26 2/6 5/51 9/83 (9.2)
Thomas Muster 1/29 0/4 8/53 9/86 (9.6)
Gustavo Kuerten 3/33 1/3 5/67 9/103 (11.4)
Jim Courier 4/38 0/4 5/71 9/113 (12.6)
Stefan Edberg** 3/28 0/4 1/24 4/56 (14)
Marcelo Rios 0/26 0/1 5/56 5/83 (16.6)
Michael Chang 1/50 0/6 7/86 8/142 (17.8)
Marat Safin 2/41 0/3 5/87 7/131 (18.7)
Andy Roddick 1/46 0/6 5/75 6/127 (21.2)

* Becker’s four other Grand Slam titles came before 1990.
** Edberg’s three other Grand Slam titles came before 1990.

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Challenger Q&A: Klahn Captures Winnetka Crown

  • Posted: Jul 15, 2019

Challenger Q&A: Klahn Captures Winnetka Crown

Bradley Klahn sits down with broadcaster Mike Cation after claiming his eighth ATP Challenger Tour title in Winnetka

In 2013, Bradley Klahn stepped onto the hard courts of Winnetka and reached his first ATP Challenger Tour final.

Six years later, the American finally found his way to the winners’ circle in the Chicago suburb. Klahn completed a perfect week at the Nielsen Pro Tennis Championships with a 6-2, 7-5 victory over Jason Kubler on Sunday, capturing his eighth Challenger crown.

Klahn, who was mired in a significant slump entering the week, having lost nine of 10 matches since early April, rediscovered his top form in a hurry. The California native did not drop a set en route to securing both the singles title and the doubles trophy alongside JC Aragone. Not only did he defeat the always dangerous Kubler in the final, but he also topped fourth seed Denis Istomin and sixth seed Bjorn Fratangelo along the way.

Klahn extends his win streak in Challenger finals to three straight, having prevailed exactly one year ago in Gatineau, Canada, followed by a season-ending triumph on the hard courts of Houston. The 28-year-old rises to No. 84 in the ATP Rankings and will look to continue climbing as the U.S. summer hard court season kicks into high gear.

The American spoke to broadcaster Mike Cation following the final…

This is the second time you’re in the final in Winnetka. It has to feel good to come back and get the title.
It’s a great feeling to come out on top this time around. Winnetka is always a special place for me. It was my first Challenger final here in 2013. I have family not too far down the road and coming back to midwest I just love it here. The people and just the whole tournament is great. It’s a great springboard for my summer. I’m really excited for what the rest of the summer holds.

It was a weird second set in the final. You were cruising, up a set and a break, but the forehand got a little shaky. All of a sudden, everything was on his terms.
I feel like I lost my energy a little bit. Up 3-1, I was thinking a little ahead of myself. I was serving really well and he didn’t have a great read on it. I was trying to force first serves and put too much pressure on myself. I thought my feet stopped a little bit and I didn’t have the same energy on my forehand. I let him back into the match and allowed him to dictate the course of the points. But, that being said, I went into scrap mode and just make some balls. Just to show him that while I may have lost my game a little bit, mentally I was going to be competing for every point. It was a matter of time.

It was a weird situation today, because you had a five-set epic at Wimbledon between Djokovic and Federer. Roger was trying to serve it out in the fifth, you walked by and I said to you, ‘Hey, you’re not watching the end of the match?’ You said to me that you had your own final to focus on. It’s one of these weird situations and it shows how important every final is, regardless of the stage or level.
Obviously they are two of the greatest ever and it’s a huge match. But for me, it’s about staying in my routine like any other match. It’s a much smaller occasion, but this was a huge thing for me to get over the hump and get some match wins and a title. Like I said, it’s a great way to kick off the summer and keep the momentum that I made on the grass. I had things to do to make sure I took care of my preparations before my match. My focus today was on the 2pm final and getting the job done.

ATP Challenger Tour 

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Wimbledon final watched by peak audience of 9.6m viewers

  • Posted: Jul 15, 2019

Novak Djokovic’s epic five-set win over Roger Federer in the Wimbledon final on Sunday attracted a peak TV audience of 9.6 million on BBC 1.

On a huge day for British sport, an average of six million people tuned in to watch the longest ever Wimbledon final, lasting four hours 57 minutes.

England’s Cricket World Cup final win over New Zealand was watched by a peak of 7.9m across Channel Four and Sky.

A peak of 2.5 million viewers watched the British Grand Prix on Channel Four.

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Sky was the live TV rights holder for the Cricket World Cup and agreed to show the final on free-to-air television once England secured their place.

An average of 1.6 million people watched the action from Lord’s on Sky with an average of 2.4 million watching on Channel 4, with the peak occurring at 19:25 BST during New Zealand’s super over.

The peak audience for the Wimbledon final was at 19:05 during the historic fifth-set tie-break, which Djokovic won 7-3 to claim his fifth title at SW19.

The British Grand Prix was watched by an average of 1.8 million viewers with the peak at 15:30 as Hamilton took the chequered flag to win the race for a record sixth time.

The highest TV sport audience of the year so far remains England’s semi-final defeat by the USA in the Women’s World Cup on 2 July, which had peak viewing figures of 11.7 million. The game attracted an average audience of 10.3 million.

Episode one of BBC One’s Line of Duty is the most watched programme overall of 2019 with 13.2 million, based on 28-day viewing data.

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Behind A Renewed Mindset, Medvedev Cracks The Top 10

  • Posted: Jul 15, 2019

Behind A Renewed Mindset, Medvedev Cracks The Top 10

Russian reflects on his journey to the elite group

One year ago, Daniil Medvedev was the No. 61 player in the ATP Rankings, six months on from lifting his first ATP Tour trophy in Sydney and eight months on from competing in the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan.

Ever since, the Russian has been on a tear. And on Monday, the 23-year-old took the next step in his journey by breaking into the Top 10 for the first time, reaching a career-high No. 10.

“I am very proud to reach this step in my career. Some years ago I changed my life and really dedicated myself to this sport and the results have shown this,” Medvedev said. “This is hopefully the first step of many more goals. I am looking forward to the second half of the season.”

It has been an incredible 52 weeks for Medvedev, who has quickly become a consistent threat on every surface, capable of competing against the best players in the world. The 6’6” right-hander has won 56 matches over the past year, good for fourth-best on the ATP Tour.

Just 18 months ago, Medvedev earned his maiden tour-level crown in Sydney. Little did he know at the time that between then and now he would lift three additional trophies, including one at the ATP 500 tournament in Tokyo last October. Three of his four titles have come in the past 11 months.

“Growing up, I never thought I’d be a professional player in the Top 100. I went about it step-by-step, I never made any one big step,” Medvedev said after his Sydney victory, before pondering what it meant to lift a single trophy. “It would have been tough to imagine that, even two years ago.”

Medvedev says his rapid rise stems from a change in mentality during his offseason before the 2018 campaign.

“Starting from last preseason I became much more professional in everything I do, talking about preparation or even life apart from tennis,” Medvedev said. “I started to dedicate my life to tennis. I started to do everything I can to be better in tennis and I’m really happy that it worked out because the worst scenario is when you do everything and it doesn’t work out, then you start asking questions: ‘I am doing everything right, so maybe I should just take it easy and be where I am?’ So I’m really happy that it worked out and I’m continuing [forward].”

Before then, Medvedev admits to going to sleep at 3:00 a.m. the night before matches, not thinking it would mean much. But it would be tough to see the ball, to run, and more. Medvedev changed his habits, and it has shown in his results.

“I became more mature, which is normal. I was never dedicating myself to tennis until that moment. I was always taking it kind of easy and it was still working. I started to be Top 100,” Medvedev said. “I think it’s a lot of influence of my coach. My coach, we have a great relationship, he never tells me you should do this, he says, ‘I think this will help you’, and then you start asking yourself questions. ‘Is it true what he’s saying? Will it help me?’”

Medvedev has a great relationship with his coach, Gilles Cervara. And in 2017, while they were travelling from Montreal to Cincinnati, they had a memorable conversation at a small airport.

“I was talking with him and I said, ‘Why should I take tennis seriously? Why should I do everything professionally? It takes so much dedication, so much mental strength. I feel like when I do it, nothing works’,” Medvedev recalled. “He was laughing at me, saying, ‘Okay, we’ll see. We’ll see. Maybe you’re right’. Now he’s laughing about this saying, ‘Hey Daniil, do you remember what you said? What do you think about this right now’?”

<a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/daniil-medvedev/mm58/overview'>Daniil Medvedev</a> celebrates his Monte-Carlo win against <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/novak-djokovic/d643/overview'>Novak Djokovic</a>

Not only has Medvedev dedicated himself to the sport, but it has paid massive dividends. He has earned three of his four Top 10 wins this season, with two of those triumphs coming en route to his first ATP Masters 1000 semi-final at the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters.

Medvedev has also put himself in strong position in the ATP Race To London. Currently placed in the final qualifying spot, eighth, Medvedev is trying to earn a spot in the Nitto ATP Finals for the first time. He has appeared at The O2 once before, when he was honoured as the Tecnifibre Young Gun on the Road in 2016. But now he is in position to return to compete in the season finale.

“It’s an amazing tournament, an amazing experience. Just to be there means you’re one of the Top 8 players of the year and it’s an amazing experience probably,” Medvedev said. “I hope to feel it one day.”

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People must wake up to the greatness of Djokovic – Becker

  • Posted: Jul 15, 2019

Tennis fans must “wake up to the greatness” of Novak Djokovic after he won his 16th Grand Slam, says his former coach Boris Becker.

Serbia’s Djokovic, 32, won his fifth Wimbledon title by beating Centre Court favourite Roger Federer in a classic.

Victory in the longest ever Wimbledon singles final moved him closer to Federer’s men’s record of 20 major triumphs. Rafael Nadal, with 18, separates the pair.

Djokovic struggled to win over a pro-Federer crowd, who clapped some of his misses and jeered him at one point during a tense final set.

“It triggered him to fight in the fifth set,” said Becker, who coached Djokovic between 2013 and 2016.

“He got a bit riled and gave some stares to people in the crowd but that’s how he works, that’s how he ticks.

“There comes a point when you get frustrated, but I thought he handled himself well and was mentally well prepared.”

Swiss second seed Federer, 37, was aiming for a record-extending ninth men’s singles title at the All England Club, which would have matched Martina Navratilova’s all-time leading tally.

Federer is the darling of the Centre Court crowd and was backed by the majority of the 15,000 fans in what became an increasingly partisan atmosphere.

That was most apparent when Djokovic was booed when he went over to chair umpire Damian Steiner to discuss what he felt was a late Hawk-Eye challenge from Federer.

“Federer is the greatest of all-time here and has the right to get that love, but on the other side you have to respect a four-time champion a little bit more,” said Becker, a three-time winner at SW19.

“I hope next year, if they played again, it would be more even.

“He came into the party that was the Roger and Rafa party and he became the party pooper.

“Now, after 16 majors, people have got to wake up to the greatness of Novak Djokovic.”

‘Djokovic wants to be the greatest’

Djokovic retained his Wimbledon title by fighting off two championship points before beating Federer with a record four hours 57 minutes on the clock.

And Becker believes the world number one will not rest until he has surpassed Federer and Nadal.

“Novak is not quite happy yet,” the German said. “He’s one of the greatest of all of time but he wants to be the greatest of all time.

“He should be more than proud to have achieved 16 majors. If you told him that 15 years ago he would have said ‘I don’t believe you’ and he would have taken one or two.”

Djokovic’s triumph means he has now won four of the past five Grand Slam titles and, being almost six years younger than Federer, could add plenty more barring a loss of form or fitness.

His pursuit of Federer and Nadal is made more remarkable by the fact he won his first major in 2008 – when Federer had claimed 13 and Nadal five – and only added a second three years later.

“Honestly I think he can overtake them, but I wouldn’t like to say that for sure,” said Becker. “The race is on.

“This endless talk of who will be the most successful will continue as long as all three of them are playing.

“I don’t see the end of the road for any of the three. I believe all of them will win more Grand Slams.

“Novak’s work ethic is 24/7 and he actually admitted at the end that Federer – still reaching Grand Slam finals at the age of 37 – inspired him.”

Tim Henman, a former British number one and three-time Wimbledon semi-finalist, also believes Djokovic’s hunger will only increase.

“This victory will motivate him to keep putting in the hard work and winning more titles. Federer and Nadal are very much in his sights,” he added.

“He’s a year younger than Nadal and five younger than Federer – we all know he fancies overtaking those two.”

Click to see content: big_three_grand_slams

‘Sometimes it is lost Djokovic is one of the greatest grass-courters’

Djokovic’s fifth Wimbledon win, in addition to triumphs in 2011, 2014, 2015 and 2018, saw him move alongside Swedish great Bjorn Borg in terms of Open era victories.

Only Federer (eight) and Pete Sampras (seven) have won more since the sport became open to professional players in 1968.

“I think because of Federer winning eight, it is sometimes lost that Djokovic is one of the greatest grass-court players in history,” Henman said.

“He’s up to five and you wouldn’t put it past him winning more titles in future.”

‘This will sting Federer’ – but he can win more Slams

Federer, who turns 38 next month, was bidding to become the oldest Grand Slam men’s singles champion in the Open era and missed two opportunities for the title at 8-7 in the decider before going on to lose about 45 minutes later.

“There’s no doubt Federer will be massively disappointed,” Henman said.

“In terms of disappointments in his career this will be right up there. To have two match points and against one of his biggest rivals on his favourite court – it will hurt.

“I know he’s good at controlling his emotions, but this will sting for a long, long time.”

Becker does not think Federer has seen his last chance of Wimbledon glory disappear, however.

“I think he can go from strength to strength. I was very impressed with his fitness and his quality of play against Nadal and Federer,” he added.

“I don’t see him slowing down yet.”

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Federer rues 'incredible opportunity missed'

  • Posted: Jul 14, 2019

Roger Federer said letting slip two championship points in his Wimbledon final loss to Novak Djokovic was “such an incredible opportunity missed”.

The Swiss, 37, led Djokovic 8-7 40-15 on his serve in the final set but the Serb fought back to win 7-6 (7-5) 1-6 7-6 (7-4) 4-6 13-12 (7-3) in four hours and 57 minutes.

Victory for Federer would have given him a ninth Wimbledon singles title.

“I don’t know what I feel right now… I can’t believe it,” said Federer.

“You just always try to push yourself to see things on the better side. But it was definitely tough to have those chances.”

Federer also held two break points when Djokovic served at 11-11 in the deciding set but could not convert them.

It was the longest singles final in Wimbledon history and the first fifth-set tie-break to be played in a Wimbledon final.

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It is the second time Federer has been involved in the longest singles final at Wimbledon – and ended up losing too – after he was beaten by Rafael Nadal in 2008.

Federer has lost his past five meetings with Djokovic in Grand Slams, last beating the Serb at Wimbledon in 2012.

He still holds the all-time men’s Grand Slam record of 20 singles titles but Djokovic now has 16 with Nadal on 18.

“It used to be a really, really big deal, I guess when you were close,” Federer said of the overall record.

“I guess two behind, then eventually you tie, then eventually you break. That was big.

“It’s been different since, naturally because the chase is in a different place.

“I take motivation from different places. Not so much from trying to stay ahead because I broke the record, and if somebody else does, well, that’s great for them. You can’t protect everything anyway.”

Federer, who during Wimbledon set two new landmarks in winning his 100th match at the championships and his 350th match at a Grand Slam, said holding the record was not what motivated him as a player.

“I didn’t become a tennis player for that,” said Federer.

“It’s about trying to win Wimbledon, trying to have good runs here, playing in front of such an amazing crowd in this Centre Court against players like Novak and so forth.

“That’s what I play for.”

Federer said there were similarities with his loss to Nadal in 2008 but differences too.

“This one is more straightforward maybe in some ways because we didn’t have the rain delays, the night coming in and all that stuff,” he said.

“But sure, epic ending, so close, so many moments, sure there are similarities.

“I’m the loser both times, that’s the only similarity I see.”

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Analysis

Three-time Wimbledon champion Boris Becker: “All the compliments in the world to Roger Federer, for the performances over the past two weeks, showing he’s still one of the top players in the world, and one point away from a record ninth Wimbledon title.

“He’s an ambassador for all men, not just sportsmen, he’s in great shape.

“We said before that the longer the match goes on, the better it would be for Djokovic. But Roger was as fit as a fiddle in the fifth set.”

Former British number one Tim Henman: “There’s no doubt Roger Federer will be massively disappointed.

“In terms of disappointments in his career this will be right up there. To have two match points and against one of his biggest rivals on his favourite court – it will hurt.

“I know he’s good at controlling his emotions, but this will sting for a long, long time.”

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When the crowd is chanting 'Roger' I hear 'Novak', says champion Djokovic

  • Posted: Jul 14, 2019

Novak Djokovic says his epic Wimbledon final victory over Roger Federer was his most “mentally demanding” match – and he even had to tell himself the partisan crowd was cheering for him.

Djokovic, 32, retained his title with a 7-6 (7-5) 1-6 7-6 (7-4) 4-6 13-12 (7-3) win over the eight-time champion, 37.

Lasting four hours 57 minutes, it was the longest Wimbledon singles final.

“When the crowd is chanting ‘Roger’ I hear ‘Novak’,” said the Serb. “It sounds silly, but it is like that.”

Djokovic – now a five-time Wimbledon champion – added: “Mentally this was different level.

“It was probably the most demanding, mentally most demanding, match I was ever part of.

“It was a huge relief in the end. You work for, you live for these kind of matches.

“They give sense and they give value to every minute you spend on the court training and working to get yourself in this position and play the match with one of your greatest rivals of all time.”

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‘I always try to imagine myself as a winner’ – blocking out the noise

Djokovic saved two match points on his way to beating Federer in the first 12-12 final-set singles tie-break used at the All England Club.

He credited mental training and visualisation in helping him through the epic that unfolded on Centre Court, adding it was more difficult for him than the physical toll on his body.

“I always try to imagine myself as a winner. I think there is a power to that,” he said.

“Also there has to be, next to the willpower, strength that comes not just from your physical self, but from your mental and emotional self.

“For me, at least, it’s a constant battle within, more than what happens outside.

“It’s really not the situations that you experience that are affecting you, but how you internally experience those situations, how you accept them, how you live through them.”

Federer fever was rife throughout the grounds of SW19 and on Centre Court itself, with the majority of the 15,000 in the stands supporting the Swiss.

That is a situation Djokovic has faced on numerous occasions and something he has been known to react negatively to, cupping his ear in response to chants supporting opponent Roberto Bautista Agut in the semi-finals.

In the final, many of the 52 unforced errors and nine double faults Djokovic made were cheered, and he was booed when he questioned a Hawk-Eye decision that had ruled in Federer’s favour.

His celebrations after winning the title were somewhat muted.

Asked if he was aware of the favouritism towards Federer, Djokovic said: “It’s hard to not be aware.

“You have that kind of electric atmosphere, that kind of noise, especially in some decisive moments where we’re quite even. It’s one way or another. The crowd gets into it.

“If you have the majority of the crowd on your side, it helps. It gives you motivation, it gives you strength, it gives you energy. When you don’t, then you have to find it within.”

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‘I don’t have any obligation to play’

With 16 Grand Slam titles to his name, Djokovic closed the gap to Federer (20) and Rafael Nadal (18) on the all-time records list.

Djokovic is five years Federer’s junior and one year younger than Nadal, and he says they are “one of the biggest reasons” he continues to compete.

“The fact they made history motivates me. It inspires me to try to do what they have done, what they’ve achieved, and even more,” he said.

“Whether I’m going to be able to do it or not, I don’t know. I’m not really looking at age as a restriction of any kind for me at least.

Djokovic refuses to set himself the target of catching – or surpassing – their records, because he has bigger priorities in his life.

“It depends not only on myself, it depends on circumstances in life,” he said. “I’m not just a tennis player, I’m a father and a husband.

“I don’t have any obligation to play. I really don’t have any commitment to play tennis. I play it because I really love it and I have support of the closest people in my life.”

How the tennis world reacted

Six-time Wimbledon singles champion Billie Jean King: An epic men’s final. Congratulations to Novak Djokovic on his fifth singles title at Wimbledon. Roger Federer and Novak are two world-class players who left it all on the court.

Four-time Wimbledon singles champion Rod Laver: An incredible finale. Congratulations Novak Djokovic on your fifth Wimbledon title. You and Roger Federer reached the highest level. A thrilling match between two incomparable grasscourt champions. Thank you for the good fight, played fairly and ferociously.

Former Wimbledon champion Martina Hingis: STANDING OVATION for both players in this Wimbledon final! What a joy and privilege to watch.

2018 Wimbledon runner-up Kevin Anderson: I have such huge respect for both Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer. What a match… wouldn’t have minded to see it go on a little longer. Congrats Novak on another Wimbledon.

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Djokovic On Wimbledon Win: 'Mentally Most Demanding' Match Of My Life

  • Posted: Jul 14, 2019

Djokovic On Wimbledon Win: ‘Mentally Most Demanding’ Match Of My Life

Serbian details how he came back against Federer

Novak Djokovic has competed in some of the most memorable and challenging matches in Open Era history, including the 2012 Australian Open final, when Djokovic beat Rafael Nadal in the longest Grand Slam final match in history – five hours, 53 minutes.

But no match has asked more of Djokovic mentally than did his Wimbledon final against Roger Federer on Sunday. The Serbian saved two match points and won his fifth Wimbledon championship 7-6(5), 1-6, 7-6(4), 4-6, 13-12(3) in four hours, 57 minutes, the longest men’s final in tournament history (since 1877), nine minutes longer than the 2008 final (Nadal d. Federer). To prevail, he had to constantly rely on his mental reserves and inner belief.

It was probably the most demanding, mentally most demanding, match I was ever part of. I had the most physically demanding match against Nadal in the final of Australia that went almost six hours. But mentally this was a different level because of everything,” Djokovic said.

I’m just obviously thrilled and overjoyed with emotions to be sitting here in front of you as a winner. It was one shot away from losing the match, as well. This match had everything. It could have gone easily his way.”

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Federer had two championship points at 8-7, 40/15 in the fifth set, but the Serbian broke and won the first fifth-set tie-break in Wimbledon history for his 16th Grand Slam crown.

“One thing that probably allowed me to come back and save match points and win this match was the mental stability in those moments,” Djokovic said.

“You need to be constantly playing well throughout five hours if you want to win a match like this. I guess there is an endurance part. But I think there is always this self-belief. You have to keep reminding yourself that you’re there for a reason and that you are better than the other guy.

“As hard as the moment is that you are in, the more you have to remind yourself, the more you have to talk to yourself.”

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In some ways, the 37-year-old Federer outplayed the Serbian. The Swiss hit 40 more winners (94-54), won 14 more points overall (218-204) and broke four more times (seven to three). But Djokovic raised his level in the tie-breaks.

I thought most of the match I was on the back foot actually. I was defending. He was dictating the play. I just tried to fight and find a way when it mattered the most, which is what happened,” Djokovic said. “In the most important moments, all three tie-breaks… I found my best game.”

The Serbian, who has won four of the past five major championships, is now within two Grand Slam titles of Rafael Nadal (18) and four of Federer (20). Djokovic admitted his longtime rivals continue to push him.

We’re making each other grow and evolve and still be in this game,” Djokovic said. “Those two guys [are] probably one of the biggest reasons I still compete at this level. The fact that they made history of this sport motivates me as well, inspires me to try to do what they have done, what they’ve achieved, and even more.”

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Strycova & Hsieh win women's doubles title

  • Posted: Jul 14, 2019

Czech Barbora Strycova and Chinese Taipei’s Hsieh Su-wei defeated Canada’s Gabriela Dabrowski and China’s Yifan Xu in straight sets to win the Wimbledon women’s doubles title on Centre Court.

Third seeds Strycova, a singles semi-finalist, and partner Hsieh triumphed 6-2 6-4 in one hour and six minutes.

Following a first Grand Slam title for the pair, Strycova, 33, moves to number one in the women’s doubles rankings.

Earlier, Ivan Dodig and Latisha Chan claimed the mixed doubles title.

Croat Dodig, 34, and Taiwanese Chan, 29, prevailed 6-2 6-3 against Sweden’s Robert Lindstedt and Latvia’s Jelena Ostapenko in one hour and 10 minutes.

Crowned French Open champions in June, the eighth seeds dominated the first set and secured the decisive break in the eighth game of the second set.

  • Djokovic beats Federer in thrilling five-set men’s final
  • Fernandez wins men’s wheelchair singles final
  • Cabal and Farah win men’s doubles
  • Halep on winning Wimbledon

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