Monday, July 4, 2011

Novak Djokovic, Wimbledon Champion

Serbian player Novak Djokovic  reacts after beating Spanish player  Rafael Nadal in the men's single final at the Wimbledon Tennis  Championships at the All England Tennis Club, in southwest London on  July 3, 2011. Djokovic won 6-4, 6-1, 1-6, 6-3.
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Serbian player Novak Djokovic eats the grass after beating Spanish  player Rafael Nadal in the men's single final at the Wimbledon Tennis  Championships at the All England Tennis Club, in southwest London on  July 3, 2011. Djokovic won 6-4, 6-1, 1-6, 6-3.
Getty

He played one set of spectacular tennis and captured his first Wimbledon crown. He wanted it so much, had struggled so to find his footing in the past, he ate a blade of grass when it was all over. I had sworn it would take a spectacular effort to defeat defending champion Rafael Nadal, that there was no way the Spaniard would let the Serbian off the hook at any time during the match.

I was wrong.

On either side of trading 6-1 sets, Nadal played two loose service games out of nowhere to drop serve. The first one handed Novak Djokovic the set outright, the second gave him the opportunity to serve for the match. I've seen Nadal choke in Wimbledon finals before (2006 and 2008) but for some silly reason, I didn't think he'd do it again.

I suppose it's time I stop underestimating Djokovic's mental toughness in the face of Nadal. Fans all over the place say the way Nadal submits to Djokovic now reminds them of how Roger Federer submits to Nadal, or how Andy Roddick submits to Federer. But in both of those cases, the man who would become the pigeon never boasted a winning record over the one who would make him so.

In some ways, the reversal of fortune seems more like what Federer did to David Nalbandian. After losing to the Argentine the first 5 times they played, the Swiss figured out a way to win. Thereafter, it seemed Nalbandian forgot how to beat Federer. Are we headed to a period when every match between Djokovic and Nadal will have a predictable outcome?

Serbian player Novak Djokovic (L) holds the trophy  after beating  Spanish player Rafael Nadal in the men's single final at the Wimbledon  Tennis Championships at the All England Tennis Club, in southwest London  on July 3, 2011. Djokovic won 6-4, 6-1, 1-6, 6-3.
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In yesterday's final, Nadal mentally went away at the end of the two sets that handed Djokovic the title. He struck his first double fault of the match serving at 3-4 in the fourth, and followed it with two errors off the ground. He saved one break point, but another error allowed Djokovic to serve out the match. At 30-30, Djokovic served and volleyed for the first time in the match, and then won championship point when Nadal struck a passing shot long.

Overall, it wasn't a spectacular effort or a very good match, but Novak Djokovic cements his place today as the new world No. 1 with the most coveted title in tennis.

Serbian player Novak Djokovic kisses the trophy  after beating  Spanish player Rafael Nadal in the men's single final at the Wimbledon  Tennis Championships at the All England Tennis Club, in southwest London  on July 3, 2011. Djokovic won 6-4, 6-1, 1-6, 6-3.
Getty

Serbian player Novak Djokovic (L) holds the trophy  after beating  Spanish player Rafael Nadal in the men's single final at the Wimbledon  Tennis Championships at the All England Tennis Club, in southwest London  on July 3, 2011. Djokovic won 6-4, 6-1, 1-6, 6-3.
Getty

Two Slams, the No. 1 ranking, and an astounding record of 48-1 on the year. If it's true, as pompelmo asserts, that every Pharoah has his Moses, then who's going to float up out of the bullrushes and cut his way through Djokovic's absolute dominance?

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