Karn Sharma and Swapnil Singh bag four key wickets to secure a 35-run victory in Hyderabad
sports1 day ago
Novak Djokovic steamrolled local hope Alex de Minaur 6-2 6-1 6-2 on Monday to ease into the quarterfinals of the Australian Open with a statement win in his quest for a 10th title at the Grand Slam that has only been threatened by a hamstring issue.
It was Djokovic's 38th consecutive win on Australian soil and the fewest number of games he has dropped in a match at the year's first major since he lost four against Lucas Pouille in the semifinals in 2019.
Asked after the match why he beat De Minaur the way he did, Djokovic replied: "Because I wanted to."
Djokovic drew first blood after a breathless start to the match when De Minaur crashed a forehand into the net to allow the fourth seed to go up 4-2 and the Serbian consolidated the break and struck again to claim the first set.
Having never lost at Melbourne Park since the fourth round in 2018 the 35-year-old was in no mood to give De Minaur a sniff of a chance on Rod Laver Arena, as he raced out of the blocks and dominated his opponent with blistering shots on both wings.
"I can't say I'm sorry you've not watched a longer match," Djokovic told fans.
"I wanted to win in straight sets. Once on the court, you have to deal with a lot of things... the first four, five games were close and after the break I started feeing more loose and more aggressive.
"He was a bit more nervous and that was my opportunity to capitalise. Tennis is a quick, dynamic sport, so things change in a matter of moments, but I was able to play my best match of the year."
Djokovic, who is hoping to equal Rafael Nadal's record of 22 Grand Slam titles in Australia, also said that he did not face any issues with his hamstring for the first time in the tournament.
"I've been taking a lot of pills to mask the pain, not those kinds of pills guys," he said to laughs. "Anti-inflammatory... I don't want to go too deep into it, but today was the best day of the tournament."
Up two sets to love and with his heavily-strapped hamstring cooperating after scares in the last two rounds, Djokovic moved in for the kill by taking the first four games of the third and finished in style to gear up for fifth seed Andrey Rublev next.
"He's an established top-five player," Djokovic added.
"He has incredible fire power from his serve and forehand, explosive -- a lot like De Minaur -- so hopefully the result is the same."
Karn Sharma and Swapnil Singh bag four key wickets to secure a 35-run victory in Hyderabad
sports1 day ago
The American they will face Australia and Serbia on July 15 and July 17 as part of their preparation for the Paris Olympic Games
sports1 day ago
The historic season opener will feature fighters from the Featherweight and Bantamweight divisions
sports1 day ago
Between them the two players are set to receive a stake around $150 million from the Tour's newly-formed enterprise
sports1 day ago
The four-time Grand Slam winner has enjoyed huge success with her powerful baseline game but has struggled on clay
sports1 day ago
The Parisians are on 69 points with four games left with Monaco trailing by 11 points
sports1 day ago
Reds defeat at Everton extinguishes their last hopes of winning the Premier League
sports1 day ago
The in-form Italian will move to within 330points of World No 1 Djokovic if he wins his fourth trophy of 2024 at the Madrid Open
sports2 days ago