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    Novak Djokovic Is Ready For Another Fight

    As he closes in on a rare calendar-year Grand Slam, Novak Djokovic has mastered readying himself for tennis as hand-to-hand combat.“A good fight.” “A battle.”This, invariably, is Novak Djokovic, late in the evening, often well past midnight, when another day of work is finally done, when the arena has emptied and he sits in front of a microphone, his piercing eyes an odd combination of glazed and steely, and he tries to put into words what he has just endured.To so many tennis players, their game exists as a kind of art. Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece, the world’s third-ranked player, talks about tennis as a form of self-expression.To Daniil Medvedev of Russia, who is No. 2 in the world rankings, tennis is a chess match, requiring the ability to think several shots ahead, to control the center of the court as though it is the center of a chess board, to make the quick moves needed to shift from defense to offense in an instant.Then there is Djokovic, the player who stands two matches away from pulling off the most hallowed achievement in the game — winning all four Grand Slams in the same calendar year. For Djokovic, tennis is not art, or ballet, and it is certainly not a game. It is combat, a street brawl in which there is only one survivor.“A battle.”“A good fight.”“I can go the distance,” he said as the clock ticked close to 1:30 a.m. Thursday, fittingly using a boxing expression after his 3 hour, 27 minute duel with Matteo Berrettini of Italy in the quarterfinals. “Actually I like to go the distance.”For nearly two weeks, Djokovic, the 34-year-old Serbian, has faced opponents who are younger, some by more than a decade. Several of them are bigger than he is, and seemingly far stronger. “I don’t want to wrestle with him,” Djokovic joked after beating Berrettini, his 25-year-old opponent, who is 6-foot-5 and more than 200 pounds.And yet, Djokovic has left all of them not just defeated but also beaten.Holger Rune, a cocky 18-year-old from Denmark who took a set off him in their first round match, could barely walk by the middle of the third set, crippled by cramping that set in after 90 minutes of chasing Djokovic’s blistering forehands to every corner of the court.Michelle V. Agins/The New York TimesJenson Brooksby, a 20-year-old American, gave Djokovic all he could handle for a set-and-a-half in the fourth round. But within a few more games, a medical trainer was hovering at his chair, treating him for a hip injury he aggravated during the unmatched physical test that playing Djokovic has become.The signature moments that night came when Djokovic followed up his on-the-run passing shots by staring down his 6-foot-4 foe.He said he wanted Brooksby “to feel” his presence on the court, to understand that he was facing someone with no intention of showing any mercy, no matter how hobbled he might be.“I wanted to wear him down,” he said of Brooksby, “and it worked.”Battlegrounds are familiar territory for Djokovic, a lover of wolves, the product of a region that was war-torn during his childhood. One of his coaches, Goran Ivanisevic, a Croatian, said that the Balkans bred people who are desperate to prove their resourcefulness to a world that, as he put it, expected nothing from you.For Djokovic, in so many ways, this U.S. Open has become a microcosm of a career marked not just by on-court battles with opponents, but by career-long fights against so many other forces in the game: fights against history, to do what no player has done before by taking the lead for most Grand Slam titles; against a tennisphere that so loved its binary duel between Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer and preferred not to have Djokovic crashing their Rafa-Roger lovefest. And there is the never-ending fight against the tens of thousands of tennis fans who come to his matches and roar for him to lose, caring little who the opponent is. (If Novak loses, Roger and Rafa win, their logic goes.)Frank Franklin II/Associated PressThe jeering jarred Djokovic on his first night here, as the crowd roared “ROOOOOON!” over and over and showed little appreciation for the start of Djokovic’s quest to achieve something that was considered too difficult in this era, with the three greatest-ever players competing all at once. He was terse in his on-court interview after Rune was finished. He abandoned his trademark gesture of pushing his heart out to the crowd. He was blunt in a post-match news conference.“Obviously you always wish to have the crowd behind you, but it’s not always possible,” he said. “That’s all I can say.”Two matches later, with the jeering reaching full throttle as Kei Nishikori tried to survive, Djokovic pulled off a series of impossible shots at the key moment of the third set. He put his finger to his ear after the first two, demanding the noise that finally surged behind him. After a third, he squinted and glared at the crowd as he sauntered to his chair for the changeover, sending a very clear message — I am going to beat him and I am going to beat you.Always, though, the primary fight is on the court, and it is a battle he begins with a head start, because the players on the receiving end of his blows have convinced themselves that nothing less than the best match of their lives will suffice.Sarah Stier/Getty Images“You have to be perfect,” Alexander Zverev, his semifinal opponent, who beat him at the Olympic Games in Tokyo six weeks ago, said earlier this week. “Most of the time you can’t be perfect. That’s why most of the time people lose to him. You have to win the match yourself. You have to be the one that is dominating the points.”Berrettini looked as though he might have a shot Wednesday night in the quarterfinal.Everything about Berrettini is big — his shoulders, his chest, the way he stalks the court and unleashes his booming serve and massive forehand, plus a Usain Bolt-like stride that sends him from the baseline to the net seemingly in three quick steps. For 80 minutes he took every blow Djokovic tried to land and gave it back, prevailing 7-5 in the first set, sending the teeming stadium packed with 23,000 fans into a frenzy.Djokovic, though, was just getting started, raising his level to win the next three games and making sure Berrettini knew how much more he was going to need to come up with to prevail.Within 40 minutes it was all even. Just before the three-hour mark, a few minutes past midnight, Djokovic was cruising toward the finish. Berrettini was still blasting 130 mile per hour serves, but Djokovic was somehow blasting them right back at his feet and onto the lines. When he ripped a crosscourt forehand that Berrettini could only watch whiz by, the big Italian slumped his shoulders and shook his head.Elsa/Getty ImagesOnce more, Berrettini said, Djokovic had made him sweat in a way other players never do, had taken his early shot square in the mouth when he lost the first set, just as he had to Berrettini in the Wimbledon final, and somehow come back to the court stronger.“He takes energy from that set that he lost,” Berrettini said.Berrettini had plenty of company in defeat. By midnight, when Djokovic had made it clear that his night would end just as all the others had, perhaps half the crowd had gone home. The only ones left chanted “Nole, Nole, Nole, Nole…,” inserting Djokovic’s nickname into the Ole chant.Once more he had fought them all, and won.“Five sets, five hours, whatever it takes,” he said in the bowels of the stadium, just before he left. “That’s why I’m here.” More

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    At U.S. Open, Novak Djokovic Moves One Step Closer to Grand Slam

    After dropping the first set, the world No. 1 smoothly beat sixth-seeded Matteo Berrettini, 5-7, 6-2, 6-2, 6-3, to advance to the semifinals against Alexander Zverev.The U.S. Open has waited 52 years for a man to have a chance at winning the Grand Slam, so what’s a few extra hours?Top-ranked Novak Djokovic, undefeated in best-of-five matches this year as he pursues the Grand Slam, again lingered in long form play on Wednesday night in Arthur Ashe Stadium before rerouting to a romp of the sixth-seeded Matteo Berrettini, 5-7, 6-2, 6-2, 6-3.Djokovic’s first set against Berrettini was the third straight time he had lost the opening frame, and also his most taxing set of the tournament. The first game lasted for 14 points; the sixth game needed 20 points. Though Djokovic was broken in the 11th game on a forehand passing shot winner by Berrettini and lost the set soon after, it was Berrettini who needed to leave the court to change out of his sweat-soaked attire just an hour and 17 minutes into the match.Djokovic’s detours at this tournament have not led to despondency, but discovery.The first set against Berrettini was the fourth set Djokovic has lost this tournament. As he did each time before, Djokovic took the information he gleaned and reprogrammed his game with increased precision. After hitting 17 unforced errors in the first set, he hit only three in the second and three in the third. Djokovic had five unforced errors in the fourth set.Through force of will and persistence, he turned the match in his favor, and even won over some of the begrudging crowd. When he held for 5-2 in the third, after saving a Berrettini break point and extinguishing any hope for a comeback, Djokovic held his hand to his ear, imploring the crowd to recognize his indomitability as he moves closer to the Grand Slam, and a record 21st career major singles title.After he got up a break early in the fourth set, Djokovic seemed to shift to a lower gear to coast to the finish, winning only two more points on return to conserve energy. When he wrapped up the victory after three hours and 27 minutes, Djokovic walked briskly to the net, wasting little energy on an elaborate celebration. He took several seconds to find the wristwatch he dons for the on-court interview to fulfill sponsor obligations.“I was locked in, really, from the beginning of the second set,” Djokovic said in his on-court interview. “I took my tennis to a different level. This has been the best three sets I’ve played so far in the tournament, for sure.”Djokovic has won the first 26 of the 28 matches he needs to complete the Grand Slam, but his 27th test may prove to be one of his toughest. On Friday night, Djokovic will face fourth-seeded Alexander Zverev, whose 16-match win streak includes a win over Djokovic in the semifinals of last month’s Tokyo Olympics.Zverev needed only two hours and six minutes to complete his own quarterfinal victory hours earlier, avoiding delay by saving a set point in the tiebreak of his 7-6(6), 6-3, 6-4 win over Lloyd Harris.Where Djokovic has been effective, Zverev has been efficient. Zverev has needed only nine hours and 23 minutes to complete his five wins here; Djokovic has needed 13 hours and 52 minutes.In his news conference on Wednesday, Zverev showed confidence but recognized the task ahead of him.“Against him you prepare that you have to play the best match that you can,” Zverev said of facing Djokovic. “You have to be perfect, otherwise you will not win.“Most of the time you can’t be perfect,” Zverev added. “That’s why most of the time people lose to him.” More

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    Djokovich, Beware: Tennis History is Rife with Spoiled Slams

    Don’t remember the name? Vinci was one of the greatest spoilers in tennis history, ending Serena Williams’s Grand Slam hopes in 2015.In 2015, Roberta Vinci improbably put an end to Serena Williams’s bid for a Grand Slam at the U.S. Open and called it “the best moment of my life.”Six years later, Vinci has not changed her mind.“People remember me for the Serena match, and I really appreciate that,” Vinci, 38, said in an interview from her home in Milan on Tuesday. “It still gives me a lot of pleasure. They still ask me today how I could have beaten her.”Tennis runs on upsets: the newcomer who shocks the veteran; the outsider who takes down the star. Rarely will a professional tournament go by without at least one surprise, but Vinci’s win was a genuine shock, and it was magnified by the setting and the timing. It came on the largest stage in tennis, Arthur Ashe Stadium, with the top-ranked Williams just two victories away from one of the biggest achievements in sports.Vinci was unseeded at the 2015 U.S. Open at age 32 and had never won so much as a set against Williams in their previous matches. But her 2-6, 6-4, 6-4 semifinal victory is a reminder, as the top-ranked Novak Djokovic takes aim at a Grand Slam in the same stadium this week, that nothing is a given at this level, particularly with the pressure cranked up to new heights.Spoilers lurk, and they have thwarted pursuits of Grand Slams at or near the final hurdle. The Australian players Jack Crawford and Lew Hoad both came within one match of winning all four major singles titles in the same year. Crawford lost to the British star Fred Perry in the final of the U.S. Championships in 1933, before the term Grand Slam had gained wide currency in tennis. Hoad was beaten by Ken Rosewall, another Australian, in the final of the 1956 U.S. Championships. Martina Navratilova, riding a 74-match winning streak in singles, was upset in the semifinals of the 1984 Australian Open by a 19-year-old Helena Sukova when the Australian Open was the final Grand Slam tournament on the calendar instead of the first.“I was more concerned with playing Martina than I was about the Grand Slam,” Sukova said in an interview from her home in Prague on Tuesday. “I was really a newcomer and so I was really concentrating on my own game and improving my game and I was far from thinking about any record or her breaking any record.”Sukova, a big underdog, said her goal was to win five games in a set.“I had never won more than three in any set we had played previously,” Sukova said. “I lost the first set 6-1, but when I got five games in the second set, I looked at my coach and said, ‘I achieved my goal!’”She won that match 1-6, 6-3, 7-5 before losing to Chris Evert in the final. Sukova, a tall player with big power for that era, reached three more Grand Slam singles finals, but lost all three. She and her doubles partner, Jana Novotna, did come to within one match of a Grand Slam in 1990, only to lose in the U.S. Open final to Gigi Fernandez and Navratilova.Consider that payback, but Sukova, now a practicing psychologist, said she wished she could go back and play those matches with her new skills.“I think it would have made a difference if I knew what I know now about the mind, I would have won more,” she said. “But it’s always like that, once you’re older, you’re wiser, but the body is not faster.”Unlike Sukova, Vinci was well aware of the tennis history at stake in 2015, and she believes the looming possibility of a Grand Slam helped her against Williams.“I think it played a big part in that match,” Vinci said. “To win the U.S. Open meant reaching an incredible goal for her, and I think the combination made her play with a lot of pressure.”Djokovic will most likely not face anyone as unexpected as Vinci in the final rounds at the U.S. Open, although he will meet an Italian underdog in the quarterfinals: the huge-hitting Matteo Berrettini.But Berrettini, 25, is the No. 6 seed and an established threat who already has pushed Djokovic hard twice this year in Grand Slam tournaments before losing in the quarterfinals of the French Open on clay and in the final of Wimbledon on grass.“The hammer of tennis,” Djokovic said late Monday night of Berrettini, comparing the power of his serve and forehand to that of Juan Martin del Potro, the 2009 U.S. Open champion from Argentina. Perhaps it was just a coincidence that Del Potro, recovering from his latest serious injury, visited the tournament grounds on Tuesday.“Next to Del Potro, he’s probably the hardest hitter of the serve and forehand,” Djokovic said of Berrettini. “If he serves well, which is his biggest weapon, he’s tough. He’s tough on any surface to play against.”Dodge Berrettini’s bullets and Djokovic will likely face No. 4 seed Alexander Zverev, the German who beat him in the semifinals of the Olympic men’s singles tournament and has been playing the best tennis of his career. Winning a potential matchup against Zverev would likely set up a duel with No. 2 Daniil Medvedev, a shock-absorbing hardcourt master from Russia, in the final.Berrettini, Zverev and Medvedev, all big new-generation talents, are not Djokovic’s customary rivals in the homestretch. Neither Rafael Nadal nor Roger Federer played in this U.S. Open. But Berrettini, Zverev and Medvedev certainly would represent quite a 1-2-3 punch and a fitting challenge for Djokovic as he chases his crowning moment in New York.Daniil Medvedev played Tuesday against Botic van de Zandschulp. He is a likely opponent for Novak Djokovic in the U.S. Open final. Justin Lane/EPA, via ShutterstockWilliams was in a similar spot in September 2015, already the most successful player of her era and a clear No. 1. Like Djokovic, she too already had won four majors in a row — the so-called Serena Slam — but had not achieved the Grand Slam by winning all four in the same calendar year. Djokovic also won four majors in a row over two seasons, from 2015 to 2016.Only five players have completed the Grand Slam in singles: Don Budge in 1938, Maureen Connolly in 1953, Rod Laver in 1962 and 1969, Margaret Court in 1970 and Steffi Graf in 1988.Williams put herself in position to join the list by making a series of great escapes at the Grand Slam tournaments in 2015, winning the French Open despite playing much of it with a high fever and leaving her room (and in some cases her bed) only for her matches. Coming into the Vinci match, Williams had won all 11 of her three-set matches at majors in 2015, including a tough three-setter against her sister Venus in the quarterfinals.It was a phenomenal run of gutsy, big-point tennis, but Williams’s luck ran out against Vinci, whose crisply sliced backhand, rhythm shifts and surprise attacks to the net were just the right mix to play tricks on Williams’s timing and mind.Vinci also embraced the occasion: cupping her hand to her ear and shouting to the crowd after prevailing in one extended rally.“I didn’t start the match thinking about winning, but I told myself to try because sometimes miracles happen,” Vinci said on Tuesday. “In the tensest moments, especially towards the end, I tried to think that on the other side of the court it was not Serena Williams but just a person and just to try to hit the ball over the net as often as possible.”She managed it often enough to complete her comeback and reach her first and only Grand Slam singles final, losing to her friend and Italian compatriot Flavia Pennetta in straight sets.Vinci, who retired in 2018, said she and Williams had never discussed their U.S. Open match, but what is clear is that they both will never forget it.“Serena lost to the Grand Slam more than anything else,” Navratilova told me on the night of that upset. “But still, Vinci had to finish it off.” More

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    What to Watch at the U.S. Open

    Novak Djokovic looks to fend off the surging Jenson Brooksby as a slew of crowd favorites clash in the round of 16.How to watch: From 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Eastern time on ESPN2; and streaming on the ESPN app. In Canada on TSN from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.; and streaming on TSN.ca and the TSN app.Matches to keep an eye on.Because of the number of matches cycling through courts, the times for individual matchups are estimates and may fluctuate based on when earlier play is completed. All times are Eastern Standard.Louis Armstrong STADIUM | 11 a.m.Belinda Bencic vs. Iga SwiatekBelinda Bencic, who won gold in women’s singles at the Tokyo Olympics, reached the semifinals of the U.S. Open in 2019 and is two wins away from returning this year. Bencic, a hardcourt specialist seeded 11th, has lost only 18 games across three rounds of play as her flat baseline shots have caused difficulties for her opponents.Iga Swiatek, the seventh seed, is the only woman to reach the second week of each Grand Slam event in 2021, but she did not make it past the quarterfinals at any of the first three. Against Bencic, Swiatek will have to use crafty shots to try to unsettle Bencic’s rhythm on longer rallies.Arthur Ashe Stadium | 10 p.m.Maria Sakkari vs. Bianca AndreescuBianca Andreescu won the 2019 U.S. Open but sustained a knee injury at the end of that year, stymying her development as she took 15 months off, returning at the 2021 Australian Open. After losing in the first round on both the French Open’s clay and Wimbledon’s grass, Andreescu, the sixth seed, has looked more at home on the hard courts of Flushing Meadows.Maria Sakkari, the 17th seed, reached her first major semifinal at this year’s French Open and has moved into the round of 16 at the U.S. Open without dropping a set. After this run, she will move into the top 15 in the world rankings for the first time and with a few more wins, she could even reach the top 10, a first for a Greek woman.Novak Djokovic has looked vulnerable at times.John Minchillo/Associated PressArthur Ashe Stadium | 7 p.m.Novak Djokovic vs. Jenson BrooksbyNovak Djokovic, the first seed, has not looked as indefatigable as usual during the U.S. Open. Although he has won each of his three matches in four sets, there have been moments of lethargy that point to some issues with Djokovic’s form as he chases a calendar Grand Slam.Jenson Brooksby, a 20-year-old American who entered the main draw through a wild card, upset the 21st-seeded Aslan Karatsev in five sets on Saturday. Brooksby has a strangely stylized game, with a shortened service motion and a massive backswing on the forehand that beguiles opponents. He’ll test that style against the best returner in modern tennis.Louis Armstrong STADIUM | 4 p.m.Oscar Otte vs. Matteo BerrettiniOscar Otte, a qualifier, had never moved past the second round of a major tournament until this week, starting his run in the main draw by upsetting the 20th-seeded Lorenzo Sonego in the first round. He will come up against a much stronger opponent, the sixth-seeded Matteo Berrettini of Italy. Berrettini’s breakout performance came at the U.S. Open in 2019, and he seems most at home among the raucous crowds of New York City. His strong serve and brutalist style of play is well suited to faster surfaces, and Otte will be pushed to play more defensively.Shelby Rogers is coming off defeating the top-ranked Ashleigh Barty.Ed Jones/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesArthur Ashe Stadium | 3 p.m.Shelby Rogers vs. Emma RaducanuShelby Rogers had lost to Ashleigh Barty, the world No. 1, all four times they’d played in 2021. On Saturday night, she fought from two breaks down in the third set to win in the tiebreaker, motivated by a crowd that swelled in anticipation after any mistake that Barty made. She will face Emma Raducanu, an 18-year-old Briton, in an attempt to reach her second consecutive U.S. Open quarterfinal. Raducanu blitzed past Sara Sorribes Tormo in the third round, losing only one game in 70 minutes. Raducanu’s second appearance in a major tournament has resulted in yet another visit to the round of 16, and she is in good form to attempt to make a deeper push. More

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    How to Watch the U.S. Open on Saturday

    Novak Djokovic and Ashleigh Barty feature at Arthur Ashe Stadium as the third round of singles play concludes.How to watch: From 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Eastern time on ESPN2; and streaming on the ESPN app. In Canada on TSN from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.; and streaming on TSN.ca and the TSN app.Matches to keep an eye on.Because of the number of matches cycling through courts, the times for individual matchups are estimates and may fluctuate based on when earlier play is completed. All times are Eastern Standard.ARTHUR ASHE STADIUM | 2 p.m.Novak Djokovic vs. Kei NishikoriNovak Djokovic, on a quest for a career-defining Grand Slam, has not been kept out of the second week of a Grand Slam event since the 2017 Australian Open. The task of breaking that streak falls to Kei Nishikori, a finalist at the 2014 U.S. Open. Nishikori struggled with a wrist injury in 2017 and has more recently faced issues with his right shoulder. Although his game can now be inconsistent at times, Nishikori could push Djokovic to exert himself more seriously, or at the least provide some very entertaining tennis.Louis Armstrong STADIUM | 1 p.m.Belinda Bencic vs. Jessica PegulaBelinda Bencic, the 11th seed, won gold at the Tokyo Olympics in August, and has kept her foot on the pedal since. Bencic has lost only 16 games on her way to the third round, overwhelming her opponents with steady counterpunching on defense and acute shot making on offense.Jessica Pegula, the 23rd seed, has been similarly dominant in her past two matches. Following her run to the quarterfinals at the Australian Open in February, she will be looking to match her career result and push herself into the top 20. As these two hardcourt heavyweights meet, it’s hard to say which will persevere.Louis Armstrong STADIUM | 3 p.m.Gael Monfils vs. Jannik SinnerGael Monfils, the 17th seed, struggled at the beginning of 2021, losing in the first round at the Australian Open, but has found his form since then. Monfils recently recorded his 500th ATP Tour win, joining an exclusive club that only contains 10 other active members.On the other side of the net, the relative newcomer Jannik Sinner has only won 60 professional matches. However, Sinner has already made himself a mainstay near the top of the tour, reaching the finals at the Miami Open to break into the top 20.ARTHUR ASHE STADIUM | 7 p.m.Ashleigh Barty vs. Shelby RogersAshleigh Barty, the first seed, has followed an unusual pattern through the first two rounds of play. She has won the first set in both of her matches at ‘6-1’, while needing to win seven games to then finish off the second set and secure victory. Shelby Rogers, ranked No. 43, will need to start brightly in order to push back on the momentum that Barty has begun to build.Sleeper match of the day.ARTHUR ASHE STADIUM | 6 a.m.Emma Raducanu vs. Sara Sorribes TormoEmma Raducanu was ranked No. 338 before this year’s Championships at Wimbledon. After receiving a wild-card into the main draw, the 18 year-old won three matches without dropping a set, catapulting herself up the rankings. Although her hard court preparation this summer was only at challenger level events, she played through the qualifying rounds and her first two matches at the U.S. Open without dropping a set once more, and will look to reach the second week of play on her first attempt at Flushing Meadows.Sara Sorribes Tormo upset the 22nd seed, Karolina Muchova, in the first round and then skated past Hsieh Su-wei in the second. Her powerful baseline shots are moderated by her clay-court upbringing, making it difficult for opponents to set themselves against a barrage of consistent, deep balls. More

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    Taking Aim at Novak Djokovic, Kei Nishikori Wants a Streak of His Own

    The world’s No. 1 has beaten his third-round opponent in 16 straight matches. The unseeded Japanese player is optimistic. But he’s not delusional.It was one of the most famous retorts in tennis history, a perfectly executed overhead slam of a quote from the self-deprecating prince of the tour, Vitas Gerulaitis. Going into his match against Jimmy Connors at the 1979 Masters, Gerulaitis had lost 16 straight matches to the lefty, but pulled off the upset at Madison Square Garden.“Let that be a lesson to you all,” he told reporters afterward. “Nobody beats Vitas Gerulaitis 17 times in a row!”Forty-two years later, Kei Nishikori finds himself in a similar spot, hoping that he could mimic that quintessential sports one-liner. Just like Gerulaitis with Connors, Nishikori has lost his last 16 matches to Novak Djokovic, Nishikori’s upcoming opponent in the third round of the U.S. Open on Saturday.Oh, Nishikori, who is from Japan, says he embraces the challenge, all right. But he doesn’t take us for fools, either. No one wants to face the best player on the planet — perhaps the best player of all time, who is only five matches from becoming the first man to win a Grand Slam since Rod Laver in 1969 — in the third round.“I’d rather have someone ranked lower,” Nishikori said.Bless his honesty.Over all, Djokovic is 17-2 against Nishikori, with the most recent win a straight-sets victory at the Olympics in Tokyo last month. But there is something about that 16-0 marker that seems to elicit punch lines from players. When asked Thursday night if he has Nishikori’s number, Djokovic paid homage to Gerulaitis’s comedic genius when he nodded and agreed.“I actually do,” Djokovic said.What’s this? A blatant burst of bravado bordering on disrespect toward an opponent? It would be unsportsmanlike, and out of Djokovic’s playbook to claim he has another player’s number. But before anyone could put Djokovic’s brash proclamation on Twitter, he reached back as if to grab something and added, “in my phone.”Get it? He’s got Nishikori’s phone number, just in case he wanted to text his upcoming opponent something along the lines of, “Sweet 16,” or “See you on court for No. 17!”Instead, Djokovic flashed his humble side. Rather than providing bulletin board fodder, he lavished Nishikori with praise.“I don’t have anyone’s number on the court until I win,” Djokovic said and added, “He’s one of the quickest and most-talented players that I’ve seen in my lifetime, in my career.”Despite the one-way flow of traffic in this pairing, there is one aspect to the streak that bears noting. It started after Nishikori beat Djokovic in their most marquee encounter, the semifinals of the U.S. Open in 2014. Nishikori dispatched Djokovic, who was ranked No. 1 then, by 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (4), 6-3, before he went on to lose to Marin Cilic in Nishikori’s only major final.Nishikori celebrates his upset win over Novak Djokovic in a U.S. Open semifinal in 2014.Chang W. Lee/The New York Times“I think it was one of my best matches,” Nishikori said of the win over Djokovic. “Because of that, I think it’s a little better feeling that I have, playing here. I mean, even though he’s the best player, I have good memory here playing the U.S. Open and beating him before here.”The only other time Nishikori beat Djokovic was in 2011, at Basel in Switzerland, in their second meeting. No other player has dominated Nishikori the way Djokovic has.But believe it or not, Djokovic’s streak against Nishikori is not his best. He holds a 17-0 advantage against Gael Monfils over all (apparently, someone does beat Monfils 17 times in a row). Djokovic also holds 14-match winning streaks against Cilic and Stan Wawrinka, according to the ATP.Against Rafael Nadal, his longest winning streak is seven matches, which he has done twice, and he is 30-28 over all against the Spaniard. Djokovic’s longest winning streak against Roger Federer is five straight, from 2015 to 2019 and he holds a 27-23 advantage over Federer.But Djokovic, while terrific, is not perfect. Nishikori said the key to beating him is achieving the right balance of patience and aggression. He recalled that when he won in 2014 he was very aggressive.“I have to stay patient,” he said. “I still have to play great tennis to beat him. Same time, I have to be aggressive. He’s not going to give me any free points, so I have to earn the points. Being aggressive is the key.”If he sounds a little bit muddled on the subject, he can be forgiven. It’s a daunting task. Nishikori is not only trying to beat the No. 1 player, who has defeated him 16 consecutive times. He is also trying to stop Djokovic from attaining immortality.If Djokovic wins the U.S. Open, he will not only become the first player, man or woman, to win a Grand Slam since Steffi Graf in 1988, he will also break the three-way tie among him, Federer and Nadal, with a record 20 career major titles.Perhaps the pressure will work on Nishikori’s favor. Perhaps he will become the Roberta Vinci of the 2021 U.S. Open. Vinci got in the way of Serena Williams’ quest for a Grand Slam, beating her in a semifinal at the 2015 U.S. Open. Williams had won all four of their singles matches heading into that day, and she and her sister, Venus, had beaten Vinci in a doubles match, too.But the Italian player turned upstart and spoiled the party. Nishikori was asked if the pressure that is mounting on Djokovic could help him to play spoiler, too.“Yes,” he said while leaning back with a sly smile.It was not exactly a line worthy of Gerulaitis’s hall-of-fame retort. But for the understated Nishikori, there was definitely humor in it. The real question may be: Can anyone beat Kei Nishikori 17 times in a row? More

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    A Young Serbian Player Has a Not-So-Secret Weapon: Novak Djokovic

    Olga Danilovic, who calls the world No. 1 her mentor, had been scheduled to play Naomi Osaka at the U.S. Open, but pulled out an hour before her match.Olga Danilovic has never experienced an atmosphere like the show court matches at the U.S. Open. And now she will have to wait at least another year.Danilovic had been scheduled to play the reigning champion Naomi Osaka at noon on Wednesday, but withdrew from their second round match about an hour before it was played. Tournament officials said Danilovic had a medical issue and that Osaka would advance to the third round.Danilovic, a qualifier ranked 145th, has been mentored and inspired from a young age by the 20-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic, a compatriot who has quietly offered support to many young Serbian players, even as he chases a spot atop the pantheon of men’s tennis history.“When you talk to him you think, ‘OK, now I’m going to beat everyone after talking to him,’” Danilovic told Tennis.com earlier this year. “His energy and dedication and his passion to play and work is something that pushes you to be better.”After winning his first round match on Tuesday night, Djokovic said Danilovic had been eager for a big-time opportunity against Osaka.“She was asking me about how it feels to be on the big stage,” Djokovic said. “Of course, you can say something, but then you really need to experience it. Hopefully she can use that to her own advantage, the motivation and inspiration.”Danilovic, 20 broke into the WTA Top 100 after winning the Moscow River Cup in 2018, when she was only 17, becoming the first player born this century to win a WTA title, but she struggled to win consistently.Djokovic emphasized that Danilovic was still “really young.”“She’s got the goods,” Djokovic said. “She’s really, really strong, fit, tall, lefty; don’t have many good lefty servers in both the men’s and women’s game. I think it’s quite an advantage. If she’s serving well, she can do damage to a lot of players.”What Danilovic is missing, Djokovic said, was experience.“The more matches she’s winning on this stage, the more comfortable she’s going to feel,” Djokovic said. “So, yes, we’ve been speaking a lot. I’ve been trying to help her out as much as I possibly can, her team, her family, with guidance on and off the court, some advices.”Danilovic has plenty of athletic experience in her family, although not in tennis. Her father, Sasha Danilovic, was a star shooting guard in European basketball leagues in the 1990s, and played for two seasons in the N.B.A. He is now the president of the Basketball Federation of Serbia.“She’s got the great genes for sport,” Djokovic said Tuesday.Djokovic watched Danilovic’s second-round match at the Australian Open courtside earlier this year.“I noticed at the very end,” Shelby Rogers, Danilovic’s opponent in that match, said. “She definitely won the cheering squad award today, I’ll tell you that.” More

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    Novak Djokovic Is Sensitive, Even When the Crowd’s Not Against Him

    Fans at the U.S. Open lustily cheered Djokovic’s teenage opponent Holger Rune, but once you have played the villain in New York, it’s easy to jump to conclusions.The confusion was understandable on Tuesday night. Novak Djokovic has been through enough me-against-the-world moments at the U.S. Open and beyond to expect the boos even when he is shooting for tennis’s equivalent of the moon.But the crowd in Arthur Ashe Stadium for this first-round match was actually chanting “Rune” — accentuating the u in the surname of his flashy 18-year-old opponent Holger Rune.“Obviously you always wish to have the crowd behind you, but it’s not always possible, that’s all I can say,” Djokovic said after his 6-1, 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-1 victory.Djokovic is a great champion, and in position in this golden age of men’s tennis to win the statistical race by a hefty margin, ahead of his career-long measuring sticks Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.But the road to the summit has often been bumpy, and he has made a number of his own potholes, including the one he dug in his most recent appearance in Arthur Ashe Stadium. That was last year when he was defaulted in the fourth round after unintentionally hitting a line judge in the throat with a ball he struck in frustration after losing his serve against Pablo Carreño Busta.Djokovic was the No. 1 seed and heavy favorite to win the title then, just as he is the No. 1 seed and heavy favorite to win the title now. But there is more at stake and a very different vibe.Djokovic’s gaffe in 2020 came in an all-but-empty Ashe Stadium, devoid of fans because of coronavirus pandemic restrictions. This year, the stadiums and grounds are packed. More than 53,000 came on Tuesday, and it would have been easy to imagine that life had returned to normal if it had not been for the many fans wearing masks in the stands and in the walkways.Djokovic dropped the second set and the crowd began to chant Holger Rune’s name.Michelle V. Agins/The New York TimesRune began to cramp in the third set and never really recovered.Michelle V. Agins/The New York TimesAnother sign of the times: the line judges are gone. Already absent in 2020 on the outside courts, they have been replaced on all courts this year by the automated line-judging system that eerily uses a prerecorded human voice.Call it a clean slate as Djokovic tries to make his mark on the game even more indelibly. A Grand Slam is a big deal and deserves to be: Only five players have accomplished it in singles in tennis’s long history.Men’s stars like Jack Kramer, Roy Emerson, Ken Rosewall, Bjorn Borg, John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors, Ivan Lendl, Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi never managed it. Federer and Nadal surely won’t either.But Djokovic is close enough to taste the Grand Slam now, having won the first three of the four legs in 2021. After Tuesday night’s victory, he is just six matches away from joining Don Budge, Maureen Connolly, Rod Laver, Margaret Court and Steffi Graf on the short list of those who have achieved it.Though the shoulder that bothered him at the Tokyo Olympics did not seem to be a problem, it was not an entirely reassuring start. Rune, a teenage qualifier from Denmark whose boyhood hero was Federer, was making his Grand Slam debut. A former world No. 1 as a junior, Rune is a dynamic player with explosive power and contagious energy. He not only won the second set. He also got the crowd on his side in Ashe Stadium, the biggest venue in tour-level tennis with its five tiers and 23,771 seats.Though Djokovic looked frustrated and off rhythm as Rune evened the match at one-set-apiece, Djokovic never looked genuinely rattled and was under no threat down the stretch.Rune, playing his first best-of-five-set match, began to cramp in his legs early in the third set and winced and hobbled between points. He was unable to jump into his serve, unable to run down Djokovic’s drop shots and groundstrokes into the corners.Fans watching matches on the big screen in front of Arthur Ashe Stadium.Michelle V. Agins/The New York TimesOne suspects that Rune has a bright future (and not because he resembles a young Leonardo DiCaprio). But the final two sets on Tuesday lasted just 51 minutes, less time than it took Rune to win the 58-minute second set.“Unfortunately, my fitness let me down,” Rune said. “I knew if I had to win, I really had to fight for every point. With my body at this point, it was impossible.”Djokovic, despite Rune’s long affinity for Federer, has played a mentor’s role. They practiced together earlier this season, and when they met for a handshake at then net it turned into something closer to a conversation. It continued later in the locker room after the disappointed Rune left the court in tears, his towel in his teeth.Though it is easy to forget at this stage, Djokovic, too, once struggled with his endurance on court, only solving the problem in 2010 and 2011 after changing to a gluten-free diet. But he has proved to be a long-running champion.“I did struggle with injuries and retirements early in my career,” Djokovic said. “That’s why I can relate to Holger, what he’s going through. We just had a little chat in the locker room. It’s an emotional moment for him. It’s not easy to see that. He’s really sad. I understand that. I’ve been through that. I just told him that he handled himself extremely well. He didn’t want to stop. I thought he was going to stop at the end of the third. He just kept going with dignity, finished off the match. He deserved definitely my respect, the respect of a lot of people. He’s still very, very young.”Respect is a word that resonates with Djokovic. He has not always had the respect he deserves in New York, where he has won three titles. The crowd turned particularly ugly in 2015, when he defeated Federer in a four-set final, cheering on Djokovic’s errors and double faults, and interrupting his rhythm.In an interview the next day, Djokovic told me that when they had been chanting “Roger” he willed himself to pretend they were chanting for him instead.He did not seem to rely on such mind games on Tuesday night, and it must be said that “Ruuuuuune” in cavernous Ashe Stadium does sound a great deal like “Booooooo.”Even Rune was confused, and only learned for certain after the match what was being chanted. “When I heard that I was happy, because I didn’t understand it in the match,” he said. “It was a crazy crowd, the best I’ve ever felt in my life.”Who wouldn’t gravitate to a charismatic underdog, a young player wind-milling his arms in delight after hitting a winner against the best in the world? At some stage this tournament, you hope the New York crowd takes the full measure of the tennis achievement Djokovic is pursuing and what he has sacrificed to become this extraordinary a player. Trainers tried to help Rune with his cramps in between sets.Michelle V. Agins/The New York TimesHe seemed to be conserving his energy and emotions on Tuesday, and he may need to dip into his reserves over the next 12 days.Self-control is not his trademark. Witness his racket-smashing tirade in Tokyo just last month when he lost the bronze medal match to Carreño.But he took a break from the tour after that to refresh his mind and attitude. He is not ignoring the elephant in the room in news conferences.“As always you have tons of expectations and pressure from just the whole tennis community, including myself,” he said late on Tuesday night. “Obviously I would like myself to win, to go far, to win the title and make the history. Without a doubt that’s something that inspires me. But I am focused on trying to be the best version of myself every day. I know it sounds like a cliché, but there is a great power in being present and working on mentally and emotionally being in the moment and trying to handle it in such a way that would benefit you.”He remains a seeker and a tinkerer, hard-wired to optimize at the peril of trying to fix what may not be broken. But until proven otherwise, he is the game’s best big-match player and whatever the public is shouting from on high, down in the arena Djokovic is just six matches away from one of sport’s ultimate prizes.Next up on Thursday: a second-round match with the 121st-ranked Tallon Griekspoor. More