I always believed I could come back: Novak Djokovic

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“It was just a matter of momentum shift. I felt that the beginning of the third set is crucial to start well, try to break his serve early. That’s what happened” 


Novak Djokovic during a training session yesterday. Pic/AFP






Defending champion Novak Djokovic said he never doubted his ability to recover from two sets down to defeat Jannik Sinner and reach his 11th Wimbledon semi-final on Tuesday. 

Djokovic triumphed 5-7, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 and will face Britain’s Cameron Norrie for a place in Sunday’s final. It was the seventh time in the 35-year-old Serb’s career that he had battled back from two sets to love down to win. 

Cameron Norrie celebrates  his win over David Goffin Cameron Norrie celebrates his win over David Goffin 

“I always believed that I could come back. I know the experience I have could eventually prevail in these kind of situations,” said six-time champion Djokovic.

Shift of momentum

“It was just a matter of momentum shift. I felt that the beginning of the third set is crucial to start well, try to break his serve early. That’s what happened.” 

Djokovic had also come back from two sets down as recently as the 2021 French Open against Lorenzo Musetti in the fourth round and then Stefanos Tsitsipas in the final. Crucially, Tuesday’s quarter-final was his 47th five-set match. For Sinner, it was just his fifth. 

“I feel like Sinner, coming into the match, didn’t have much to lose, but he had a lot to lose when he was two sets to love up,” said 20-time major winner Djokovic. “I could feel that mentally with him. He didn’t have too many five-set matches in his life…not too many matches on the Centre Court. So all these things play a role. It does definitely help knowing that you have been in these particular situations and you had success in the past.”

Djokovic is bidding to go level with Pete Sampras as a seven-time Wimbledon men’s champion. That would put him just one off Roger Federer’s record of eight. 

First Slam semis for Norrie 

Norrie reached the semi-finals of a Slam for the first time by defeating 58th-ranked David Goffin of Belgium, 3-6, 7-5, 2-6, 6-3, 7-5. Norrie said he was struggling at the start of the match, admitting he was forced to dig deep. 

“It was all just adrenaline, using my legs and trying to put the ball in the court, and it’s great to get over the line,” said the left-hander. Norrie, who is the first British man to reach the Wimbledon semi-finals since Andy Murray in 2016, said he was going to “take it” to Djokovic.

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