| ROLAND GARROS 2014 |
Djokovic Draws Motivation From Ovation |
| Paris, France |
by ATP Staff | 08.06.2014
Novak Djokovic’s hopes of completing the career Grand Slam and reclaiming the No. 1 Emirates ATP Ranking were put on hold Sunday at Roland Garros, but he received a boost from the outpouring of support he received following his defeat to Rafael Nadal. The Parisian crowd rose to its feet and gave the two-time runner-up a lengthy and resounding ovation for his efforts, moving Djokovic to tears. “It was fantastic,” he admitted. “I am so grateful for the opportunity to play here… To be able to also be appreciated by the fans the way I was in the end of the match just gives me more strength and motivation to come back here and try till the end of my career hopefully to get at least [one] title.” For a third straight year, and for a sixth time in his 10 appearances, Djokovic’s Roland Garros campaign ended with a loss to Nadal. It marked his first defeat to the Mallorcan since the 2013 US Open final. Djokovic had won four straight meetings entering their 42nd FedEx ATP Head2Head clash, including last month in the Internazionali BNL d’Italia final. “I wasn’t playing at the level that I wanted, especially in the second part of the match,” he said. “These kind of big matches obviously take the best out of players, and of course it’s a huge challenge. WATCH DJOKOVIC INTERVIEW
A five-game run late in the second set, when he limited Djokovic to a mere five points, sparked Nadal’s 3-6, 7-5, 6-2, 6-4 victory on Sunday. Djokovic also lost to the nine-time Roland Garros champion in four sets in the 2012 final, and fell in a 9-7 decisive set in last year’s semi-final. “It’s not impossible, but it’s very, very difficult to stay with Rafa on this court throughout the whole match on the highest level of performance,” said Djokovic. “It’s normal that you have ups and downs. I was just hoping that in the fourth I would be able to come back. I started feeling a little bit better, but I wasn’t managing to bring my A game when it was most needed in the end of the fourth. “I think he was covering the forehand angle quite well,” he added. “My backhand crosscourt wasn’t as effective as it was maybe in the previous matches against him. He was hitting his down-the-line forehand really, really well, so I think his first shot off the forehand, off my return, was terrific today.” The 27 year old will next return to action at Wimbledon, where he will look to reclaim the crown he won in 2011 (d. Nadal). Djokovic finished runner-up to Andy Murray last year. |
Nole after Garros: “…a lengthy and resounding ovation for his efforts, moving Djokovic to tears.” What a beautiful kid…
9 JunNole makes it to French finals…
6 JunAnd ChronBeta publishes the most knockout Serb-berserker-warrior-Achilles-in-Book-XXI-Iliad photographs of him that I’ve ever seen. Click on all of them with care, please; the files are large and their beauty is terrifying — as true beauty always is.
And now begin forty-eight or so hours of sleeplesness for me till Sunday’s final. If Nole finally takes Garros, I’m going to sell my house to keep him in rackets to smash for the rest of his career and go on a walking pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Then maybe become a monk somewhere. If he doesn’t, I have no plans for the rest of my life. Expect to hear no more from me.
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From the New York Times: “And Novak all fired up now goes, ‘Serbia! Serbia!’ ”
27 May
Djokovic defeated Joao Sousa in straight sets Monday, 6-1, 6-2, 6-4. Credit Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters (click)
Djokovic’s Greatest Motivation Isn’t on Court By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY MAY 26, 2014
PARIS — Novak Djokovic was safe and dry after his first-round victory at the French Open on Monday, and it was noted that he often seems to play his best when he is playing for a cause higher than tennis.
“You’re right; you’re right,” he said. “It’s an interesting observation. I did also feel this at times when I had the last couple of years certain kinds of situations in life, good and bad, that were a lesson in a way for me. I noticed that I found that extra motivation to perform well on the court and to go far.”
But can he go all the way here over the next two weeks and join an exclusive seven-member men’s club by winning the only Grand Slam singles title he is missing?
Playing for Serbia has been a powerful motor for Djokovic. An emotional run to the 2010 Davis Cup title, Serbia’s first, helped him make the leap from serial Grand Slam contender to serial Grand Slam winner in 2011.
Wojtek Fibak, the former Polish star who advised Djokovic at last year’s United States Open, said he used that for fuel again when Djokovic was upset after his semifinal with Stan Wawrinka was scheduled first during the day after he had played primarily night matches.Fibak said Djokovic had “the worst warm-up” and was in “a horrible mood” so he tried his best to get him back to the essential. “I said, ‘Remember your parents, remember your father had to sell his car for you to play tennis,’ ” Fibak said. “I kept bringing it up, and Novak’s eyes were big, and I said: ‘Do you know why they did it? So you could play the U.S. Open, and now you are in the semis of the U.S. Open and you don’t want to fight and you’re not happy just because of the time? I said do it for your father, your mother, for Serbia.’ And Novak all fired up now goes, ‘Serbia! Serbia!’ ”
He went on to beat Wawrinka in five sets before losing to Nadal in the final.
Now, as he returns to the tournament he wants to win more than any other, Serbia is again at the forefront of his thoughts. He has been seriously involved in raising money and awareness for relief efforts after this month’s floods in southeastern Europe, primarily in Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, that killed dozens and forced hundreds of thousands from their homes.
Djokovic has donated his prize money — listed at 549,000 euros, or $750,000 — from winning the Masters 1000 event in Rome.“I’ve seen the images and followed the news every single day, and it was something I’ve done because I felt like that was the right thing, and that’s it,” Djokovic said. “The second thing I thought about was that it was going to attract more of the donors from the international world to see that the situation is as serious as the prize money I donated. We’re talking about billions of dollars needed.”
Several players from the region took part with Djokovic in an on-court show of solidarity during an exhibition day at Roland Garros before the tournament. It was a small yet deeply symbolic gesture. Croatia, Serbia and Bosnia were all part of Yugoslavia before war broke the country apart in the 1990s. But Djokovic said that if there were any upside to this, it would be that former antagonists were now cooperating.“To be honest there is something that I did not predict, did not expect,” Djokovic said. “And that is the solidarity of the people of the three countries that were in conflict only 15 years ago. That’s something that was incredibly moving and very encouraging for the relationship for the future of these people, because maybe we cannot be the same country again. Maybe people are thinking that’s not a good idea, but there is definitely a lot more room for improvement of the respect and solidarity between the people.”
When he is serious, Djokovic speaks in long paragraphs. He makes less eye contact than in his earlier days, but what remains remarkable is his ability to shift tone in a hurry. On Monday, marooned on a bench on a changeover during a second-set rain delay at Roland Garros, he invited the ball boy holding his umbrella to join him on the bench for a chat. He then finished off Joao Sousa, 6-1, 6-2, 6-4.
In a news conference, he doubled over with laughter and put his head on the desk when an Italian journalist asked Djokovic, who eats a gluten-free diet, if adopting the same regimen would help him improve his writing. Moments later he was discussing the floods again and then, moments after that, answering a query about Boris Becker, the former champion who is coaching Djokovic this year along with his longtime coach Marian Vajda.Becker won every Grand Slam tournament except the French Open and never won a professional clay-court title, which makes him an intriguing choice of mentor. What kind of advice might Becker be giving him for the French Open?
“He doesn’t tell me to serve and volley, that’s for sure,” Djokovic cracked. “But you know on a serious note, he is still one of the most successful players to play the game even though he hasn’t won Roland Garros.” For Djokovic, Becker’s experience in big matches and big events is precious cargo even if he failed to win the Australian Open with him in his camp and has had most of his big victories this year with only Vajda in attendance. But the whole team was together in Rome.
“I feel that we understand each other much better already since Rome,” Djokovic said of Becker.
For now, Djokovic remains, with Becker, one of the best men’s players never to win the French Open, a list that includes John Newcombe, Jimmy Connors, John McEnroe, Stefan Edberg and Pete Sampras. But in light of Djokovic’s excellence on the surface, he may now be the best men’s clay-court player in the Open era never to win it.
Djokovic has won Rome three times and Monte Carlo and Madrid once. At Roland Garros, it took Roger Federer in full flight to stop Djokovic in the semifinals in 2011. It took Nadal in full fight to stop him in a rain-interrupted final in 2012 and then again in last year’s classic five-set semifinal.
Beating Nadal at Roland Garros remains the toughest task in tennis, and Djokovic said that the death of his grandfather inspired him in 2012, just as the death of his childhood coach Jelena Gencic in the midst of last year’s tournament inspired him before he fell just short, losing by 9-7 in the fifth.
“I cannot say that the images and memories of these people were not in my head while I was playing but I tried to channel this energy and information in the positive direction,” he said. “And I knew both of these people who were very supportive of my career would like me to play and win for them, so that’s
something I had in the back of my mind.” There is much more for the back of the mind this year. There are Serbia and
its neighbors. There is his coming marriage to Jelena Ristic and the birth of their first child later this year.“It’s true; I have plenty of causes right now,” he said with the second round on the horizon.
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Even if he’s a Serb…
23 May…is the subtext of this article from AP and Canadian Press about Djokovic donating his full check from the Rome Masters to relief aid for Serbia and Bosnia A nice guy, even though…
(AP Photo / Gregorio Borgia — click)
Novak Djokovic unites old enemies for flood relief effort
Serbian brings together former Balkan wartime foes
The Associated Press
After winning the Masters tournament in Rome on May 18, tennis player Novak Djokovic donated all the prize money, about $500,000 US, to the flood victims in Serbia, Bosnia and Croatia.
Novak Djokovic has served many match-winning aces on the tennis court, but now he has fired a major one in the flood-hit Balkans.
The world’s No. 2 tennis player has achieved what no politician has managed since the bloody Balkan wars in the 1990s: to at least temporarily reunite former bitter wartime foes as they jointly struggle against the region’s worst flooding in more than a century.
Djokovic has sparked worldwide financial and media support for victims of the massive river water surge that has killed at least 45 people and left hundreds of thousands homeless in Serbia, Bosnia and Croatia.
The Serb has in the past triggered fury in the other former Yugoslav republics for what people considered nationalistic gestures, such as celebrating his victories with a three-finger victory sign that was used by Serb soldiers during their wartime campaigns in Croatia and Bosnia.
‘My heart is breaking when I see that so many people were evacuated and endangered in Bosnia. … Help will come from the world.’– Tweet from Serbian tennis star Novak Djokovic
What has set Djokovic’s flood salvage campaign apart is that he didn’t just seek international support for Serbia. He also did it for Bosnia and Croatia which were at war with Serbia. All three states are still harbouring a deep mutual hatred and distrust, 20 years after the wars ended and the former Yugoslavia split up into seven different countries.
“My heart is breaking when I see that so many people were evacuated and endangered in Bosnia! More than 950,000!!! Hold on brothers … help will come from the world,” Djokovic wrote on Twitter. “I also see that the east of Croatia is hit by floods … I sincerely hope that it will not hit you like Serbia and Bosnia. Keep safe.”
“Long live the people of former Yugoslavia. Let God be with you,” he wrote, adding a map of the former Yugoslavia with the flags of now different countries.
The floods have triggered unprecedented regional solidarity in the Balkans, with the former Yugoslav countries sending rescue teams and humanitarian aid to each other over their borders.
$500,000 US donation
After beating top-ranked Rafael Nadal in the final of the Masters tournament in Rome on Sunday, Djokovic donated all the prize money — about $500,000 — to the flood victims. His charity foundation collected another $600,000.
“There have not been floods like this in the existence of our people,” Djokovic said. “It is a total catastrophe of biblical proportions. I don’t really know how to describe it.”
Djokovic’s gestures triggered mostly positive public support in both Croatia and Bosnia.
“I’m not Djokovic’s supporter or like tennis,” said Davor Buric, a university student in Zagreb, Croatian capital. “It is nice that he mentioned not only Serbia, but also Croatia and Bosnia. Djokovic has nothing to do with the war, and I have never heard him saying anything against other nationalities.”
In Bosnia, national football team coach Safet Susic said Djokovic had won “the support of the whole of Bosnia” with his campaign, and promised to support him in the upcoming Grand Slam tournaments — the French Open and Wimbledon. Djokovic replied by saying he will support Bosnia at the World Cup in Brazil.
Such sentiments in Bosnia and Croatia have prompted some commentators to nickname him “Marshal Djokovic” after Marshal Josip Broz Tito, the post World War II Yugoslav communist leader who managed to keep Yugoslavia united with iron fist. With his death in 1980, the country started unraveling along ethnic lines.
“This water … has destroyed what we have been building for the past 20 years,” wrote prominent Croatian columnist and writer Vedrana Rudan in an ironic commentary on her web page.
“Djokovic has sketched the map of Yugoslavia, he greets both our and his people … the slaughter has separated us, the drowning has reunited us.”
© The Canadian Press, 2014
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This is the three-finger gesture they’re talking about, along with a temporary tattoo Djokovic got at some point of the Serbian national crest (with “Born in Serbia and ‘something’ in Monaco” added), and generally looking a little bit like a Belgrade club bouncer:
But it’s not a nationalist victory gesture “used by Serb soldiers during their wartime campaigns in Croatia and Bosnia.” Those are the three fingers Orthodox Christians make the sign of the cross with and, according to my sources (granted, all Serbian), did not become a Serbian symbol or gesture of any kind until WWII, when members of the Nazi-collaborationist Ustaša regime of Croatia and those Bosnian Muslims who worked with them (for reasons I’ve never understood) made a habit of cutting those fingers off both corpses and the living. It then became a symbol of resistance. The Ustaša’s plan for the Serbs that fell under their control during the war was the “thirds” plan: kill one third, expel one third, convert the last third to Catholicism (good luck with that last one…) See my post on genocide from last November. Also yesterday’s “After the Flood, Unity and Compasion…yeah. “
You wanna casually throw some history around in lazy, half-informed North American style, at least look back a little further than twenty years.
Marin Čilić is never ‘the tennis player from the country that created one of the ugliest, most homicidal Fascist regimes of twentieth-century Europe,’ is he? Or ‘from the country that committed as many if not more atrocities in Bosnia during the wars of the nineties, and ethnically cleansed larger parts of the areas under its control of both Muslims and Serbs, and more thoroughly as well’ is he? Or that ‘still holds on to a huge part of occupied Bosnia where Muslims suffer worse than they do in the Serb-held parts,’ is he? Or, ‘that blew up the famous Ottoman bridge of Mostar?’ is he? Nor should he be…considered anything other than an exceptional tennis player and a great athlete.
Marin Čilić (click)
Yet Nole is constantly having to prove he’s not the “ugly Serb.” Why can’t this just be the story of a deeply Christian kid, which is essentially what Novak is — and very genuinely so — who wants to help his neighbors? Why is he held responsible for “fixing” damage he didn’t do? And his people still responsible for a war they didn’t start?
He’s certainly far more above all of it than I am, and God bless him.
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The Bridge of Mostar, now rebuilt (click)
Yesssssssss!!!!! Rome falls to the Serb
18 May(click)
And what a welcome and needed morale booster for Serbia these days.
The Guardian: always has great play-by-play coverage of tennis, complete with slightly malicious Brit humour:
“Second set: Djokovic 4-6, 5-3 Nadal* (*denotes server) “In a stadium built for a dictator, Mussolini, it is Novak who’s doing the dictating.” Yes, someone said that. A thumping forehand is followed by a drop, and Nadal is in all sorts, a booming crosscourt forehand clawing back a point.
“Third set: *Djokovic 4-6, 6-3, 3-1 Nadal (*denotes server) This is brilliantly, beautifully, brutally dismissive from Djokovic – he goes to 30-0 with a backhand swiped crosscourt. But there follows the kind of forehand return that gives small children nightmares, whip-clubbed down the lane with intense prejudice. Still, though, Djokovic closes out the game with ease.
Third set: *Djokovic 4-6, 6-3, 5-3 Nadal (*denotes server) There’s a slightly forlorn look about Nadal now, two groundstrokes absolutely smelted past him.
“Brilliant tennis from Djokovic today, particularly in that final set. Nadal didn’t feel sufficiently confident to match his aggression, and was nowhere near in terms of execution – the winners count stands at 46-15. Whether or not this means anything remains to be seen – Nadal will be better for having played the game, and Djokovic won’t be able to use the higher bounce in Paris, where the courts play lower. Can Roland Garros start now, please?”
That’s right. Start now. Get obsessed. Roland Garros. Roland Garros. Roland Garros. Roland Garros.
And two good pieces from ATPworldtour.com: Read: How The Rome Final Was Won | Rafa, Novak: The Rivalry
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Nole, Rome, Serbian and Bosnian Floods
17 MayFffffffffff……. I can’t believe I missed this match, Nole and Ferrer, another great favorite of mine.
Julian Finney/Getty Images
Julian Finney/Getty Images
“Despite the Canadian’s impressive run to the semifinals, Djokovic will be a heavy favorite to survive [against Raonic] and advance to Sunday’s tournament final.”
(Which he did — see below.)
And from internazionalibnlditalia.com:
Semi-finalist Djokovic: The rising stars of tennis are making the sport better

“Novak Djokovic says the emergence of new tennis superstars is good for the sport.
The world no.2 made the semi-final of the Rome Masters after being David Ferrer 7-5 4-6 6-3.
The 26-year-old will face rising star Milos Raonic, 23, in the last four.
And he said of the new empire coming to prominence in Italy: “It’s great – its a new generation and a new wave of players who are proving their qualities on different surfaces.
“It is good for tennis to see new faces and young players who are able to win theses big matches and come to the final stages of the big tournaments.”
Six-time Slam winner Djokovic has won the Rome Masters twice – but there is one trophy that is still eluding him – the French Open.
But although he admits he can’t look too far past this week’s tournament at Foro Italico, Djokovic also played down reports that he was obsessed with retrying to win Roland Garros.
He added: “Obsession is a really strong word.
“I don’t think being obsessed with something is positive. It still is my dream and goal to win it and I have a strong desire and motivation to achieve that goal and win the trophy in Paris.”
No, no, no, no…. Άς’τα αυτά… Who are you kidding Nole? Be obsessed. Roland Garros….Roland Garros…Roland Garros…Roland Garros…Roland Garros…
And finally, from Reuters:
Djokovic Makes Serbia Flood Appeal After Semi Win in Rome
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“And Novak breaks back, not unexpected…”
14 MayFrom the Bleacher Report:
“The fact that Djokovic had to work for the win was actually a positive in that it forced him to dig deep and get back in the swing of things. [My emphasis] Now the Djoker will be faced with the challenge of progressing in the Rome Masters and getting properly prepared for the French Open.”
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The Djok’s in Greece
25 AprThat said….meaning, I wasn’t gonna write for a while: news too cool to not report. Djoković is in Greece, fiancée Jelena Ristić is pregnant, and though he lost his Monte Carlo Crown, he made it to semi-finals, and at least it was to Federer and not to the Catalan or anybody. All in all, not a bad Easter week for Nole.
(click)
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Nole: “…the world No. 2 is in the process of knocking his game into overdrive.”
29 Mar(Sorry, but sometimes the Jadde is just gonna be the Nole Djokovic page for a few days…. Especially at times like this. I know…there are more important things happening in the world, but sometimes the most important is, well…)
From The Bleacher Report:
Novak Djokovic’s Win over Andy Murray Isn’t Tainted by Bad Call
By Richard Langford ,Mar 28, 2014
Novak Djokovic has gotten off to a relatively slow start this year, but the world No. 2 is in the process of knocking his game into overdrive.
Don’t let the fact that his victory over Andy Murray in the quarterfinals of the Sony Open was heavily assisted by a bad call fool you into thinking any differently.
Nole is 12-2 on the year, and he got his first tournament title of the year at Indian Wells in the last event. It is hard to knock that kind of start, but we’ve grown accustomed to Djokovic having multiple titles at this point of the year. This was the first time in four years he hasn’t won the Australian Open.
Apparently, that does not mean he is headed for a down year, and the Serb asserted his dominance against Murray.
See rest: “Djokovic’s Win over Andy Murray”
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