A year ago, Novak Djokovic was on the wrong side of the net and the celebrations after the last ball was struck in the US Open final.
Somewhere in the back of his mind, though, as he watched Rafael Nadal fall to the blue court and bask in the lights of the world’s biggest tennis stadium, Djokovic had a sense that soon enough, that would be him.
On Monday it was.
Photo: AFP
After defeating Nadal 6-2, 6-4, 6-7 (3/7), 6-1 over 4 hours, 10 minutes of relentless, draining tennis, Djokovic dropped to his knees and kissed the same concrete that Nadal ruled last year, celebrating a win that capped one of the greatest seasons in the sport’s history.
It was a win that, in many ways, came out of a loss on the same court last year.
“I guess it just clicked in my head,” Djokovic said, referring to his sudden awareness that he could beat Nadal and Roger Federer — the hegemons of the tennis world before this year.
“I was always trying to wait for their mistakes, and not having that positive attitude and believing I could win,” Djokovic said. “This has changed and US Open 2010 was one of the turning points in my career, definitely.”
Djokovic won his third Grand Slam title of the year to match what Nadal accomplished last year and what Federer did in 2004, 2006 and 2007. Djokovic bested them both en route to this title, taking down Nadal two days after he overcame two match points against Federer to win the semi-final.
The man they call “Nole” improved his season win-loss record to 64-2. With a few months left in the year, the best record in the modern era — John McEnroe’s 82-3 in 1984 — is within reach.
However it ends up, victory No. 64 may go down as the most impressive of them all.
Over the first two sets, second-seeded Nadal broke top-seeded Djokovic’s serve three times and each time Djokovic responded by doing what a champion does — answering back right away, then not looking back.
However, it was the third set that was the classic — 84 minutes of side-to-side, unforgiving play from both men, filled with punishing ground-strokes that somehow kept coming back.
Nadal won that set, Djokovic walked off the court holding his back and the momentum shifted.
What that did, though, was allow the world’s top-ranked player to show he is made of sterner stuff nowadays. Yes, he improved his fitness and, yes, he changed his diet, but mostly he changed his attitude.
With his back and ribs aching and his legs started to cramp, he said he knew he could not allow the fourth set to turn into yet another long series of rallies. He had to do what he had been doing all year — go for it.
“I knew I wasn’t physically there,” Djokovic said. “I wasn’t as fit as I was at the start of the match. I needed to take the chances — I did. It was an incredible set for me.”
Every bit as telling and stunning as any of the 17 winners Djokovic hit in that fourth set was the way Nadal reacted as the set wore on.
Instead of rushing, skidding, shuffling, reaching out to get one more ball back as is his norm, he stood and watched.
Nadal watched at 30-30 in the final game when Djokovic followed his serve with a backhand winner down the line. He watched again on match point when Djokovic hit a forehand down the line, then dropped his racket and fell to the ground to celebrate in almost the exact spot where Nadal did last year.
A year ago, Nadal was being celebrated as the next “King of Tennis,” with nine Grand Slams (now 10) and seemingly in need of nothing more than time and tournaments to match Federer, who has 16. A year later, Nadal is on a six-match losing streak to Djokovic, all of them in finals.
“He’s having less mistakes than before,” Nadal said when asked to explain the Djokovic renaissance. “In my opinion, that’s all. He’s confident enough in every moment to keep believing in one more ball, one more ball. His forehand is not more painful than before, his backhand is not more painful than before, he serves the same.”
However, things are not all the same with Nadal.
Last year en route to the title he lost five service games. In this tournament he lost 24, including 11 in the final. Against Djokovic, Nadal won only 52 percent of the points in which he got his first serve in. He faced 26 break points. Against an opponent who spent most of the night hugging the lines, this was not a winning formula.
Every time Djokovic hit one of those huge returns, it was hard not to think back to Saturday, when, facing two match points against Federer in the semi-finals he turned on Federer’s serve, taking a chance and pounding it back for a clean, forehand winner.
Djokovic called it a gamble, but one he had no problem taking. He now joins Andy Roddick, Pete Sampras, Boris Becker, Martina Navratilova and Manuel Orantes as the sixth player to hoist the US Open trophy after facing match point at some point earlier in the tournament.
“In big matches, the winner is decided by small margins, a couple [of] points,” Djokovic said. “I guess the winner is the one who believes in victory more.”
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