WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Listen to
Novak Djokovic’s opponents explain why he is as successful as he is — why he will begin his pursuit of a fifth consecutive and eighth overall
Wimbledon championship on Monday; why he also will be attempting to claim an Open era-record
24th Grand Slam trophy over the coming fortnight on the All England Club's grass courts — and they'll offer plenty of answers.
His best-in-the-game return of serve. His dangerous two-handed backhand. His elasticity. His stamina. His defense. His ability to read someone else's intentions, get to where a ball is headed and send it back with force, a combination Casper Ruud described this way after losing to Djokovic in
the French Open final: "He sort of just goes into this mode where he just becomes, like, a wall."
Listen to Novak Djokovic explain why he's done what he's done and why, at age 36, he's still doing it, and he'll offer a reason far less tangible and far less observable, something he mentioned during his victory speech at Roland Garros a few weeks ago.
"I try to visualize every single thing in my life and not only believe it, but really feel it with every cell in my body. And I just want to send a message out there to every young person: Be in the present moment; forget about what happened in the past; the future is something that is just going to happen," Djokovic said. "But if you want a better future, you create it. Take the means in your hands. Believe it. Create it."
Speaking that day about his own hopes and dreams as a 7-year-old kid, Djokovic noted two primary goals: getting to No. 1 and winning Wimbledon.
He's already been No. 1 for more weeks than any man or woman in the half-century of computerized rankings. Now he will try to
pull even with Roger Federer by earning title No. 8 at the oldest of the four Grand Slam tennis tournaments. Djokovic is one ahead of the injured Rafael Nadal — and three ahead of the retired Federer — for the most singles majors won by a man, with 23.
"Those two guys," said Djokovic, who faces Pedro Cachin of Argentina at Centre Court on Monday, "were occupying my mind for the last 15 years quite a lot."
His 23 is the same number Serena Williams ended her career with last season; only Margaret Court, who won 24 across both the amateur and professional eras, has more.
"Grand Slams are the goal. I don't know how many, but I think he has in his body a lot more," said Djokovic's coach, Goran Ivanisevic. "It's fascinating to see, because sometimes you think, ‘OK, now you have 23.' But he's going to find, again, some kind of motivation to win 24, maybe 25. Who knows where is the end?"
Entering the 2011 season, the so-called Big Three's Slam standings looked like this: Federer with 16, Nadal with nine, Djokovic with one.