It wasn’t the French Open final, with a career Grand Slam as the big reward. But if you wanted to come up with an achievement that will resonate in history as fully as earning all four majors might, beating Roger Federer at Wimbledon in what will be remembered as one of the greatest of all matches isn’t exactly a bad option.
Novak Djokovic exercised that option in a stirring, four-hour display by both men of everything this game can offer in the way of variety, skill, perseverance, and spirit. Djokovic won it after failing to convert a match point in the fourth set, 6-7 (7), 6-4, 7-6 (4), 5-7, 6-4. The triumph by Djokovic, a player who’s been dealing with some demons as a competitor for the better part of two years, overshadowed the remarkable stamina, focus, and strength shown by his 32-year-old rival.
If you wanted to show a visitor from Mars just how gorgeous tennis can be, just roll out tape of the first set of this confrontation. It was wonderful stuff from the start, featuring Federer demonstrating his newfound love of the approach shot and volley, and Djokovic demonstrating why his attacking, slashing game is more difficult to pursue successfully than ever before. It was Djokovic’s superb defense—with a constant, sizzling under-current of electric offense—matched against the deft touch, supreme comfort, balletic mobility, and all-around wizardry of the seven-time Wimbledon champ. And all of it hung in the balance over four excruciating hours.
There were no breaks in the first set, nor any break points. Yet each game was dramatic and any 15-30 or 30-all point forced spectators to inch closer to the edge of their seats. Only an aficionado of futbol can possibly understand how fascinating something that so often leads to nothing can be. As a result, the tiebreaker loomed even more significant than it otherwise might have been.