Hi Joel,
“Resilient” is a good word to describe Djokovic at this stage of his career—he’s needed to be. Controversies come and go, but he shrugs them off by continuing to play well. Whatever disaster may befall him at one major is quickly forgotten as he strives to win the next one; whatever off-court setbacks he may suffer are eventually drowned out by his on-court accomplishments. I mean, you didn’t even mention the fact that he was defaulted from the US Open for hitting a line judge with a ball until the fifth paragraph of your post above.
That doesn’t mean Djokovic’s issues aren’t real, or that his actions haven’t had consequences. His Adria Tour, as well-intentioned as it was, led to at least a half-dozen Covid cases. He helped a fitness guru sell “advanced brain nutrients” online. And his default in New York wasn’t just “bad luck,” as some tried to say. Djokovic has been banging balls and slamming racquets in frustration for years, and has narrowly escaped similar excommunications in the past. Let’s hope his Covid-vaccine doubts from 2020 aren’t a harbinger of more science skepticism to come.
But it also seems that whatever Djokovic does, he’ll never get the benefit of the doubt from tennis fans. They don’t like his “clinical” game, or his roaring, clench-fisted celebrations. What they don’t like most, of course, is that he regularly beats their favorite players, Federer and Nadal.
We know Djokovic will never match the global popularity of Roger or Rafa, but more recently he has begun to be compared, negatively, to the fourth member of the Big 4, Andy Murray. With his forthright call for gender equality across the board in tennis, Murray is in tune with the progressive times. Djokovic, by contrast, started his new players union, the PTPA, without mentioning the women at all in the initial announcement. He has since said he welcomes WTA players, but failing to talk to them, or about them, from the beginning was an unforced error.
I like Djokovic. As a player, I marvel at his consistency and his underrated artistry. As a fan, I like his reliably good sportsmanship in defeat. As a writer, I appreciate his thoughtful, famously long answers to questions in press conferences, and his desire to take on new challenges. I like that he doesn’t shy away from stating his sky-high on-court goals, and that he cares about records and achievements. And whatever the flaws were in his player-union launch, it’s an effort that was overdue in tennis, and one that he didn’t need to make. Fans roll their eyes at his antics and say that he “wants to be loved,” but for me that quality adds a poignant side to his story.
One thing I do wish is that Djokovic would use his leadership position to push for gender equality, and to help unite the tours. He may never call himself a feminist, the way Murray has. But tennis has an opportunity to be a leader in that sphere, which means Djokovic has that opportunity, too.
Joel, is there something you’d like to see from Djokovic as he moves into 2021, either on-court or off?