Tsitsipas stumbles as Djokovic marches on towards greatness
Djokovic now holds 19 Grand Slam titles after epic French Open triumph, just one behind record held by career rivals Nadal and Federer
Paris
THE atmosphere seemed as if it was designed to make a Greek feel at home in his first Grand Slam singles final. Greece's azure-and-white flags were draped over seats in the French Open's main Philippe Chatrier Court.
The fans, most of them French, were chanting Stefanos Tsitsipas' surname and often cheering Novak Djokovic's errors. And there was the weather: sun-kissed with a slight breeze and a pale blue sky.
But no matter how much it might have felt like a Grand Slam title was meant to be for Tsitsipas on Sunday as he held a two-set lead, it was all a false promise and yet another chance for the world's No 1 player to demonstrate his resilience and poise under pressure.
"He gave me no space," Tsitsipas said of the final three sets, looking understandably crestfallen but also a bit befuddled.
Djokovic is the champion who has beaten Roger Federer on three separate occasions in Grand Slam tournaments after saving two match points, including the 2019 Wimbledon final.
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Djokovic is the man who prevailed against Rafael Nadal in a grinding 2012 Australian Open final that lasted nearly six hours; the man who stopped Nadal last Friday in a gruelling semi-final at the very tournament Nadal has won a preposterous 13 times.
The truth is, the opponent does not have Djokovic where he wants him in a major tournament until he has the big trophy in his hands. Tsitsipas, like so many players before him, had to settle for the smaller prize. He was asked what he had learned from the defeat.
"Two sets doesn't really mean anything," Tsitsipas concluded.
The best-of-five format, which is only in use for men's singles at the four Grand Slam tournaments, remains a major roadblock to the younger set in their pursuit of winning titles over the Big Three.
Long form gives Djokovic more time to untie tactical knots; more time to impose his groundstrokes and great returns; more time to create doubt and stress in the minds of his less experienced opponents.
Dominic Thiem broke the long run of the Big Three - Djokovic, 34; Nadal, 35; and Federer, 39 - by winning last year's US Open, but he did not have to defeat any of them along the way. Nadal skipped the event over virus concerns, and Federer was recovering from knee surgery.
Djokovic eliminated himself in the fourth round by smacking a ball that inadvertently hit a lineswoman in the throat, resulting in his ejection.
But Thiem has faded, struggling mentally with the tour's pandemic-related restrictions and straining to retain his drive and excellence.
He has been touchingly open about his doubts, but his slump also makes you marvel at the drive and sustained focus of a player like Djokovic, who has had plenty of pandemic concerns of his own and actually tested positive for Covid-19.
Djokovic had his own fade from late 2016 to early 2018, but he has come back at full roar and full stretch. The younger generation, however talented, has yet to break through and win the titles that matter most against the players who matter most.
Tsitsipas, a 22-year-old seeded fifth in this tournament, spent several minutes in his chair after match point, his face hidden by a towel.
A great athlete, a great tennis player with amibition and tools
He possesses the ambition and the tools: a big bang of a forehand, a forceful and varied serve, a one-handed backhand that he can drive effectively from higher contact points or slice to change the pace of points and defend in the corners.
He also has above-average volleys that he could have put to more frequent use on Sunday, no matter how daunting it is to face Djokovic's passing shots.
Tsitsipas, the son of a Russian mother and Greek father, is a great athlete, not just a great tennis player.
He is quick on the move with improving core strength and with a hairstyle and rolling walk that recall Bjorn Borg, the great Swedish champion who, now 65, awarded the trophies on Sunday looking as cool as ever.
But although Borg faced plenty of greatness in John McEnroe, Ivan Lendl and Jimmy Connors, he never had to deal with the combined firepower and long-running excellence of Djokovic, Federer and Nadal.
For the second time in six years, Djokovic is halfway to a calendar year sweep of all four Grand Slam titles. He now has 19 overall, only one behind the men's record 20 held by Nadal and Federer and there is nothing to suggest that Djokovic will not surpass his two career rivals.
Djokovic is already on course to be the most statistically successful of the Big Three and already holds the men's record for total weeks holding the world No 1 ranking. He reached 325 weeks on Monday this week, and for now, the most gifted youngsters - Tsitsipas, Daniil Medvedev, Alexander Zverev, Andrey Rublev, Jannik Sinner and Lorenzo Musetti - can only look up in awe and wonder if they truly have what it takes.
As a group, they can take some solace in knowing that two of them were up - two sets to none - on Djokovic at the French Open.
Musetti, a 19-year-old Italian, took his lead in the fourth round before running out of steam and straight into Djokovic's staying power. Musetti won just one more game, but Tsitsipas had enough left to make the fifth set interesting.
"Despite my loss today, I have faith in my game. I very much believe I can get to that point very soon. I was close today. Every opponent is difficult," said Tsitsipas.
"There's a small difference between the player I played today and the ones from before. But I think with the same attitude and if I don't downgrade myself, I see no reason for me not to be holding that trophy one day."
For now, such trophies still belong to the elders, no matter how loud the cheers or how reassuring the weather may be. NYTIMES, REUTERS
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