Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Sport
Andy Sims

Novak Djokovic recovers from dropping a set to get title defence off and running

PA Wire

Back to Wimbledon but not exactly back to business for Novak Djokovic. There was a moment where it appeared the six-time Wimbledon champion had found an unlikely sanctuary after the events of the past 12 months but thanks to controlled aggression from the unheralded Soonwoo Kwon, Djokovic was faced with an afternoon that, like his year, was far from straightforward.

There was a storm brewing on Centre Court as Kwon served out the second set, and that wasn’t just overhead as the rain pittered on the closed roof to the sound of thunder above the All England Club. The 24-year-old troubled Djokovic at times with a big serve, patience in the lengthy exchanges and an exquisite touch at the net that really should have been utilised more often.

It gave Djokovic a brief scare but as Kwon’s accuracy waned the size of the task at hand for a player ranked 81 in the world became clear, as the top seed and favourite for the men’s title rattled out a 6-3 3-6 6-3 6-4 win.

In the end it was a welcome homecoming for Djokovic, who will attempt to win his fourth consecutive title this year. There was a thought that Djokovic may have been treated with some rancour on his first appearance at SW19 since he was deported from Australia following a row over his medical exemption for the Covid-19 vaccine – but that was quickly dispelled on the opening Monday of play, as the defending men’s champion took the traditional opening slot on Centre Court.

Indeed, Djokovic was greeted as a player who is attempting to move one short of Roger Federer’s record of eight titles should really be, even if he remains a figure who has never truly felt the love from this hallowed arena. Part of the problem of having a record as dominant as Djokovic’s at Wimbledon is it does not take much for the crowd to get behind the underdog when there is even a faint whiff of an upset.

There was more than that when Kwon served for the second set at 5-3, as the South Korean received a standing ovation at the start of his task. From 0-30 down and to the delight of the crowd, he whipped out the three notes that had got him to that point; first taking on Djokovic shot for shot in a baseline rally, then playing a delicious drop shot and finishing with a big serve out wide that Djokovic could not return.

Djokovic praised Kwon for playing ‘high-quality tennis’ (Getty)

It was a thrilling and unexpected performance from a player who has only reached the third round of a grand slam on one occasion and has just the one ATP Tour title to his name. Kwon could not hide the grin on his face as he turned after flashing a forehand winner past Djokovic early in the third set. Yes, this was really happening, and the end result could have been different had he taken breakpoint chances in the early exchanges of the final two sets.

Instead, Djokovic raised his level, particularly at 15-40 in his opening service game of the fourth. Kwon blinked on a forehand into the net before Djokovic fired an ace, played a perfect lob and then stretched to reach a Kwon pass in a brilliant piece of defence, with the 24-year-old drooping a drop shot into the net. From there Djokovic cranked up the pressure and the break to love in the fifth game of the fourth put an end to Kwon’s resistance.

Djokovic received a standing ovation after closing out a win, on the court he holds above any other. “I’ve said this before but this court is truly special,” Djokovic said. “For me it has always been the court I dreamed of playing and winning and all my childhood dreams came true here so it’s an honour and pleasure to be back.” It may have taken a set longer than planned, but he had found his home again.

Norrie overcomes delays as Alcaraz stages stunning fightback

Cameron Norrie was twice interrupted by rain delays as the British men’s No 1 advanced to the second round while Spanish sensation Carlos Alcaraz fought from two sets to one down to defeat Jan-Lennard Struff.

Norrie may have felt slightly aggrieved at the idea of the top-ranked British player opening play on Court No 2, and those irritations must have worsened as the heavens opened above the All England Club. No sooner had Norrie raced into 6-0 first-set lead against Pablo Andujar the first spots of rain began to fall on SW19.

Norrie steadied to take the second set following the resumption of play but was then made to wait again before serving out a 6-0 7-6 6-3 win. “It is what it is,” Norrie said. “It would be nice to play on a show court, especially with the weather. As we saw today, I had to come off twice. Centre Court and Court 1 have the roof so that you know you’re guaranteed to play.”

Spanish wonderkid Carlos Alcaraz overcame Struff in a five-set epic (Getty)

Norrie was overlooked on Court No 1, as the 19-year-old Alcaraz downed the big hitting and even bigger serving Struff in a five-set epic. Alcaraz is still learning on the grass courts and struggled to gain momentum after battling back to take the second set, as Struff repeatedly got out of danger by unleashing first-serve bombs that Alcaraz could not return, as well as an impressive array of winners.

However, the tournament’s sixth seed found the breakthrough as he edged the fourth set on a tie-break, flashing a stunning backhand winner to deliver a blow to Struff’s confidence, before closing out the decider 6-4 in the fifth.

The biggest casualty on day one ended up being last season’s semi-finalist and seventh seed Hubert Hurkacz, who was beaten in another five-set epic by Alejandro Davidovich Fokina in what was perhaps the match of the day.

It came after Davidovich Fokina fluffed a tweener as he tried to showboat on match point while two sets up. Hurkacz emerged from the rain delay to force a fifth set, only for Davidovich Fokina to spare any blushes by edging it 10-8.

The result opens up the quarter of the draw taken by third seed Casper Ruud, the defeated French Open finalist who has admitted to not being the strongest on grass. The Norwegian required two tie-breaks to defeat Albert Ramos-Vinolas in straight sets.

With many matches on the schedule cancelled following the rain delays, Jannik Sinner’s win over three-time grand slam champion Stan Wawrinka also stood out. Sinner, the 10th seed, could face Andy Murray in the third round if the Scot advances past John Isner, who eventually defeated Enzo Couacaud in five.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.