Novak Djokovic retired injured after losing the first
set 7-6(5) against Alexander Zverev on Friday to put the German through to his
first Australian Open final and extend his wait for a record 25th Grand Slam
title.
Zverev will meet either Jannik Sinner or Ben Shelton
in Sunday’s decider as he bids for his first Grand Slam title, but Djokovic
will remain locked with Margaret Court on 24 major trophies until at least the
French Open.
There were doubts about Djokovic’s left thigh
following his taxing quarter-final win over Carlos Alcaraz when he took a
lengthy medical timeout after the first set against the Spaniard.
The 37-year-old Serb skipped a training session on the
eve of the semi-final and entered Rod Laver Arena for the afternoon match with
the thigh strapped.
But there was little indication he was struggling
until late in the set when he began trudging slowly between points and
muttering in frustration at his players’ box.
He gave up the set by hammering a regulation forehand
volley into the net and promptly walked to Zverev’s side to shake hands and
embrace the German, leaving the crowd gasping.
With a rueful expression, Djokovic held two thumbs up
and clapped at the terraces but there was a round of boos as the 10-times
champion made his exit.
Djokovic later said he had been trying to nurse a torn
muscle and he was in increasing pain as the set wore on.
“I knew even if I won the first set, that it’s going
to be a huge uphill battle for me to stay physically fit enough to stay with
him in the rallies, you know, for another God knows what, two, three, four
hours,” the Serb told reporters.
“I don’t think I had that, unfortunately, today in the
tank.”
‘SHOW SOME RESPECT’
Zverev said he was also surprised by Djokovic’s
retirement but noted the Serb’s movement had fallen away in the tiebreak.
“I thought it was a high level first set,” he added.
“Of course there are some difficulties … in the
tiebreak he was not moving. I did see him struggle a bit more.”
Zverev also admonished sections of the crowd for
jeering Djokovic, who has dominated the year’s opening Grand Slam since winning
his first trophy at Melbourne Park in 2008.
“The very first thing I want to say is, please guys,
don’t boo a player when he goes out with injury,” Zverev said.
“I know everyone paid for tickets and everyone wants
to see hopefully a great five-set match.
“But … Novak Djokovic is someone who has given this
sport for the past 20 years absolutely everything of his life.
“He has won this tournament with an abdominal tear,
won this tournament with a hamstring injury.
“So please show some respect.”
The truncated semi-final win is a huge boost for
Zverev’s hopes of finally winning a Grand Slam, having missed out to Alcaraz in
last year’s French Open final and surrendering a two-set lead before losing to
Dominic Thiem in the 2020 U.S. Open decider.
The rangy 27-year-old has been tipped for Grand Slam
success since his teen years but was often thwarted by the likes of Djokovic
and the now-retired Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal.
Zverev was strong on serve on Friday and appeared
content to wage attritional rallies with the Serb while biding his time for
chances.
Though failing to convert all five break points he had
over Djokovic, Zverev was rock-solid in the tiebreak.
He thrashed a forehand down the line to bring up set
point with a 24th winner before Djokovic made his stunning exit, a year after
being shocked by Sinner in the semi-finals.
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