Tramlines

Djokovic can be the greatest

Novak Djokovic clasps his Australian Open trophy

So how was it for you? Has there ever been a match so painfully pleasurable? Five hours and 53 minutes of blistering tension that seemed like it would never end.

Such raw emotion, such unpredictablity, such effort, such athleticism and such heroism. Such beauty yet such brutality. It truly was something to behold.

The 2012 Australian Open tennis final will be remembered as an item of real drama that is unlikely to be easily upended in the cluttered world of professional sport. Certainly not this year.

Of course, it is easy to get carried away after such happenings yet it is much more difficult to escape an almost inevitable conclusion from what went on in a throbbing Rod Laver Arena in Melbourne: whatever is made of the greatness of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal over the past decade - and their ability is not in dispute at this juncture - Novak Djokovic is in prime position to establish himself as the finest player to pick up a racquet in anger.

Or fabulously crisp calmness, judging by his ability to muzzle a rampant Nadal during a breathless occasion Down Under that would have been deemed far-fetched if not so brutally honest.

Nadal is perhaps used to beating Roger Federer these days, but Djokovic is a different proposition. The man from Serbia continues to possess his own variety of kryptonite whenever he faces Nadal, which is no mean feat after Nadal threw the kitchen sink and then the washing machine at 'Djoker' yet still came up short shortly before 2am in the Aussie heat.

Djokovic had beaten Nadal on six previous occasions - and bruised him badly in the finals of Wimbledon and the US Open last year - but will surely derive greatest pleasure from getting the nod by such a slender margin.

With Nadal a break up in the final set and the crowd suddenly mimicking the experience of enveloping Rafa on a clay court in a Davis Cup tie in Barcelona, the strain on Djokovic was huge yet he found a way to come through. He came up with the answers to the conundrum in breaking back twice in snagging a richly deserved third title in Melbourne. Such a response is only reserved for true greats of the sport. Djokovic walks tall in this golden age of giants.

Novak Djokovic celebrates his astonishing win

Federer has 16 Grand Slams tucked away, Nadal has ten such trinkets and Djokovic moves up to five. Novak is hardly the poor relation in third spot having clasped four out of the previous five majors in the sport.

Djokovic knows how to win, and crucially does not get flustered when the heat comes round the corner. These are key ingredients in a man of growing maturity at the age of only 24. Perhaps more impressive is his fitness in outlasting Murray in the semi-finals and Nadal in the final over ten titanic hours to snatch the trophy for a second straight year. There was never a chance that Djokovic would collapse despite his body language sometimes suggesting otherwise.

Let us not forget that Nadal had an extra 24 hours to prepare for this final than Djokovic. He was ready for such a war of attrition, but could not get enough grapeshot off to mortally wound his foe. Djokovic was never really on his haunches.

"Congratulations to Novak and his team, they deserve it, they are doing something fantastic," commented Nadal.

What price a seasonal sweep of the Grand Slams of Aussie, French, Wimbledon and US Open by Djoker? You could 40-1 on such a feat after he strode to the US Open last September, but the odds come tumbling down. He is suddenly 10/1 to make off with all four this year. Nadal in Paris is likely to be the one that stands between him and the whole blooming lot.

---

A special mention for Andy Murray.

Djokovic and Nadal will take huge encouragement from their efforts in the Australian Open for different reasons, but Britain's Murray should perhaps feels glad he has subscribed to Ivan Lendl's school of coaching.

Murray has lost the last two finals in Melbourne, but his defeat to Djokovic in five sets in the semi-finals was easily his best output from several such trips Down Under.

With a touch more good fortune, Murray could have taken Djokovic's place in the final. He is on the right track, and the remaining three Grand Slams of the season may yet bring real benefits for Murray under Lendl. Never has the Scot been quite so magnificent in defeat.

PHOTO OF THE DAY:

Novak Djokovic's win is right on time

STAT OF THE DAY:

The final ran for five hours and 53 minutes. The previous longest final was Mats Wilander's win over Ivan Lendl in the 1988 US Open final that managed to make its way over four hours and 54 minutes. Nobody said it was going to be easy.

LOOKING AHEAD:

There are tournaments in Montpellier, Zagreb and Santiago on the men's tour this week, but it may take a few weeks to get over the shenanigans in Melbourne. Djokovic and Nadal could do with the rest to reflect on what just happened here. As could the rest of us.

 
  • Pendula  •  Belgrade, Serbia  •  27 days ago
    i hate when i see some ppl doesn't respect what this two guys do today.
    put on the side your love to some player (federer, murray, djokovic ...) and love the game, respect it.
    when i see comments like: "it's not longest match because they use a lot of time between the points"
    that's very stupid.
    why? think about it.

    we get a big rivaly, and we will enjoy in the future in every match. tennis is winning for sure, so we all need to respect the game.
  • mira  •  Belgrade, Serbia  •  27 days ago
    Huge thanks to both players -Djokovic n Nadal!! Great match, great athletes, and most important great young men!!! Barvo Nole!!! Congrats!!! Nadal is a great tennis player and the victory is even sweeter.
  • sunshine  •  27 days ago
    What a superb match. It was a privilege to watch.
  • CARLA  •  London, England  •  27 days ago
    The same was said about Roger Federer many moons ago ! Until next superman comes along......... Wellcome Novak !
  • ZoranBlue  •  Belgrade, Serbia  •  27 days ago
    BRAVO NOVAK YOU ARE A REAL CHAMPION!!
  • sue  •  26 days ago
    Novak has his close family, his many friends- a great fitness coach -
    his compatriotist the Davis Cup squad- and - not only plays with his
    heart but also with G od on his side -- many congratulaions - masterful
    achievement and perforformance ..............
  • Anna Vaghfeldt  •  Värmdö, Sweden  •  27 days ago
    I agree! He is on the very good way! What a guy!!!
  • Mark  •  Dublin, Ireland  •  26 days ago
    Unbelievable , irresistable, indefatigable, irrepressible, indestructable, and utterly resilient....How the Djoker found the mental and physical reserves to fight back after destroying Rafa in the 2nd, 3rd andf 4th sets to the point where Rafa did not know what to do or where to look for inspiration...and lead 4-3, 40 luv on Rafa's serve...only to be pegged back ...then leading 5-3 in the 4th set breaker only to loose that 7-5......and yet to refuse to submit ( as I have witnessed other so called all time 'great's in similar circumstances !! c) or allow his Warrior Spirit to be broken ...and yet again fo the third time in the 4th and 5th sets claw his way back from a break down in the 5th set, break Rafa at 5-5...and have the guts and conviction to serve it out for a 7-5 epic victory in the 5th set . I just dont know how he did that . Will someone plase explain it to me ? It simply defies scientific and Medical logic...but Hey.... after all why should I be surprised ! He is 'The Serbinator' ! Gwann Nole ......A calendar slam for the great Serb this year !
  • Ljubomir  •  Oslo, Norway  •  27 days ago
    Nole ti si Idol pozitivnosti za nase ljude !
    Mi te obozavamo
    Oslo
    Petkovic
  • David  •  Reading, England  •  27 days ago
    I actually cant wait till these two meet again! Yes im a nadal fan, but i gotta give it to djok at the moment hes the best of the best, we are actually so lucky to be seeing nadal and djokovic rivalary unfold i think it could easily eclipse nadal federer rivelary! all the best for novak and rafa for 2012 but i would like to see nadal beat novak a few times this year too. just so it heats things up!
  • Great Eddie  •  Edinburg, United States  •  26 days ago
    These two guys are pretty good. Together they've won the last eight Majors. For for Rafa and 4 four Novak. If not for these two players, Roger would have had at least 25 majors and several grand slams by now. The Big 4 are the greatest four players that have played at the same time. Andy, eventhough he lost, showed me that is has heart. He will overcome in due time.
  • Blood Hound  •  26 days ago
    I knew you could do it Tim. Well done.
  • Zoran  •  Belgrade, Serbia  •  27 days ago
    where is Mats Wilander now,i ask???
  • Jelena Grkinic  •  25 days ago
    You should respect what Nole has done in the past several years, He is not No1 by chance, you should know about all the troubles he had while he was growing up, playing tennis in drained pool, he was not rich, and had some healt problems, so I can truly say that it is a really positive and inspirational story, how some kid from little, poor country made it, and become No 1. One also important fact, he is still same ordinary kid, as he was, he is generous and kind, fame has not changed him. I can say all of them are great, we should respect them, whether we like them or not...
  • ananda  •  Aldershot, England  •  26 days ago
    what ever peple think about this final match but i enjoyed soooooo much and in my openion both are the winner my best player is Roger Federer but i like the determination and fighting spirit of Novak because when i saw him yesterday playing in 5th set as the comentetar said he was down amongs the dead people but still he manage to come over with one of the greatets player of all so thats the main thing i like about Novak and very goodluck Novak for the rest of the season and very2 weldone for yesterday

    one of the great fan from Nepal
  • Veki  •  Crawley, England  •  26 days ago
    WHAT A GREAT MATCH BEST I EVER SEE WE HAVE TO WAIT 100 YEARS TO SEE ANOTHER GREAT MATCH LIKE THIS WHAT GREAT PLAYERS AND GREAT SPORTMAN,NOVAK IS ALLREADY BEST EVER TENIS PLAYER IN THE WORLD CONGRATULATIONS NOVAK AND THANK YOU FOR ALL GREAT GAME YOU ARE NUMBER ONE
  • Sikhumbuzo  •  Johannesburg, South Africa  •  26 days ago
    the greatest at the moment...he's great
  • ho  •  Bucharest, Romania  •  27 days ago
    why is nadal's hand at tramlines logo?
  • Pendula  •  Belgrade, Serbia  •  27 days ago
    about the theme, can djokovic be the greatest ever?
    well, the fact is novak is superior now and he have such players as nadal, federer (everyone says that he is the greatest now, but he didn't have this kind competition when he won his titles - i don't trying to make him less than he deserve, fact is he have 16 majors and that's very hard to do even you don't have this kind of competition), murray, del potro (he won one slam, he has to be in this group).
    the very important thing is, remember one year ago, before AO no one had in their mind that rafa and roger will be dethroned, especial in the way like novak did it.
    roger win his first slam when he was age 24., like novak is now.
    i know we will have great next few years, and the most important tennis will win.
  • chike  •  Lagos, Nigeria  •  27 days ago
    I HAVE BEEN WATCHING TENNIS FINNALS BUT THIS IS THE GREATEST OF THEM ALL.

About Tramlines

Tramlines spent its formative years living and breathing tennis, watching Yannick Noah berate line judges and admiring Steffi Graf"s backhand slice from the comfort of its couch at home. Nowadays, Tramlines can often be seen wearing Andre Agassi's old denim shorts, sleeping under its desk in an office with an overzealous air-con machine, whilst devouring punnets of strawberries and pints of Pimms in a bid to bring you the best of the world's tennis. It boasts a 100 per cent record against Alex Bogdanovic on clay and has a top-spin forehand frequently compared to that of the great MaliVai Washington.

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