Djokovic frustrated by Wimbledon waiting game
Serbian suggests earlier start but organizers defend scheduling
WIMBLEDON, England — Novak Djokovic is a bit tired of not getting on Centre Court at Wimbledon until nearly 9 pm. The waiting. The uncertainty. The rushing to try to finish matches by the 11 pm local curfew — or the annoyance at having to stop midway through a contest and wait until the following day to resume.
He offered a solution Monday afternoon after winning his 32nd consecutive match in the grass-court tournament by wrapping up a 7-6(6), 7-6 (6), 5-7, 6-4 victory over Hubert Hurkacz that began on Sunday evening but was halted after two sets: Start play in the All England Club's main stadium earlier than 1:30 pm. Maybe at noon, say.
"It would make a difference," said Djokovic, who is now into the quarterfinals and three wins away from what would be a fifth championship in a row at Wimbledon, an eighth overall at the place and a 24th career Grand Slam title.
"There are different ways that I'm sure they will address this issue," said Djokovic, whose shoes are stamped with the number "23", a reference to his current major trophy count, "and try to avoid having these kinds of problems in the future."
Yeah, Novak, good luck with that.
The head of the club made clear there is not much of a chance of such a switch.
"Matches are happening at a time when they're accessible to people. We're seeing (TV) viewing figures that are beyond our expectations and beyond previous years," club chief executive Sally Bolton said, "so I think they probably speak for themselves."
Victory in his 100th match at the tournament gave the Serbian a 90th win.
"In the important moments, particularly in the fourth, I managed to read his serve, make that break. That was the key to success," said the 36-year-old, who will face Russia's Andrey Rublev in the quarterfinals.
Play begins on the smaller courts at 11 am and at No 1 Court at 1 pm, with Centre Court the last to get play underway.
Because the tournament site is situated in a residential area, local rules prevent matches from continuing past 11 pm; often, if a set ends around 10:30 pm, the encounter will be suspended until the next day so as not to risk going past the cutoff time. That happened in Andy Murray's loss to Stefanos Tsitsipas in the second round, which got stretched into a second day after being the last on the schedule at Centre Court.
Djokovic's third-round match, which also was last at that arena, appeared to be headed that way, too, but he managed to finish beating Stan Wawrinka at 10:46 pm.
Djokovic-Hurkacz, again last for the day at Centre Court, began with the retractable roof shut; they stopped at 10:35 pm. When action picked up again a little more than 16 hours later, the cover was gone and the wind was whipping.
Djokovic said he warmed up at about 1 pm for both of those nighttime affairs and then was left with a key decision.
"Should you go back to the accommodation? The house nearby? Or should you stay (at the club)? Yesterday, I decided to stay," said Djokovic. "I stayed, basically, for seven hours, waiting for my match to start."
Once it did, Djokovic was not quite at his very best against the 17th-seeded Hurkacz, who is best known for being the player to beat Roger Federer at Wimbledon in 2021 in what wound up being the last match of the 20-time major champion's career.
Hurkacz held three set points when he led the opening tiebreaker 6-3, but he showed some shakiness and couldn't hold on. Then he led 5-4 in the second tiebreaker — two points from taking it — and again allowed Djokovic to come through before the interruption on Sunday night.
After Hurkacz made things interesting by grabbing a set on Monday, Djokovic reasserted himself, as he so often does.
"Playing Novak," Hurkacz said, "is just an incredible challenge to compete against."
One of Wednesday's men's quarterfinals will be No 3 Daniil Medvedev, the 2021 US Open champion, against unseeded Chris Eubanks, a 27-year-old American making his Wimbledon debut. Eubanks had never been past the second round at a Grand Slam tournament until now. The other men's match on Wednesday will be No 1 Carlos Alcaraz against No 6 Holger Rune. Alcaraz got past 2021 Wimbledon runner-up Matteo Berrettini 3-6,6-3, 6-3, 6-3, and Rune beat No 21 Grigor Dimitrov 3-6, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (4),6-3.
Women's quarterfinal matchups established Monday were No 2 Aryna Sabalenka vs No 25 Madison Keys, and No 3 Elena Rybakina vs No 6 Ons Jabeur.
Rybakina is the defending champion; she defeated Jabeur in last year's final.
"The first one or two weeks (after), I thought about it a lot. It was very painful," Jabeur said after eliminating two-time champion Petra Kvitova 6-0, 6-3 Monday. "The good thing about it is I know I gave it everything. I'm someone that believes that it wasn't meant to be, so I cannot force it more than it should be. I'm glad that I have this belief. I believe in destiny. It wasn't supposed to be that year. Maybe greater things are coming after that final."
Agencies via Xinhua
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