• World’s two best players reach ATP Tour final
• Murray’s semi-final took more than three hours, Djokovic’s 66 minutes.
• Murray’s semi-final took more than three hours, Djokovic’s 66 minutes.
Who ends the year at the top? |
Andy Murray and Novak Djokovic
meet for the 35th time on Sunday in a match loaded with more
significance than even some of their many contests for majors: the
championship of each other, as someone once described the trilogy of
world heavyweight title fights between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier.
They have not absorbed as many physical bruises as did those fine,
departed warriors, but there has been pain, psychological as well as
physical, since they first played as youths nearly 20 years ago and kept
punching all the way through their professional careers, with Djokovic
ahead in these surely latter stages of the rivalry, 34-10. “This maybe
is one of the biggest matches that we have ever played against each
other, so let’s enjoy it,” said the Serb.
Murray has won two of his three slams by beating Djokovic in the
final but this match is different. It has its recent genesis in
Djokovic’s surprise collapse in the early stages at Wimbledon and has
been building by the week, as he struggled on and off the court while
Murray went on the sort of run every player dreams about: unbeaten now
in 24 matches over more than three months and returning in front of his
home fans with four titles collected on the spin among eight for the
year – plus the scalp of the man who will look across the net at him
around 6pm at the O2 Arena on Sunday.
At stake is the world No1 ranking, which the Scot took from the Serb
in Paris nearly a fortnight ago. Their almost inevitable collision
follows semi-final wins that could hardly have been more different,
Murray taking a record three hours and 38 minutes to wear down the
serving monster that is Milos Raonic, 5-7, 7-6, 7-6, before Djokovic’s
one hour and six minutes stroll to blow away Kei Nishikori 6-1, 6-1.
There was very little traffic on Route 66.
Much will depend on how the two players recover: Murray’s match was
the longest of the week (and in the history of the tournament), while
Djokovic’s was the shortest.
The Serb was awesome, back to his best, and will be so tough to beat.
He said later: “I pretty much executed everything that I tactically
planned to do.
“I started off very well. That helps when you’re playing against a
top player. Kei was obviously a little bit tired, not at his best. My
week has been going in the right direction. The last couple of matches
have been pretty much flawless and now we’re coming up to the last match
of the year, the one everyone wanted. There are two of us on the court,
let’s start with that. Let’s enjoy the occasion, be conscious of the
great match. I’m honoured to be part of the history with Andy tomorrow.
We have known each other many years.”
The biggest struggle of the match arrived in the first set when
security guards grabbed a spectator who ran on to the court and escorted
him from the premises. Djokovic said, “No, I did not feel threatened.
Maybe he just wanted to be noticed.”
The second semi-final was a pointed statement – not necessarily
intentional – as Nishikori engaged in a three hours and 20 minutes game
against Murray on Wednesday night, to that point the longest match in
the tournament’s history. There was precious little left of the Japanese
player against Djokovic, whose confidence and power have blossomed by
the day after an uncertain start last Sunday.
There
are some who still regard him as the world’s best, whatever the slim
lead Murray has over him in the rankings. Others closer to the heat of
battle see it differently; Raonic for instance.
“He’s done a lot of great things,” the Canadian said of Murray,
clearly exhausted after what was one of the most draining spectacles –
for players and spectators alike – this season. “Nothing’s missing in
that storyline.
“Tennis ranking is a game of checks and balances. Who’s going to finish No1 is who does the best that year.
“Doesn’t matter whether [Murray and Djokovic] played or not. You
could take that away from Andy in a way; then you could also say it’s
sort of Novak’s responsibility to get to that point because Andy was
there every single week. Regardless, Andy’s still the best player in the
world of 2016. There’s no question about it.”
If Nishikori was totally spent after enduring a Murray mauling, the
question remains unanswered about what the winner of the first
semi-final can bring to the final. Raonic did not lack for candour about
his own physical state. “I’ll probably feel like crap for the next few
days,” he said.
Murray was more circumspect, not wanting to give Djokovic even a
sliver of a psychological advantage, but he could not deny he was spent
after a match that demanded as much mental fortitude as physical
stamina.
“I don’t know how I’ll feel tomorrow,” he said. “Obviously I’m tired
just now because it was a really hard match. It wasn’t just that it was
physically hard, it was mentally a tough match, too. It was pretty
stressful. I was quite far behind in the second set, a set and a break
down, managed to turn it round. Then it was back and forth in the third
set.”
The pressures also bring frustration. Earlier in the week, Djokovic
was castigated for hitting a ball into the crowd, risking censure at
least, not to mention injury to a spectator. His local media went
apoplectic when a British journalist questioned him about it. “You guys
are unbelievable,” he said in an exchange that was pretty feisty.
Well, Murray hit a ball into the crowd on Saturdaylast night, off an
overhead beam admittedly, but conceded later: “If you hit balls into
crowds, stuff like that, obviously you’re close to getting defaulted.
You have to be very, very careful with that. That’s happened to my
opponents this week, as well, and they didn’t get warnings for hitting a
ball up into the scoreboard.
“I think for the players, you just want the consistency there. But,
if you’re hitting balls into the crowd or anything like that, you
deserve to be warned. It’s up to the umpire, if you hit a ball into the
crowd, if it hits someone, whether they default you or not.”
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