Hardcourts have
traditionally been Djokovic’s happiest hunting ground, suiting his precise
footwork best; yet, U.S. Open finals
have been more stumbling blocks than showcases for him. He had lost four of the
five in which he had played until this time. It appeared to be the set pattern as he won
the 1st and lost the 2nd.
In
Tennis, Chair Umpire is the final authority – generally, we hear them calling ‘
quite please’ … and not much more. It was
in 2011 US Open - after losing the first set in the U.S. Open in the final
match against Samantha Stosur, Serena Williams hit the best shot of her losing
day--a thumping forehand which her opponent barely laid a racket on.
Unfortunately for Williams, she also yelled "Come on!" after she
struck the ball--a no-no in tennis and a violation of distraction rules in
tennis. The Chair Umpire, a woman this
time, awarded Samantha Stosur the point,
which gave her the game, and reprimanded Williams. "This is not a
replay," she said. "This is
hindrance and it is her point. Because when you shouted, she ran to the ball
and she touched the ball." Williams
responded, "Are you the one who screwed me over last time?" Williams
wasn't finished and extended her rant to the changeover.
At US Open 2015,
today, Novak Djokovic has defeated Roger Federer in four sets for his 10th
Grand Slam title. The top-ranked Serb
beat Federer 6-4, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 on Sunday night [Monday morning in India] to
win three major championships in a year for the second time in his career. He
also topped Federer in the Wimbledon final in similar fashion — dropping the
second set and taking the next two.
The second-seeded
Federer is still stuck on 17 Grand Slam championships, with none since 2012
Wimbledon. After a rocky start, the Swiss great raised his level and kept
constant pressure on his rival. But Djokovic was just a bit better at the
biggest moments, saving 19 of 23 break points — including three in the final
game — while converting 6 of 13 of his own opportunities. The start of the
match was delayed more than three hours by rain, and when it began the crowd
was firmly behind the 34-year-old Federer. But the roars for his opponent
didn’t rattle Djokovic much, and he also recovered quickly from a scary fall
early in the first set that left him with bloody scrapes on his right forearm,
hand and knee.
Before
the start of the match, history was created with Eva Asderaki-Moore of Greece becoming
the first female chair umpire for a U.S.
Open men's singles final. The U.S. Tennis Association said
Sunday that this year's tournament also is the first major in which a woman
chaired both singles finals. Marija Cicak of
Croatia handled Saturday's women's final. In the incident referred to above in
2011 US Open Women involving Stosur and Serena, Asderaki-Moore was the chair
umpire. Asderaki-Moore is one of 19 Gold
Badge umpires working the U.S. Open this year. The Gold Badge is the highest
rating a chair umpire can earn, following reviews from tennis' governing
bodies. Of the 127 men's singles matches at this year's U.S. Open, 41 of them
have been chair umpired by women, according to the USTA. In 2007, Sandra de Jenken of France became the
first woman to chair umpire a Grand Slam final for the men at any of the majors,
chairing both the Australian and French Opens.
At US Open today,
up a break early in the set, Djokovic's
right foot rolled as he tried to change directions to chase after a volley and
slid out from under him. He slammed down hard on his right side, scraping his
forearm, hand and knee. Blood was dripping down his arm as Djokovic was broken
in the game. He had treatment during the next changeover and started to take
control again after that.
Today there was rain delay at the U.S. Open — because there's
still no roof atop Arthur Ashe Stadium. That's supposed to be in place for next
year's tournament. The U.S. Open has a
long history of scheduling problems because of weather, including five
consecutive men's finals postponed from Sunday to Monday from 2008-12. As part
of a broader, $500 million-plus renovation plan for the tournament site, the
U.S. Tennis Association has been constructing a retractable roof over Ashe,
with 2016 the planned date for its debut.
Shrugging off a
three-hour rain delay and the overwhelming hostility of the Arthur Ashe Stadium
crowd, the 28-year-old world number one captured his second title in New York
to add to his 2011 triumph. The defeat shattered 34-year-old Federer's bid to
become the oldest US Open champion in 45 years and left him marooned on 17
Grand Slam titles, the last of which came at Wimbledon in 2012. Djokovic's 10
majors takes him level with American Bill Tilden and just one shy of Bjorn Borg
and Rod Laver on the all-time list.
"I have
tremendous respect for Roger and the challenge he presents," said
Djokovic, who is now 21-21 in career meetings with Federer. Djokovic at 28 is
just seven titles short of 34-year-old Federer – who was his opponent’s age
when he won the last of his five US championships here. The chances of adding
to his list will slide by the year, his best opportunity since beating Andy
Murray at Wimbledon in 2012 being his thrilling five-setter against Djokovic
there two years ago. Djokovic needed a set fewer to inflict another defeat at
the same place this year.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
14th
Sept. 2015.