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Novak Djokovic breaks grand slam drought with Wimbledon triumph

Novak Djokovic has won his fourth Wimbledon title after beating Kevin Anderson.

Novak Djokovic has won his fourth Wimbledon title after beating Kevin Anderson. Photo: AAP

An elated Novak Djokovic, shrugged off a second-set blow-up to break his two-year grand slam title drought with a tense Wimbledon final triumph over spirited South African Kevin Anderson.

The Serbian secured his fourth crown at The All England Club – and 13th career major – with a 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-3) win that was much less straightforward than the lopsided scoreline suggests.

After a sluggish start, Anderson threatened another famous fightback like his quarter-final recovery from two sets down against Roger Federer before Djokovic staved off five set points in the dramatic third set.

He eventually reigned supreme after two hours and 19 minutes in front of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, British Prime Minister Theresa May and Australian tennis icon Rod Laver to surpass the Wimbledon feats of all-time greats and three-time champions John Newcombe, John McEnroe and the Serb’s one-time coach Boris Becker.

Sunday’s victory also elevated the 31-year-old above Australian Roy Emerson into fourth place on men’s tennis’s all-time grand slam title leaderboard behind only Roger Federer (20), Rafal Nadal (17) and Pete Sampras (14).

The big three of Federer, Nadal and Djokovic have now amassed a staggering 50 slams between them to cement themselves as arguably the most dominant triumvirate in sports history.

Novak Djokovic Wimbledon

Novak Djokovic celebrates his match-winning point against Kevin Anderson. Photo: AAP

Only Federer (8), Sampras (7), William Renshaw (7), Bjorn Borg (5) and Laurie Doherty (5) have won the sport’s greatest prize more times than Djokovic.

Djokovic’s victory also completes in the ultimate fashion his stirring comeback after a spectacular fall from grace last year.

The former world No.1 had been the first man since Laver in almost 50 years to hold all four majors at once after he swept to the non-calender-year grand slam with a career-defining French Open triumph in 2016.

But a chronic elbow injury and self-confessed troubles in his “private life” curtailed the Serb’s seemingly relentless charge towards tennis immortality as he relinquished all four trophies to lose his air of grand slam invincibility.

Now Djokovic has returned to his rightful place in the world’s top 10 after arriving in London two weeks ago ranked 21st, his lowest standing in the game in more than a decade.

“There is no better place to make a comeback this is a sacred place of tennis. This is really special,” Djokovic said after dedicating his victory to wife Jelena and their three-year-old son Stefan.

“I had to really trust the process, and trust in myself. I owe a great thanks to my team, everyone who has supported me when things weren’t so good.

“I had a surgery and was absent for the tour for six months and faced for the first time a serious injury.

“I had many moment of doubt and didn’t know if I could come back and this is my first slam final for a couple of years.”

Anderson had required 10 hours and 50 minutes to see off Federer and John Isner in successive sapping five-setters to reach the final – and it showed with the South African slow out of the gates.

Wimbledon Novak Djokovic

Novak Djokovic and Kevin Anderson pose with the winners and runners up trophy. Photo: AAP

After pushing a backhand wide, then firing a forehand long, he double-faulted to drop serve in the opening game of the match.

The errors continue to flow as Djokovic broke twice more to nab the first set in less than half an hour.

The second set followed a similar pattern before Anderson roared to life to finally mount a challenge.

The eighth seed conjured two set points with Djokovic serving at 4-5, with tensions reaching boiling point after the Serb saved the first in one of the wildest rallies of the match.

Sensing a Djokovic forehand was going long to allow Anderson back into the contest, the excited crowd burst into cheers, only for the ball to catch the line and the South African to lose the point after slipping over.

Livid by the disturbance, Djokovic demanded chair umpire James Keothavong tell spectators to “shut the f*** up”. He retained his cool to fend off three more set points before taking victory in a tiebreaker.

Wimbledon

Prince William and Kate with Theresa May and Rod Laver at Wimbledon. Photo: Getty

William and Kate were seen talking animatedly to Australian tennis legend  Laver in the royal box during breaks as they watched the Wimbledon men’s singles final.

Also present were Philip May, actors Benedict Cumberbatch, Tom Hiddleston and Eddie Redmayne, and London Mayor Sadiq Khan, Lord and Lady Frederick Windsor.

Meanwhile, Meghan Markle attended The All England Club on Saturday to cheer on her good friend Serena Williams as she played Angelique Kerber.

-AAP

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