Stan
Wawrinka beat Novak Djokovic in the final of the 2015 French Open at Roland
Garros on Sunday
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Novak Djokovic’s dreams of authenticating his
greatness were brutally thrown back in his face on Sunday as Stan Wawrinka
shocked him to win the French Open.
Like his
coach Boris Becker and many other outstanding players, the world number one is
still without the clay court Grand Slam to his name as he was beaten 4-6 6-4
6-3 6-4 by the hulking Swiss in three hours and 12 minutes.
Djokovic
hoped to join Rod Laver, Andre Agassi, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer as the
only players in the modern era to win all four Majors, but must come back again
next year to give it another try.
Daily Mail UK report continues:
Wawrinka,
whose confidence was massively boosted by a first Grand Slam win over Federer
in the quarter finals, said “I am sure Novak will win it one year”.
He was a
popular enough winner although the crowd was surprisingly even handed
throughout, given that he is a Francophone and was clearly the underdog.
The result
also ends any hopes Djokovic has of doing the calendar year Grand Slam,
something his form suggested he was capable of. He now has to decide whether to
play a grass court warm up event ahead of Wimbledon, either at Queens or at
Halle in Germany.
Djokovic
had beaten nine-time champion Rafael Nadal and Britain's Andy Murray en route
to the final, but Wawrinka, who won the boys' singles title at Roland Garros in
2003, cemented his place among the elite with an outstanding performance.
Wawrinka
won the boys' singles title at Roland Garros in 2003, 11 years later his crowned French Open Champion
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The tone
was set in the opening game as Djokovic earned a break point but Wawrinka edged
an enthralling 39-shot rally, the longest of the tournament so far, to survive
and hold.
Wawrinka
was eager to dictate the points, stepping through the baseline and unleashing
his heavy groundstrokes but they resulted in errors as well as winners and
Djokovic's defence was often up to the task.
Another
break point came and went for the world number one in the fifth game but at
3-3, he finally made one count as a backhand wide from Wawrinka conceded 40-0,
before a double fault allowed Djokovic to convert.
Serving for
the set at 5-4, Djokovic was fortunate to hear Wawrinka's forehand winner
called out, particularly as hawk-eye would have judged it in, which opened up
two set points.
Wawrinka
saved both with two thundering passing shots before earning one chance to break,
but Djokovic held his nerve to serve out the first set.
The Swiss
was not deterred as his hitting became more persistent and more precise in the
second, but five break points came and went - the fifth prompting and angry
lashing on the net - before he finally took his chance.
It came at
the perfect time too as Djokovic, serving to stay in the set, hit an
uncharacteristic forehand long as Wawrinka deservedly drew level.
Djokovic
mangled his racket, which almost bounced into a ball-boy, and the Serb's troubles
were far from over as Wawrinka's dominance continued with two stupendous
winners in the sixth game to break and lead 4-2.
Djokovic
was rattled and Wawrinka compounded his opponent's misery with another
thundering backhand before serving out to put his opponent behind in sets for
the first time in the tournament.
The
momentum seemed firmly with the Swiss and while a sloppy service game handed
Djokovic a lifeline at the start of the fourth, he broke back to level at 3-3.
Djokovic
came under pressure again on his serve as Wawrinka opened up two break points
but the world number one found a new level to save both, the second with a
diving volley to survive and lead 4-3.
It felt
like a turning point but Wawrinka refused to lie down and he came back from
40-0 in the next game to pass the pressure back on to Djokovic before
unleashing another stunning backhand pass to break and serve for the championship.
Djokovic
is renowned for his resilience and he saved one match point with a composed
volley but there was no fairy-tale fightback as a Wawrinka backhand sailed past
and confirmed a stunning victory in three hours and 12 minutes.
The Swiss,
at 30, becomes an unlikely twice Grand Slam winner late in his career after his
superb heavy groundstroking overwhelmed Djokovic, who was a little ragged by
his own stratospheric standards.
Wawrinka
managed to carve out only a second win in his last eighteen meetings with the
Serb, recapturing the form that brought him the Australian Open title eighteen
months ago, where he beat Djokovic in the quarter final.
He might
acknowledge the role Andy Murray played in taking the Serb to five sets and a
second day yesterday in a match that spanned four hours and nine minutes.
As luck
had it, he had also needed to contend with a massive quarter final over Rafael
Nadal, and it all must surely have taken its toll.
The Swiss
is well equipped to disrupt Djokovic just by the sheer force of his
groundstrokes, which even the greatest mover in the game struggles to
reach.
He has
seriously improved his forehand in the last two years, to go with that
beautifully elegant and powerful backhand.
Wawrinka
described it as the match of his life afterwards, having come back from 0-3 in
the fourth set and then got his nose ahead when he broke for 5-4.
He had
good reason to thank his remarkable down the line backhand, which did enormous
damage, especially with the World No 1 keen to attack the net to shorten the
points.
Appropriately
it was that shot that won him the title on his second match point, and Djokovic
responded sportingly in his moment of disappointment.
Winning
the French Open is not easy. Only Federer and Nadal have done it in the last
ten years.
Many have
failed like John McEnroe, Pete Sampras, Jimmy Connors and Stefan Edberg in
recent times.
Djokovic is the world’s
best player, clearly, but finds himself stuck with the Parisian bridesmaids
rather than joining even more elevated company, and he will be 29 when he
attempts it next time after suffering what is just his third defeat of the
year.
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