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Novak Djokovic gives away first set but then takes it all back in stunning quarter-final win

Novak Djokovic gives away first set but then takes it all back in stunning quarter-final win

Irish Times5 days ago
Novak Djokovic won his 101st match at Wimbledon and advanced to his eighth consecutive quarter-final at SW19. Not that this was enough for the Serbian all-timer. In an act of grand generosity, he threw away the first set to his challenger Alex de Minaur, granting a rapt Centre Court crowd a rare moment of jeopardy at one of his matches.
The seven-time Wimbledon singles champion was broken three times in the first set by the Australian 12 years his junior. His game was all over the place. In that short window it was possible to imagine a world in which decent, well-rounded challengers such as De Minaur might come into these matches with hope of something other than chastening defeat. It was a nice thought while it lasted.
Everyone at this tennis sanctum knows better than to discount Djokovic, of course, at any point in a match. Even after such a disembodied display in the opening half-hour, the projected outcome was still success for the 38-year-old, and so it duly proved. The errors sharply declined, as if he had had a strong word with himself internally. The quality of his serve rose with each game to the point that it was the decisive weapon in the third set. The fourth was a dogfight after going 3-0 down but Djokovic got his teeth in to the contest and held on until De Minaur submitted. Next up is the Italian number 22 seed Flavio Cobolli.
Roger Federer looks on as Novak Djokovic and Alex de Minaur battle it out in Centre Court. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images
With Roger Federer watching on and the crowd largely sitting on their hands waiting for a reason to get behind Djokovic, there was an air of expectancy as the players emerged. Djokovic, however, then set about instantly letting the air out of the balloon, managing 16 unforced errors in the first set, nearly as many as in his entire third-round match against Miomir Kecmanovic. He kept missing his marks, dropping shots into the net and looked slow on the turn. His serve was stinking too, with two double faults in the opening game alone.
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For De Minaur, meanwhile, the world looked very much like his oyster. The 11th seed was dynamic, agile and smart. He could keep up with Djokovic's power easily enough but could also read his range, responding to the lobs, drop shots and switches of side sharply. He bossed the longer rallies. His own error count was low and he bounced his way into the second set. The question was whether he could keep it up.
The crowd, to this point, had been most vocal when mocking the errant line calls from the AI system (shots in reply to faulty serves were still being called 'out'). But now there were some stilted attempts to make 'let's go Novak, let's go' a thing. Maybe Djokovic responded to this or maybe he just pulled out the script from his mind palace that reminded him of what he has always done in moments of adversity. He doubled down and turned the screw; the very first point of the second set was a blitz of furious stroke-making and Djokovic earned a break of serve at the first time of asking.
Novak Djokovic returns the ball to Australia's Alex de Minaur at Wimbledon. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images
To De Minaur's credit he broke back straight away, but this was an arduous affair of seven deuces. Djokovic then stepped up and broke again. A second huge effort brought De Minaur level again but at 3-3 Djokovic broke him once more, this time to love and with the winning shot a delightful backhand slice across court that left the younger man frozen on his feet.
As Djokovic closed out the second set to level things up the familiar sense of inevitability began to rise. The third set went with serve for 10 games, but the sense of De Minaur having to scramble just to keep up was growing. This was in no small part due to the increasing relentlessness of the Djokovic serve; from a first-serve accuracy of 48 per cent in the first set he was now hitting 80 per cent in the third.
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Novak Djokovic defies injury to stun Carlos Alcaraz at Australian Open
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At the crucial juncture of four-all and with ever-decreasing room for error, the pressure finally told on De Minaur. Djokovic won a scintillating rally at 15-30 with a jaw-dropping volley on the slide back across himself, and then De Minaur delivered a gift of a loose forehand to seal the break. A couple more errors from De Minaur and the third set was gone.
Djokovic took his foot off the pedal for a moment and De Minaur stole a break of serve. He held it too, for a service game at least. At 4-2 it was all on the line and De Minaur found his best level for a final time, holding Djokovic to account in the rallies. It wasn't enough, though.
By now Djokovic was hitting so well that he didn't need to find a winner – just gradually, incrementally turn up the pressure in his favour. And so 4-2 became 4-3 then 4-4. In the blink of an eye Djokovic broke again, served out the match, flattered Federer in the stands then was off back to the dressingroom. It was almost as if the drama of two hours earlier had never happened.
– Guardian
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Wimbledon star undergoes emergency surgery after ‘one of most painful moments of my career'
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The Irish Sun

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  • The Irish Sun

Wimbledon star undergoes emergency surgery after ‘one of most painful moments of my career'

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Golf stars return to Portrush for Open, but it's a different set-up to 1951's £300 prize and pick of parking spaces
Golf stars return to Portrush for Open, but it's a different set-up to 1951's £300 prize and pick of parking spaces

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Golf stars return to Portrush for Open, but it's a different set-up to 1951's £300 prize and pick of parking spaces

I would pay good money to see how my late granny, a former Portrush bed and breakfast landlady, would react to the idea of paying up to £50,000 (€58,000) to stay for a week in her beloved Co Antrim seaside town. When the Open first casually rolled into Portrush in 1951, many of the top players found lodgings in boarding houses around the town. More than seven decades later the difference in the price of accommodation, prize money, spectator numbers and media coverage is inconceivable. In 1951, the total purse amounted to £1,700 (€1,970) with the winner receiving £300 (€350). Royal Portrush Golf club proudly announced the installation of 16 new telephones for the use of the press covering the event and the post office installed a mobile facility so that, over the three days of the tournament, the 7,000 spectators could send postcards from the course. 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I suspect that he also thinks that, as one of the few people who will have been to all three Opens held in Portrush, he shouldn't really need a ticket at all. In his debut professional tournament that summer of 1951 in Portrush, the late, great Peter Alliss recalled dancing at Barry's ballroom and swaying, not only to the music, but to the gentle swells of the Atlantic Ocean, merely a hop, skip and a twirl away. In 1951, Portrush was a bustling, fashionable holiday destination, which could already boast a long and successful relationship with the game of golf. More than five decades earlier, on a summer's evening in 1899, unsuspecting visitors to the popular resort would have noticed the centre of the town was unusually busy. Hundreds of people had gathered around the railway station to give a rapturous welcome to a teenage golfing sensation. As 17-year-old May Hezlett and her mother made their way towards the jubilant crowds, the sky above the resort's West Strand beach dazzled in a blaze of colour and the air was filled with the loud, crackling sound of fireworks, a celebration befitting the champion golfer that young Hezlett had, unassailably, just become. In back-to-back triumphs, she won the British Ladies Open Championship just two weeks after winning the Irish Ladies Open Championship. Both prestigious tournaments were played at the links course at Royal County Down. 'Miss May', as she was known, was the most accomplished of the four talented golfing Hezlett sisters. She was introduced to the game at the age of nine by her mother, also a skilled exponent of the relatively new sport. At just 11 years of age, she won her first competition using only a cleek, mashie and putter. Hezlett became the inaugural president of Royal Portrush Ladies in 1922, having been lady captain in 1905. She remained president until the Open was held for the first time at Royal Portrush in 1951. A portrait of her by artist Harry Douglas, commissioned by the club to celebrate her success, still hangs in the Portrush Ladies clubhouse. Seventeen-year-old May Hezlett caused a sensation in Portrush in 1899 when she arrived just won the British Ladies Open Championship and the Irish Ladies Open Championship back to back She died in the winter of 1978 at the age of 95. Little could she have known when she arrived on the platform of Portrush train station eight decades earlier that she would go on to carve her name in the annals of golfing history. As the Open returns for the third time to Royal Portrush, it's entirely fitting that the club recently unveiled an Ulster History Circle Blue Plaque in her honour, cementing her illustrious place in the history of the women's game. And how she would have relished the oldest and most prestigious golf tournament in the world returning to the scene of so many of her victories. She watched the Open when it was first played in Royal Portrush 74 years ago and, no doubt, in 2025 as in 2019, her spirit will be felt keenly by Royal Portrush Ladies watching proudly as the world's best golfers try to tame this mighty links. More than a century ago, behind many great golfing men, there was at least one even greater golfing woman. And so, it will be with a great sense of pride that I, along with my father, the three-time Portrush Open champion spectator, will find a place near the first tee on the first day of the 153rd Open on Thursday to cheer on the finest 21st century exponents of the game. As in 2019, there will be a collective hope among locals that a home-grown hero might just do it again. That smiling Shane Lowry, who has his own mural in Portrush now, might regain the claret jug and thrill the crowds as he did so magnificently six years ago on that rain-sodden Sunday when nothing could dampen his sprits or conquer his sheer talent. Rory McIlroy at The Renaissance Club in North Berwick this week during a pro-am before the Scottish Open. Photograph: Christian Petersen/Getty Or could it be written in the stars that his great friend Rory McIlroy will see his name carved in silver for a second time and banish the ghosts of the missed cut in 2019 ? Darren Clarke is also sure of a euphoric reception as he strides down Hughie's 420-yard first fairway. Always popular with the crowd, he became the oldest Open champion since 1967 when he won by three shots at Royal St George's at the age of 42 in 2011. Darren Clarke, who is from Co Tyrone, won the Open in 2011. Photograph: Phil Inglis/Getty Absent from the field will be pride of the parish Graeme McDowell. With a total of 11 tournament victories on the European Tour, and four on the PGA Tour, including one Major championship, the 2010 US Open at Pebble Beach, the affection in which he is held in his hometown is undiminished . These days there's nothing casual about how the Open arrives at any venue. Preparations begin months in advance, the attendant infrastructure is vast and the impact on and off the course is felt long before and after the event. No matter the outcome, no matter the weather, for golfers and non-golfers, the fervent hope is that Open will once again triumph and for at least four days in July all amateurs will feel a bit triumphant as a result. Just don't take any chances on a car parking space. Anne Marie McAleese is a former BBC Radio Ulster presenter of Your Place And Mine and a keen golfer

Advice for massive GAA crowds heading for Croke Park in heat wave this weekend
Advice for massive GAA crowds heading for Croke Park in heat wave this weekend

Irish Daily Mirror

time5 hours ago

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Advice for massive GAA crowds heading for Croke Park in heat wave this weekend

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