Novak Djokovic stated on Saturday that Australian Open organisers ought to take participant enter under consideration when scheduling matches, including that late evening clashes are “gruelling” for gamers.
Andy Murray slammed officers as his epic five-set win over Thanasi Kokkinakis completed after 4 a.m. on Friday (1700 GMT on Thursday), effectively past the standard Grand Slam midnight insanity.
Following his elimination from the event by the hands of Roberto Bautista Agut within the third spherical on Saturday, the Scot once more criticised the scheduling, saying, “finishing matches at 4 in the morning isn’t good for the players.”
When requested for his opinion on Murray’s feedback, nine-times champion Djokovic advised reporters: “I think that players’ input is always important for tournament organisation.
“We know that it’s not (decisive) because it comes down to what the TV broadcasters want to have. That’s the ultimate decision maker,” added the Serbian after his 7-6(7) 6-3 6-4 victory over Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov on Saturday.
“I would agree with his (Murray’s) points… For the crowd, it’s entertaining, it’s exciting, to have matches (end at) midnight, 1, 2, 3 am. For us, it’s really gruelling.
“Even if you go through and win, prevail in these kind of matches, you still have to come back.
“You have your sleeping cycle, rhythm disrupted completely, not enough time really to recover for another five-setter. Yeah, something needs to be addressed I guess in terms of the schedule after what we’ve seen this year.”
Djokovic subsequent faces Australian Alex de Minaur within the fourth spherical on Monday.