By Richard Pagliaro | @Tennis_Now | Tuesday, June 27, 2023
Centre Court Wimbledon was famously referred to as “a tennis cathedral” by seven-time Wimbledon winner Pete Sampras.
Lately, Novak Djokovic has managed essentially the most prestigious patch of grass within the sport with the consolation of a person patrolling his yard.
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Four-time defending Wimbledon winner Djokovic has gained 38 straight Centre Court matches and can arrive at SW19 as a powerful favourite to seize his eighth Wimbledon crown.
World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz goals to snap Djokovic’s streak armed with vocal allies—Centre Court followers.
“I felt the love from the people since day one, and for me it’s really, really important I hope in Wimbledon to feel the same energy, the same love that I felt during this week,” Alcaraz mentioned after capturing his maiden grass-court championship at Queen’s Club on Sunday. “You know, I hope it will help me, you know, to get through the rounds in Wimbledon.
“But I noticed as nicely that Djokovic has by no means misplaced a match within the Centre Court since 2013 when he misplaced in opposition to Andy.”
The US Open champion aims to snap Djokovic’s dominance on Centre Court with a little help from his friends in the stands.
“It’s 10 years [for Novak] with out dropping a match within the Centre Court of Wimbledon,” Alcaraz said. “So it has been loopy, however I hope to have the group behind me to have possibilities to vary that statistics.”
Of course, Djokovic, riding a 28-match Wimbledon winning streak into his title defense, will have his share of supporters too.
“I lost words for what this tournament and trophy means to me—it always has been and will be the most special tournament in my heart the one that motivated men and inspired me to play tennis,” Djokovic told Centre Court fans after his 38th straight Centre Court victory over Nick Kyrgios last July. “In a small little mountain resort in Serbia where my parents used to run the restaur—after ant I was 4-and-a-half, 5-years-old I saw Pete Sampras win his first Wimbledon in ‘92 and I asked my dad and mom to buy me a racquet.
“My first image of tennis was grass and Wimbledon. I always dreamed of coming here and just playing on this court. Just realizing a childhood dream of winning this trophy every time it gets more and more meaningful and special and so I’m very blessed and thankful to be standing here with the trophy.”
Undefeated on Centre Court since 2013, the 35-year-old Djokovic became the second-oldest man in the Open Era to win the Wimbledon singles title—after Big 3 rival Roger Federer, who won The Championships in 2017 aged 35 years 342 days.
Djokovic can break that record—and move closer to the calendar Grand Slam—by defending his Wimbledon championship next month.
Photo credit score: Rob Newell/CameraSport
Source: www.tennisnow.com