By Richard Pagliaro | Tuesday, January 3, 2023
Missing two of the 4 Grand Slams in 2022 infuses Novak Djokovic with a number of main ambition this season.
The 21-time Grand Slam champion is chasing historical past and aiming to reform the game.
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The top-seeded Serbian swept Frenchman Constant Lestienne 6-3, 6-2 in a pointy Adelaide International opener.
It got here after Djokovic and Vasek Pospisil dropped a three-set doubles match.
Off courtroom, Djokovic says their partnership is making progress. The pair based The Professional Tennis Players Association with the goal of giving professional gamers complete illustration.
Djokovic says regardless of the very fact the PTPA “were not accepted” by the ATP, WTA and Grand Slams, the group is gaining traction and monetary backing and “needs to live.”
“I think there’s a lot of legal challenges along the way,” Djokovic instructed the media in Adelaide. “We managed to overcome all those challenges, and we are gathering the right team of people with advisory board, people that are going to help with financing the association, of course people from the tennis world that will help us establish ourselves within the ecosystem, which I think is very important as we were not accepted and embraced by Grand Slams, ATP nor WTA, so it makes things difficult for us, but this association needs to live.”
The PTPA is significant as a result of it is solely dedicated to giving gamers a voice within the decision-making course of that impacts the game, Djokovic mentioned.
“It needs to be there because players don’t have 100 percent representation in the tennis world, unfortunately,” Djokovic mentioned. “With the association they have that. Hopefully more players will be showing the willingness to understand what PTPA can do for them.
“It’s a course of that can take an extended time simply because we aren’t getting credibility from different governing our bodies, so it is going to take longer, however we’ll keep there, and it is one thing that hopefully can keep for a lot of a long time to come back.”
While the PTPA does have the support of several star players it does not have a voice that’s recognized by the game’s governing bodies.
Last spring, Djokovic criticized the ATP for shutting the PTPA out of meetings about the ongoing imbroglio between the ATP and WTA Tours and Wimbledon over the grass-court Grand Slam’s decision to ban Russian and Belarusian players.
That ban was Wimbledon’s condemnation of Russia’s unprovoked invasion of neighboring Ukraine and prompted the ATP and WTA Tours to strip Wimbledon of ranking points—a decision opposed by Djokovic and the PTPA.
That disconnect compelled Djokovic, who is friendly with ATP President Andrea Gaudenzi, to brand the ATP broken and charge it “has failed gamers so many instances.”
In short, the PTPA wants a seat at the decision-making table and the ATP has shown the group the door. Djokovic charged the Tour continues to mute the voices of players and points to lack of wide-spread consultation with players before its Wimbledon decision as a prime example.
“It’s the council of ATP that’s throughout the construction, this representing physique of gamers, and that is the way it’s been for many years,” Djokovic said before Wimbledon. “I do not suppose that is the very best system that we’ve. I simply suppose the system has failed gamers so many instances, so many instances, and that is the explanation why PTPA must exist, as a result of when it comes right down to this type of large selections, you understand, loads of the gamers’ voices usually are not heard sufficient.
“Unfortunately, you know, within ATP you have 50/50 percent of representation between players and tournaments. So you are never going to have 100 percent players’ interest in place.”
Photo credit score: Sue McKay/Getty