Novak Djokovic says he is treating every Grand Slam tournament like it’s his last as he prepares to make a long-awaited return to the US Open next week.
The Serbian star, winner of a record 23 Grand Slam singles titles, is bidding to add a 24th to his collection in New York over the next fortnight, which would put him two clear of Rafael Nadal’s 22 Slam titles.
At 36, Djokovic said Friday he is increasingly aware that opportunities to improve his record may become harder to come by even if he is not contemplating retirement.
“I don’t know how many more slams I’ll have,” Djokovic told a press conference. I’ll still keep going. I don’t have an end in my mind at the moment. “I also understand that things are different when you’re 36, so I have to be more appreciative, a bit more, I guess, present, treating every Grand Slam as maybe your last one in terms of commitment and performance.
“I see this every Grand Slam that I play right now as really a golden opportunity to make more history.”
Djokovic has not played at the US Open since 2021, when his bid to complete a rare calendar year Grand Slam of all four tennis majors was foiled by Daniil Medvedev in an agonizing defeat in the final.
Djokovic was subsequently barred from entry to the United States over his refusal to get vaccinated – putting him at odds with US government Covid-19 travel rules – meaning he missed last year’s US Open.
Djokovic, who opens his campaign on the Ar-thur Ashe main arena against France’s Alexandre Muller on Monday, says he is relishing his return to what he described as the most “electric” atmosphere in tennis.
“The first feeling that I have is excitement to come back because it is the biggest arena we have in our sport, the biggest stadium, and definitely the most fun, electric, exciting atmosphere out there in tennis, playing night session in Arthur Ashe, no doubt,” Djokovic said.
“Come back in front of probably the loudest fans in sport, tennis fans in sport.” With Djokovic absent in 2022, Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz emerged to claim the US Open crown.
Since then, Djokovic and Alcaraz have devel-oped a fierce rivalry, with the Spaniard winning a five-set classic in the Wimbledon final last month, before Djokovic bounced back with a pulsating win in the Cincinnati Open final last weekend.—AFP