Olympics Men's Tennis Single Final

At age of 37, coming from a miniscus surgery and worst season of his life, produces one of the finest performances, beats Carlos Alcaraz, who won the last two majors, 7-6(3), 7-6(2) to deliver an Olympics gold on fifth attempt. The highlight reel is going to be 30 mins. Djokovic added the one and only trophy missing from his cabinet and he has completed tennis and simply the greatest of all time.

When I started playing tennis at age of 6, and now over 15 years of playing, I was always a Roger Federer fan because of the Wilson racket and his flashy style of play. To the untrained eyes, it’s not easy to see why Djokovic is such an unbelievable player. His groundstrokes are extremely deep and consistent, from both sides; he doesn’t go for flashy winners but he rarely misses and place the shots precise enough to force errors. His serve spotting is also extremely accurate, albeit not very fast. He doesn’t have the fastest movement but his flexibility is that of gymnastic. And after losing two potential grand slams title for sticking to his principles and still coming from behind to collect 24 titles, his clutchness at tense situations and mentality simply can’t be matched. Djokovic is the definition of a cyborg, and for a single sport when your teammates can’t bail you out, he might just be the greatest athletes of all time.




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