Friday, January 17, 2020

Roger Federer & Novak Djokovic in the same half of Australian Open draw again




Novak Djokovic, the seven-time Australian Open champion, has been drawn in the same half as six-time former titlist Roger Federer and Stefanos Tsitsipas. World No. 1 Rafael Nadal, who picked up the 2009 title at Melbourne Park, shares the top half of the draw with Daniil Medvedev and Dominic Thiem.

Djokovic, who took part in the draw ceremony on Thursday night, reflected on his 2019 final performance against Nadal, admitting, “It was probably the best performance I’ve had in a Grand Slam final in my career. I’ve had some great matches, including the 2012 final that almost went for six hours and last year at Wimbledon, another five-set thriller, but last year’s final against Rafa was probably my most complete performance. He was in great form and hadn’t dropped a set all tournament. It was one of those days where everything worked perfectly. I could feel a lot of confidence, after beating Lucas Pouille in the semi-finals.”

Djokovic, with a 68-8 record at Melbourne Park, has a tricky opener against Jan-Lennard Struff, with a potential quarter-final against sixth seed Tsitsipas or ninth seed Roberto Bautista Agut. Tsitsipas, who beat Federer in the 2019 fourth round, starts his campaign against Salvatore Caruso, while Bautista Agut faces his ATP Cup team mate Feliciano Lopez. Djokovic has a 2-2 record against Tsitsipas, with victory in their last meeting at the Rolex Shanghai Masters, while the World No. 2 is 8-3 against Bautista Agut.

Outside of his main rivals, Djokovic sees a small group of players as potential contenders for the first major of 2020. “Daniil is playing great tennis, he had a close five-set match against Nadal in the US Open final," said the Serbian. "He was two sets down, so it was impressive to look strong over five hours. He is in a small group of players that are getting close, in addition to Dominic Thiem, who has reached a couple of Roland Garros finals; Tstisipas won the [Nitto] ATP Finals a couple of months ago and [Alexander] Zverev. We [the Big Three] hope this isn’t going to be the year that they win, but there is a good group of players coming up.”

World No. 1 Nadal, the 2009 champion, opens his quest for a record-equalling 20th Grand Slam championship crown against Hugo Dellien. The Spanish superstar has a 61-13 record at the Melbourne major, including four runner-up finishes in 2012 (l. to Djokovic), 2014 (l. to Wawrinka), 2017 (l. to Federer) and 2019 (l. to Djokovic). Nadal may face No. 16 seed Karen Khachanov or No. 23 seed Nick Kyrgios in the third round, with a potential quarter-final against fifth seed Thiem, who begins against Adrian Mannarino. Nadal has a 4-3 record against Kyrgios, splitting two meetings last year in Acapulco and Wimbledon, 7-0 against Khachanov and 9-4 versus Thiem.

Third seed Roger Federer, who has recorded 97 match wins at the Australian Open (97-14), could play No. 13 seed Denis Shapovalov or No. 18 seed Grigor Dimitrov, who beat the Swiss at the 2019 US Open, in the third round. Federer, who starts against Steve Johnson, is projected to meet eighth seed Matteo Berrettini in the quarter-finals, and then Djokovic.

Fourth seed Daniil Medvedev, who compiled a 59-21 match record in 2019, including a runner-up finish at the US Open in September, faces Frances Tiafoe in the first round. If he is to better his 2019 fourth-round run, he may need to beat No. 15 seed and 2014 champion Stan Wawrinka in the fourth round. Wawrinka, who plays Damir Dzumhur in the first round, is 0-2 against Medvedev.

In other first-round match ups, seventh seed Alexander Zverev plays Marco Cecchinato and could face No. 11 seed David Goffin or last week’s Qatar ExxonMobil Open champion Andrey Rublev, the No. 17 seed, in the third round. Former World No. 4 Kevin Anderson, who is on the comeback trail from injury, could face No. 29 seed Taylor Fritz in the second round, should both beat qualifiers.

In 2019, the Australian Open began to feature deciding set tie-breaks at 6-6, with the first player to scores 10 points – and leading by two points – winning the match. The men's draw will also continue to implement its heat policy, with the potential for a 10-minute break for the heat after the third set. Main draw play will get underway on 20 January.

atptour.com

Not the worst draw he's had at Aussie Open (he's had worse ones at U.S. Open) but still a tough one. 

It'll all depend on his form and how well he can navigate the early rounds.  

Hopefully he can play his way into the tournament, having not played any warm up events. 

First obstacle could be Hurkacz he serves great, and is a decent returner, so if Roger has an off day serve-wise it could get tricky.

Don't even get me started on Dimitrov, I still haven't forgiven him for last year's U.S. Open. Here's hoping he faces Shapo instead. 

Barretini hasn't played much due to injury so I expect Roger to possibly have to face Fognini who's always unpredictable. 

Hoping Tsitsipas will do to Djokovic what he did to Federer last year at AO. I would rather he face Tsitsipas again than Djoker in the semis. 

Not too worried about Nadal, he's got Thiem and Medvedev so not gonna be easy for him to reach the final. 

If Roger doesn't reach week 2, all I want for this tournament is to have someone other than Djokovic/Nadal in the final. 

Because 1. We already had that last year & 2. We literally saw them face off a week ago at ATP Cup and it was the same boring one sided affair. 

So here's hoping we see some upsets in that regard. Bring it on Aussie Open, I'm so ready!. 

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