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Novak Djokovic was booed by the Centre Court crowd once again at Wimbledon after his semi-final win over Lorenzo Musetti.

Novak Djokovic was once again booed on Centre Court at Wimbledon after booking his place in the final

The seven-time winner booked his place in his 10th SW19 final on Friday night as he blitzed past the Italian, storming to a three-set victory just over a month after having knee surgery.

He will now take on Carlos Alcaraz in a repeat of last year’s final, with the Serb looking for revenge after coming out on the wrong end of a five-set classic a year ago.

Upon winning the final point, Djokovic pulled out a celebration that he has performed before, which involves imitating playing a violin, to which the crowd took exception to and began to boo.

There was confusion upon the celebration, however, with those in attendance seemingly thinking it was aimed as a sarcastic celebration towards the fans, who have had an indifferent relationship with the finalist throughout the tournament.

 

After beating Holger Rune in the round of 16, Djokovic called out fans who he thought had been booing him throughout the game.

It had been suggested, meanwhile, that fans had actually been calling his opponent’s name, with Djokovic confusing the chants with jeers.

‘To all the fans that have had respect and stayed here tonight, I thank you from the bottom of my heart and I appreciate it,’ Djokovic said in his post-match interview. ‘And to all those people that have chosen to disrespect the player – in this case me – have a goooooooood night.’

She has often been sat in the players box in SW19 alongside her mother and Djokovic's wife, Jelena (left)
She has often been sat in the players box in SW19 alongside her mother and Djokovic’s wife, Jelena (left)

His rather non-plussed BBC interviewer Rishi Persad said: ‘I am hoping they were just commenting on Rune, and they were not disrespecting you.’

Djokovic – who has a track record of taking on crowds – was having none of that. ‘They were. They were [disrespecting me],’ he insisted. ‘I am not accepting it. No no no. I know they were cheering for Rune but that’s an excuse to also boo.

‘Listen, I have been on the tour for more than 20 years. I know all the tricks. I focus on the respectful people that pay for the ticket, and love tennis and appreciate the players. I played in much more hostile environments, trust me – you guys can’t touch me.’

Later, he said: ‘I didn’t know what they were chanting, honestly, I thought they were booing. OK, I don’t know.

‘It was not an ideal atmosphere for me to tell you that, but I have been in this particular atmospheres before, so I knew how to handle it.’

The 37-year-old has in fact been performing the celebration for a number of games now, with his daughter Tara, born in 2017, recently learning to play the violin.

He turned to his players box, also containing Djokovic’s wife, Jelena, after shaking hands with the umpire on Friday, and began mimicking playing the instrument as TV cameras cut to Tara cheering in the crowd.

He appeared to play up to the crowd, however, turning to all corners of the stands to pretend to play the instrument.

All was well later, though, with fans cheering him off the court after he conducted his latest interview ahead of the final.

Ben Shelton is set to become the highest-ranked American on the ATP tour next week. For someone who has only played full seasons of tennis for the last couple of years, Shelton’s ranking rise is extremely impressive. But he has earned his way to near the top with a massive serve, good athleticism, and a growing knowledge of how to play points better.

Until recently, though, Shelton, like almost all Americans, had not shown he could be a danger on clay. His game should not really translate nearly as well to that surface as it might to the grass of Wimbledon. Clay slows the pace of Shelton’s best shots and takes away his greatest power. To be successful on clay, Shelton will need to adapt.

For one tournament, at least. Shelton was able to do that. He won the clay-court Houston Open recently by defeating fellow American Frances Tiafoe. Before anyone gets too excited, though, the ATP 250 event did not exactly draw the biggest and best of clay-court specialists. Most of the better European players were preparing for the Monte-Carlo Masters which Shelton did not participate in.

Ben Shelton: "Roger Federer congratulated me on my victories"

Ben Shelton could succeed where other Americans do not and Carlos Alcaraz needs to be more like Roger Federer
But gaining the confidence from winning in Houston is only going to help Shelton in the future. For the American (or any American, really, because the group has not been at all successful in high-level clay-court tournaments in nearly two decades), it simply comes down to the belief he can win on clay. According to former Wimbledon doubles champion Frederik Løchte Nielsen, Shelton should begin thinking he can improve further on his career 6-7 record on clay. He was 2-7 entering the Houston Open.

Nielsen told the Vegas Insider, “…Ben Shelton seems much more capable of it, and he delivers a full effort in every match…I absolutely believe he can make a really good run in many tournaments – including Roland Garros. I also feel that he has to work hard for it because he still needs to get used to traveling a lot. He won the tournament in Houston, where it’s still American conditions with American balls, which are much faster.”

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One player already capable of winning on clay and reaching No. 1 on the ATP tour is Carlos Alcaraz. But the Spaniard could get even better if he improves certain parts of his game. Possibly becoming slightly less aggressive would help, but making his serve more of a weapon would also make him a better player. According to top tennis commentator Rennae Stubbs, Alcaraz needs to be a bit more like Roger Federer in that regard.

Speaking on her excellent program, Racquet’s Rennae Stubbs Tennis Podcast, Stubbs comapred the size and ability of Alcaraz and Federer and pointed out that neither are extremely tall and that both could have the same leverage and ability to place their serve. Alcaraz simply has not developed that part of his game to come close to the Swiss great yet.

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Stubbs said, “Carlos is not tall, neither was Roger Federer. Roger’s what, 6’1? He’s slightly taller than Carlos Alcaraz but very similar in height. But Roger was an amazing spot server…So when you’re talking about two guys of the same height, Roger and Carlos, Carlos’ spots are nowhere near as good…That is one area he can improve on and that’s how he’ll win more on a fast court.”

Tennis could have a new Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal-style rivalry

Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz will fight for future Grand Slams in a new rivalry like Federer against Nadal, a former Wimbledon champion has claimed. The Italian claimed his first Major title at the Australian Open at the age of 22. And the world No.4 was immediately congratulated on social media by his friend and double Grand Slam winner Alcaraz – the only other man under 25 to have won a Major.

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A new rivalry like Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal could be breaking through

Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal enjoyed a decade-long battle at the top of the rankings until Novak Djokovic overtook them both. And the Serb, who turns 37 in May, insisted he still has the drive to add to his male record haul of 24 Grand Slam singles titles.

But the future is the next generation with Alcaraz only 20. And Aussie legend Lleyton Hewitt, who won Wimbledon in 2002, said: “I think this is going to be one of the great rivalries moving forward, the Sinner-Alcaraz rivalry. Potentially like the Roger-Rafa one we saw for so many years as well. And it’s intriguing. Both game styles are slightly different, their upbringings are different as well, so I’m really excited. I think tennis needs these new guys coming through.”

The two-time Major champion added: “There’s been plenty of talk about Sinner for three or four years, that he’s a possible Grand Slam champion and world No.1 but Alcaraz came out of nowhere and really took that from him. I think that really spurred Jannik on to try and find a way to be able to win these titles.”

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Jannik Sinner won the Australian Open title

Asked if Sinner had been spurred on by Alcaraz, the Italian’s coach Darren Cahill said: “Hell, yeah! Absolutely. There’s no question seeing the young players come through and having success drives each and every one of them. Carlos has trail blazed for a lot of young players. We’re thankful for that.”

“I do think Jannik can become a superstar. I think this sport at the moment has a few superstars. I think Carlos is very similar to Jannik in both the way they play with the excitement level they bring to the game, and their personalities and their likability. Both guys are incredibly alike off the court. They both like each other. They both have a friendly rivalry.”

Sinner, who has strong family support like the Spaniard, said: “Obviously I’m really happy about what Carlos has done and what he is doing. When we play, it’s always a good matchup, but at the moment we also have to say that he is further than I am.”

The Italian leads their head-to-head encounters 4-3 and his performances Down Under showed he has made big progress in his game since losing the Wimbledon semi-final.

Adriano Panatta, the last Italian male Grand Slam winner at the 1976 French Open, told Gazzetta dello Sport: “Sinner has done crazy things in Melbourne. What will happen now? He will now win a lot more Slams. I am sure that he is now the best player in the world. Forget the rankings. In the last three months, he has made a great leap forward and he seems like a different player. He has become a man.”

Serena Williams cracks joke at Wimbledon hero Chris Eubanks’ expense after modelling shot

Serena Williams cracked a joke about Chris Eubanks after the 27-year-old landed a partnership deal with Swedish fashion brand J.Lindeberg. Eubanks, who reached the Wimbledon quarter-finals last year, has become the first male tennis player to link up with the company

After Eubanks took to Instagram to announce his partnership with J.Lindeberg, Williams replied by posting: “I knew your legs would land you a modelling gig one day.”

Eubanks clearly saw the funny side of the comment as he shared it to his story and added the caption: “I’m glad people are starting to see your vision @serenawilliams.”

Eubanks will be draped in J.Lindeberg tennis attire during his appearance at the Australian Open after previously working with Japanese sportswear company ASICS. And commenting about his new deal, the tennis ace explained: “It is extremely enticing to be one of the only faces of a particular brand.

“It allows for you to really see the growth of that brand and feel a sense of pride when you’re watching it grow, which is quite a unique opportunity. Not many players get the chance to be the face of a brand in the beginning and I am really excited about that opportunity.”

Eubanks overcame the likes of British ace Cam Norrie and Australian Open finalist Stefanos Tsitsipas to reach the last eight at Wimbledon last summer. But the American was finally dumped out of the tournament by Daniil Medvedev following a five-set thriller.

Chris Eubanks
Chris Eubanks reached the quarter-finals of Wimbledon last year

And after his exit, Eubanks told the Today Show: “I think in the past 24 hours, or maybe 12 hours since I lost, it’s starting to settle in that I’m actually a Wimbledon quarter-finalist. It’s a dream come true. I showed up here playing really well in the tournament prior to Wimbledon and taking my first title, but still a bit uncertain on how I would fare here.

“The second round comes, I’m playing the number one Brit. I get past that and then things just kind of started to fall into place. It’s indescribable. I think enjoying it was the biggest thing. There’s times throughout the match where I’m smiling – I’m pretty expressive with my emotions – but at the end of the day it’s still just a tennis match.

“The court is the same size, the net is still the same height and it’s still the sport I’ve been playing since I was two years old. I’m at a stage now where I can enjoy those situations, even when my back’s against the wall, even when things aren’t going well, to just say, ‘hey, just stick with it. Things are going to work out.’”