Novak Djokovic was forced to retire from his Australian Open semifinal match against Alexander Zverev due to a left leg injury. Despite the setback, Zverev reached his first Grand Slam final, where he will face either Jannik Sinner or Ben Shelton.
Spectators booed an injured Novak Djokovic as he left the court at Rod Laver Arena after quitting one set into his Australian Open semifinal against Alexander Zverev . Dealing with what he said was a torn muscle, Djokovic lost the opener 7-6 (5) when he put a forehand volley into the net, then began shaking his head and immediately walked over to shake Zverev's hand.
The 37-year-old Djokovic packed up his equipment and walked off toward the locker room, pausing to respond to the jeers by giving two thumbs-up. At his news conference, Djokovic said the pain in his taped left leg was “getting worse and worse.” He hurt it during his previous match against Carlos Alcaraz. “I knew,” Djokovic said, “even if I won the first set, it was going to be a huge uphill battle for me.” This is the second time in the past four major tournaments he was unable to finish because of an injury; he withdrew from last year’s French Open. Novak Djokovic and new coach Andy Murray started the Australian Open off with a first-round win, but this match was a stark reminder of Djokovic’s recent injury struggles. The No. 2-seeded Zverev reached his first title match at Melbourne Park and on Sunday will face the winner of Friday’s second semifinal between No. 1 Jannik Sinner of Italy, the defending champion, and No. 21 Ben Shelton of the United States. Zverev, a 27-year-old German, is a two-time runner-up at other major tournaments, losing finals in five sets at the 2020 U.S. Open and 2024 French Open. “My goal is still to compete with the big guys and to compete for these kind of tournaments and try to win them,” Zverev said. “For that, I need to get better. I need to improve on the court. I need to improve physically.” “I know that everybody paid for tickets and everybody wants to see hopefully a great five-set match,” he said. “But you’ve got to understand — Novak Djokovic is somebody that has given this sport, for the past 20 years, absolutely everything of his life.” The only set of Djokovic vs. Zverev lasted 1 hour, 21 minutes and included 19 points that lasted nine strokes or more apiece. The first four games alone lasted 31 minutes, slowed both by the lengthy baseline exchanges and Djokovic's deliberate pacing between points, taking the 25-second serve clock down to — and occasionally slightly beyond — the full allotment. The match was grueling — and would have been even without dealing with a leg problem that initially became an issue late in the first set against Alcaraz. “I didn't hit the ball (from after the) Alcaraz match until like an hour before today’s match,” Djokovic said. “I did everything I possibly can to basically manage the muscle tear that I had. Medications and, I guess, the (tape) and the physio work helped to some extent today,” he added. “But towards the end of that first set, I just started feeling more and more pain and it was too much for me to handle. Unfortunate ending, but I tried.” Zverev said he could sense “some dents” on the other side of the net in the tiebreaker and noticed that Djokovic was struggling “maybe a bit more.” Two years ago at Melbourne Park, Djokovic hurt his left hamstring but still managed to depart with the trophy. Against Alcaraz, he was down a set against someone who is 16 years his junior but won. And afterward, there was a lot Djokovic was unsure about. “There is a chance. Who knows?” Djokovic replied. “I’ll just have to see how the season goes. I want to keep going.” He said he isn't sure yet what will happen to his coaching arrangement with former on-court rival Andy Murray. “It’s not like I’m worrying approaching every Grand Slam now whether I’m going to get injured or not, but statistics are against me in a way in the last couple of years,” he said. “But I’ll keep going. I’ll keep striving to win more Slams. And as long as I feel that I want to put up with all of this, I’ll be around.
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