2017: The year of the Djoker

By SillyPoint / Roar Rookie

And so the Earth begins its tedious journey around the Sun again. Time for us to either stick to the resolutions we made or be proud we didn’t make one in the first place. Either way, it is time to get rid of the old calendar and to usher in a new year for the game of tennis.

If you are a Novak Djokovic fan and went into a coma for 6 months post-Roland Garros 2016 – All is lost. Andy Murray is world number one. No, that was not a typo, and ask my friends, I don’t like to joke around.

For almost two years, Djokovic was seeded first in whichever and whatever tournament he decided to bring his lethal alchemy of grit and determination to.

I was looking at the draw for the Qatar Open. It was an odd feeling. For someone who is so used to seeing the Djokovic name right at the top on any draw, having to scroll down all the way to the bottom of the page to see what his quarter of the draw looked like.

But this is what Djokovic’s fans must live with. For the time being anyway.

They must also resign to the fact that he has a lot of ranking points in the first few months of the calendar year that would need defending if he has any chance of overthrowing Murray from his perch.

Two thousand points at Melbourne and then a thousand each at Indian Wells, Miami and Madrid, with another two thousand at Roland Garros is going to take some defending.

Early exits in Indian Wells and Miami for Murray last year means it is advantage for the Brit in those two tournaments. He must also ensure he gets deep runs at Melbourne, Madrid, Rome and Paris to ensure he doesn’t lose too many points on the way.

You might call the style of Djokovic boring attritional play, I call it hours and hours of sweating on a practice court to master defensive skills.

You might call him robotically predictable, I call him a highly efficient well-oiled machine. And if you call this a weak era, I am calling my lawyer to get me out on charges of murder of the first degree.

Last year at the French Open, the Serb who had stood at the cusp of greatness with a commendable quantum of patience, finally was given admission into the pantheon of the elite. This career slam coincided with him holding all four slams at one time, a territory even the mighty Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal could never conquer.

With a positive head to head versus Federer, Nadal and Murray, he looks all set to strike 2017 with remarkable force.

Having graduated magna cum laude from Magic 8 ball school, I predict another outstanding year for the Serb, a time when he pulls away from the competition just when the competition was thinking it was getting close.

The second half of the year is when he regains the top ranking. You can bring all the young turks. You can summon all the seasoned veterans. Hell, you can bring the might of any player that might have recently knelt before a Queen, you just cannot stop the brutal assault of Novak Djokovic in 2017.

The Crowd Says:

2017-01-08T20:30:26+00:00

Bandy

Roar Guru


I think he will rebound at the start of this year. I think Zverev will rise rapidly and be the next consistent force to challenge because Kyrgios is balling on the NBA court. Rafa..hmm, just looks a touch slow and hasnt regained that energy or explosiveness that made him lethal, the forehand is just...there, it's not bullying guys as much. Dimitrov, well, we know he has the talent but he finally looks like he is committing to an aggressive game plan - taking returns earlier and looking to impose his forehand. Stan is always dangerous. Murray will be tough to beat over 5. Federer maybe still too early for him to go deep in melbourne without a kind draw. It's looking like a Murray Djok final with other main contenders - Wawrinka, Raonic, Dimitrov, Nishikori, could Kyrgios go deep? perhaps.

2017-01-07T03:58:21+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


I would be happy to see him win the AO. I think the rest of the year will actually be more difficult for him. In addition to Murray I think he will be hemmed in by Rafa and Roger on two sides this year. Overall you will see better quality tennis this year than 2016 which I thought was the most disappointing in many years at the top.

AUTHOR

2017-01-05T22:35:02+00:00

SillyPoint

Roar Rookie


Glad that you agree. Djokovic is still odds on favorite to win the Australian Open. And I think he might do well at Wimbledon this time around provided he doesn't get drawn in Querrey's quarter again :)

2017-01-05T20:43:30+00:00

Rugby Realist

Guest


I tend to agree. I see another 2-3 slams for the Joker this year.

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