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@Kamileki, @Nando, @Nando, @(Nie)znajomy, Novak spędził weekend z rodziną w górach.
Re: Novak Djoković
: 14 gru 2021, 23:23
autor: Kamileki
DUN I LOVE pisze: ↑14 gru 2021, 23:18
@Kamileki, @Nando, @Nando, @(Nie)znajomy, Novak spędził weekend z rodziną w górach.
Bezcenne relacje rodzinne, wzmocnienie spokoju ducha, regeneracja organizmu i ciśniemy leszczy w Melbourne. Idemoooooooo
Re: Novak Djoković
: 14 gru 2021, 23:23
autor: DUN I LOVE
Kolejny tweet.
Re: Novak Djoković
: 15 gru 2021, 0:34
autor: Nando
DUN I LOVE pisze: ↑14 gru 2021, 23:18
@Kamileki, @Nando, @Nando, @(Nie)znajomy, Novak spędził weekend z rodziną w górach.
Re: Novak Djoković
: 15 gru 2021, 20:25
autor: Art
Re: Novak Djoković
: 17 gru 2021, 16:43
autor: (Nie)znajomy
DUN I LOVE pisze: ↑14 gru 2021, 23:18
@Kamileki, @Nando, @Nando, @(Nie)znajomy, Novak spędził weekend z rodziną w górach.
Szczęście innych ludzi cieszy mnie bardziej niż moje własne.
Re: Novak Djoković
: 17 gru 2021, 16:45
autor: DUN I LOVE
Musisz być bardzo dobrym człowiekiem.
Re: Novak Djoković
: 18 gru 2021, 13:15
autor: juniorro
Re: Novak Djoković
: 19 gru 2021, 13:38
autor: Damian
Djokovic Honoured With Serbian Stamps
Spoiler:
Artwork reflects some of Djokovic's greatest accomplishments
Novak Djokovic can add another accomplishment to his long list of accolades. The World No. 1 was recognised this week with his own Serbian postage stamps — one each for mailing letters domestically and internationally. He is the first athlete from his country to be placed on a stamp with his name on it.
“[It is] an honour to receive my very own Serbian stamp. Thank you to my generous country for this rare gift! I’m humbled!!” Djokovic tweeted. “Excited to share we’ll partner with the Serbian National Postal Service on Novak Djokovic Foundation projects for every child to have the opportunity to attend preschool.
“Gratitude for everyone that brought this together. Now Jelena Djokovic and I will take some stamps home for the kids to write to Santa.”
The artwork was done by Boban Savic, with references to some of Djokovic’s greatest accomplishments, including his 37 ATP Masters 1000 titles and 20 major triumphs.
”Thank you to the Post of Serbia for this initiative, which I experienced as an effort to revive the tradition of writing letters and postcards, and I am glad to be able to contribute to that,” Djokovic said according to the Novak Djokovic Foundation’s website. “Our Foundation receives many letters every day from children and their teachers throughout Serbia, who need help and support in early development and education.
“We want, and we are committed to that every day, that in the next 10 years, every child in Serbia has access to kindergarten and the conditions to dream and realise their dreams. Together we will try to get the results as soon as possible, and we are glad that more and more partners are joining us, including the Post of Serbia.”
Zoran Djordjevic, the acting general manager of the Post of Serbia, said it is an honour to dedicate a stamp to Serbia’s “best athlete of all time”.
“The Post, as a national institution, in this way made an appropriate homage and a sign of gratitude from the people of Serbia to Novak Djokovic, for his sport achievements, and everything he is doing for the well-being of the citizens of our country and its reputation in the world with his public and humanitarian work,” Djordjevic said. “We believe that this unique postage stamp will not only record and preserve his successes for future generations but also encourage young people to give their best in all fields of life."
Djokovic & Murray Thrillers Feature In Best ATP Matches Of 2021
4) Serbia Open, SF, Aslan Karatsev d. Novak Djokovic 7-5, 4-6, 6-4
Home … it’s where the heart is, and there’s no place like it. In so many ways, this was Novak Djokovic’s tournament. After a nine-year hiatus, the player’s family organised the event in his home town of Belgrade, with brother Djordje serving as director. The venue was Djokovic’s training facility, the Novak Tennis Centre.
Thing is, no one informed Aslan Karatsev that the host was supposed to win. The 27-year-old Russian had come whistling out of obscurity at the Australian Open, qualifying his way into the main draw, then advancing to the semi-finals, where he fell to Djokovic in straight sets. He was the first man in the Open era to reach the semi-finals in his major debut.
It was no surprise when Djokovic opened the first two sets with a 2-0 lead, but Karatsev broke back immediately each time. The Russian took the first set and was up 4-2 in the second before Djokovic took the last four games to force a third set. While his aggressive play came with unquestionable risk – Karatsev faced an incredible 28 break points – ultimately, he was rewarded with a stunning victory. In the end, Karatsev saved 23 of those break points, all 10 in the decisive third set.
The rousing match required 3 hours, 25 minutes, at the time, the longest ATP match of the 2021 season.
“It was a long, tough match,” Karatsev said afterward. “You have to put [in] like 200 per cent to beat this guy, it’s like playing against a wall. I stepped on the court to win. I was believing, and I said to myself that I would play every ball no matter what.”
Karatsev would lose the final to Matteo Berrettini in a third-set tie-break. The win against Djokovic was, Karatsev said, the biggest of his career.
“Definitely, it’s the World No. 1,” he said. “I’m really happy, I put everything on the court.”
Djokovic & Murray Thrillers Feature In Best ATP Matches Of 2021
5) Rolex Paris Masters, Final, Novak Djokovic d. Daniil Medvedev 4-6, 6-3, 6-3
Tennis, at the highest level, is a game of adjustments. Seemingly slight tweaks in strategy can have a huge impact, as Novak Djokovic illustrated in the final of the Rolex Paris Masters back in November. In the seven weeks after his crushing defeat by Daniil Medvedev in the US Open final – that cost him a rare Grand Slam – Djokovic obsessively watched the video of his downfall.
“I tried to read the patterns of his serve and the ball toss,” he said in a Tennis Channel interview. “I tried to look for the small details, because it was a match of small margins. I thought it was only a matter of time when I was going to read his serve better, and start to make some plays.
“You can’t go through him. You have to find a way to play with controlled aggression, play the right shots at the right time and make him come in.”
Indeed, the 6’ 6” Medvedev, according to former Grand Slam champion Jim Courier, moves better than any big man he’s ever seen. This enabled him to play deep behind the baseline, giving him the time to attack Djokovic’s backhand, pinning him in the Ad side corner. The Serb’s solution was to serve and volley in critical moments, to open up the court with some wide serves and follow them to net. He would win 19 of 22 points by employing that element of surprise – and despite faulting on another 17 serve-and-volley points, this kept Medvedev off balance.
That’s how the World No. 1 defeated the World No. 2 in a two hour, 15-minute match that brought him a record-breaking 37th ATP Masters 1000 title. And this came just one day after he had secured a record seventh year-end No. 1 finish in the FedEx ATP Rankings. It was his sixth Bercy crown and he celebrated by hugging his children, Stefan and Tara.
Djokovic Doubles Up In Best Grand Slam Matches Of 2021
1) Roland Garros, SF, Novak Djokovic d. Rafael Nadal 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-2
Spoiler:
The 58th instalment in one of the greatest rivalries of all time well and truly delivered on the hype when World No. 1 Djokovic squared off against 13-time Roland Garros champion Nadal in the semi-finals in Paris.
Esteemed coach and commentator Darren Cahill deemed it “one of the very best matches I’ve seen”, while Andy Murray declared “you cannot play better clay-court tennis than this. It’s perfect”. After four hours and 11 minutes, the Serbian prevailed 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(4), 6-2.
“It was one of these matches you can remember forever. It was one of the top three matches in my life,” Djokovic said. “To win against Rafa on this court you have to play your best tennis, and tonight I played my best tennis.
“It's hard to find the words to sum up how I feel. You tell yourself there is no pressure but there is. Pressure is a privilege – to test my game and my character in matches like this.”
Only seven months prior, Nadal had allowed the top seed just seven games in the 2020 final – including a 6-0 opening set – and when the Spaniard charged to an early 5-0 lead in their 2021 rematch, there was a worrying sense of déjà vu for Djokovic.
The numbers were already daunting. Nadal had fallen on clay in the French capital just twice before from 107 matches in 16 years. He was a perfect 26-0 once he reached the semi-finals at Roland Garros and had won 35 straight matches there.
Although Djokovic conceded the opening set, he had already steadied the ship as he won three straight games, saved six set points and two break points before his opponent took it 6-3. It was a small but telling momentum shift as the Serbian levelled the match at a set apiece before the showdown reached its shot-making crescendo in a gruelling 92-minute third set, in which the pair shared 37 winners.
Nadal pegged back a 3-5 deficit and held a set point against Djokovic’s serve at 6-5, before being denied in a tie-break. Such was the magnitude of the match, French authorities made an exception to their Covid-19 pandemic night curfew and allowed spectators to stay until the match’s completion.
The clash looked destined for a fifth set when Nadal jumped to an early 2-0 lead in the fourth set, but Djokovic again showed extraordinary mental resolve as he reeled off six straight games to seal a definitive triumph in the pair’s ATP Head2Head rivalry, which he now leads 30-28.
“I had the big chance with set point at 6-5 on his second serve. That's it. Anything could happen in that moment,” Nadal said. “Then I made a double fault and missed an easy volley in the tie-break. These kind of mistakes can happen. But if you want to win, you can't make these mistakes."
It was Djokovic’s first clay-court win over Nadal since the 2016 quarter-finals in Rome and made him the first man to defeat the Spaniard twice at Roland Garros. No player had beaten Nadal in Paris and gone on to claim the trophy, but that was achieved two days later against Stefanos Tsitsipas.
Victory meant Djokovic closed to within one title of tying Nadal’s and Federer’s record haul of 20 majors, which he went on to do at Wimbledon.
Djokovic Doubles Up In Best Grand Slam Matches Of 2021
2) US Open, SF, Novak Djokovic d. Alexander Zverev 4-6, 6-2, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2
All season long, as the pressure and tension mounted, Novak Djokovic remained remarkably poised as he hurtled toward history.
He had won his eighth Australian Open to open the major season, then taken the titles at Roland Garros — beating 13-time Rafael Nadal along the way — and Wimbledon. Thus, he entered the US Open with almost unimaginable possibilities: a Grand Slam not seen in men’s tennis since 1969 and the chance to pass Roger Federer and Nadal with an unprecedented 21st major championship.
But the obstacle was formidable. For six weeks earlier, Alexander Zverev – in another match laced with historic implications – had beaten Djokovic in the semi-finals of the Tokyo Olympics. Zverev erased a one-set deficit by winning 12 of the last 16 games (and then continued on to beat Karen Khachanov in the final). That deprived the 34-year-old Serbian of a chance for an exceedingly rare Golden Slam.
And so it was, appropriately, World No. 1 versus No. 4 in the season’s last major semi-final. Djokovic, perhaps feeling the weight of expectation, did not start well in Arthur Ashe Stadium. For the fourth straight match, just as he had against Kei Nishikori, Jenson Brooksby and Matteo Berrettini, Djokovic dropped the first set. Zverev, a decade younger, looked far fresher.
For the 10th time in 27 major matches, Djokovic was forced to rally from a one-set deficit at the start. Elevating his game, he took the next two sets – the third featured a ludicrous 53-stroke rally – before the German leveled the match with an impeccable fourth. It was Zverev’s lethal serve that got him there, even against the man many people view as the best returner ever.
With Rod Laver, the player who had achieved the last Grand Slam in men's tennis, watching from the President’s Suite, Djokovic displayed the righteous stuff of a champion. A classic drop shot followed by a whistling forehand pass broke Zverev’s serve for a 2-0 lead. A framed would-be overhead gave Djokovic an insurmountable 4-0 lead – and he responded with a roar in the direction of his team.
After three hours, 43 minutes his dazzling quest remained alive. Djokovic had now won all 27 of his major matches for the season and was 4-0 when it went to a deciding fifth set.
“I would like to say thank you, because the atmosphere was amazing, the best atmosphere of the tournament so far,” Djokovic said in his on-court interview. “These are the moments we live for. These are the kind of unique opportunities that we dream of every day when we wake up and are trying to find motivation to go out there and do the same things over and over again.”
Daniil Medvedev would end Djokovic's historic pursuit in the final at Flushing Meadows with a comprehensive straight-sets performance.
Djokovic Family Matching Donations In Season Of Giving Campaign
Spoiler:
This is the Novak Djokovic Foundation's fourth consecutive Season of Giving
The Novak Djokovic Foundation is running a Season of Giving campaign for the fourth straight year to raise money for the opening of a new preschool in Nis, Serbia. The foundation is continuing to strive toward its goal of making sure all Serbian children have access to preschool in the next 10 years.
Novak Djokovic and his wife, Jelena Djokovic, will once again be matching donations. Last year, fans donated €108,000, which the Djokovic Family also matched.
“This and the previous year have further demonstrated how important it is for children to attend preschool, particularly in a situation when parents are forced to work from home, and are not able to adequately dedicate their time to children,” Novak and Jelena said in a statement. “However, it should not be forgotten that there are still those who are not able to go to preschool, even in normal circumstances.
"Nis is a lovely city with unique culture whose citizens have been recognized both domestically and abroad. We have great memories from this city and we are happy that, this Season of Giving, we are raising funds for a new preschool there, thus enabling children and their families to dream big.”
Learn More About Djokovic's Charity Work
This year’s Season of Giving campaign will last until 8 January. The funds will be put towards reconstructing a community centre, which will allow for the education of 100 children.
“Reconstructing the old building of the local community and turning it into a beautiful, modern preschool will give 100 children an opportunity to get the best possible start in life and it will also help their parents to have more time for themselves and their careers,” Novak and Jelena said. “With love and light, we thank you for your support. Let’s go together for another victory, like always!””
More than 47,000 Serbian children have benefitted from the work done by the Novak Djokovic Foundation. Djokovic received the Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award in 2012 in recognition of his philanthropic work.
To learn more about the Novak Djokovic Foundation's Season of Giving and to donate, click here.