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Djokovic and the grace of knowing when

Even the strongest will and finest craft can’t outrun time — and that’s what makes Djokovic’s twilight both human and heroic. At some stage, greatness becomes not about staying in the fight at any cost, but about recognising which battles are no longer worth waging 

July 14, 2025 / 08:11 IST
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What makes Djokovic’s twilight so human is that it forces even the strongest wills to confront their own finitude.

It gets my goat. That the G.O.A.T of tennis – Novak Djokovic – is fading before our eyes. His recent semi-final defeat at Wimbledon to a much younger, hungrier opponent felt like more than just another loss.

It is a reminder that age, that quiet yet brutal adversary, eventually corners even the greatest.

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Physical dominance separated Djokovic and the rest

And for all the court craft, tactical cunning, matchplay mastery and iron will, Djokovic’s real point of difference was always his body: those impossibly elastic limbs, the unending energy and power packed into that slender frame, and the tireless engine that chased down balls others wouldn’t even attempt. Facing Djokovic then was like confronting a unique creature — his physical dominance so absolute it seemed almost unfair, as though he played in a category of his own. It was poetry in motion.