At Wimbledon, Novak Djokovic is in his garden. The Serb proved it once again on Friday, July 14, by leaving no chance to Jannik Sinner, whom he beat in the semi-finals in three sets and two hours and forty-eight minutes of play (6-3, 6-4, 7-6 [7-4]). Already winner of the last four editions of the London Grand Slam, the world number two could chain a fifth consecutive success and equal Roger Federer’s record of eight titles.

But before that, there is one last step for Djokovic, who will have to win the final on Sunday, against Carlos Alcaraz, who dominated (6-3, 6-3, 6-3) the Russian Daniil Medvedev at the end of the day. . As a regular at Center Court and given his form since the start of the season – he has already won the Australian Open and Roland-Garros in 2023 – he will start as the favorite for this meeting. Jannik Sinner, who was playing his very first Grand Slam semi-final, paid for his lack of experience against the Serb.

This was the case in the last set, during the 15th consecutive tie-break won by Djokovic, an absolute record in the Open era. Without trembling, the latter materialized his first match point to play his ninth final at Wimbledon. A completely different scenario than the 2022 quarter-final, when Sinner frightened Djokovic for a moment by leading two sets to zero, before collapsing (5-7, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6 -2).

More jostled by the referee

This time, the world number 8 failed to really hinder the Serb, always decisive in key moments. At the start of the game, Djokovic saved two break points on his first service game, before taking on that of his young opponent (21 years old). Sure of his act, “Nole” ended up being pushed around more by the referee, Richard Haigh, than by Sinner. In the second set, the world number two was cautioned for a time saver, seconds after being penalized with a lost point for shouting after hitting the ball.

“It could have been the turning point of the match, but I managed to stay focused,” assured a very relaxed and somewhat roomy Djokovic towards the referee after the meeting. To win his 34th consecutive match at Wimbledon – he hasn’t lost since 2017, in the quarter-finals against Tomas Berdych – Djokovic still had to fight during the last round, notably saving two set points.

“He managed to put a lot of pressure on me in the third set. He proved why he is one of the leaders of the new generation,” Djokovic acknowledged. In the final, the latter will face Carlos Alcaraz, world number one and another representative of this youth at the top. This meeting will be the revenge of the semi-final of Roland-Garros, during which the Spaniard, nervous and cramped, had given up in four sets (6-3, 5-7, 6-1, 6-1) against the Serbian. Alcaraz, who won the Queens tournament on grass just before Wimbledon, will play their first final in the “temple of tennis”. Djokovic will have only one goal: to win a 24th Grand Slam title and equal Margaret Court’s all-time women’s and men’s record.