The rally which stretched both men to their limits may yet turn out to be one of the most significant points of the year on the ATP tour. Had Djokovic lost it, the Australian Open would have started at Melbourne Park on a completely different keel.
Obviously, Djokovic would not have won the title and, just as obviously, he would not have had the chance to gain a measure of revenge against Andy Murray, his old rival who has usurped his position as No 1 in the world.
But there is more to it than and it is all psychological. For the latter half of 2016, Djokovic’s mind went walk about – a favorite Australian phrase for someone who loses focus. His press conferences towards the end of the year became almost whimsical. He was off on a different mind set and it came as no surprise to me that Boris Becker left the Serb’s camp. The newcomer, the Spanish guru called Pepe, was never going to be Becker’s best buddy.
So imagine where Novak’s mind would have been had he lost to Verdasco. In all probability, the super fit and newly knighted Sir Andy would have won the title and would have arrived Melbourne on a run of 30 straight victories.
That is not the scenario now. Djokovic, clearly, has regained his focus. You do not win a 31 stroke rally at match point down if your mind is wavering. Nor do you recover from failing to serve out the match in the second set against Murray in the Doha final and dominating the third. That is the real Djokovic and, as a result, Sir Andy’s task of trying to with the Australian Open after failing in five finals, has become that much harder.
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