Djokovic Speaks on the Men's Tour: "The Dominance We Were Used to Is No Longer Guaranteed"
Djokovic is currently in Monte-Carlo for the first clay-court Masters 1000 of the season. He will face the winner of the match between Tabilo and Wawrinka.
In an interview shared by Tennis World Italia, the Serbian reflected on the current generation and the difficulty of maintaining a high level of performance over time:
"When you win a Grand Slam, you earn 2,000 points, which is a lot. Zverev probably isn’t satisfied with his recent tournaments, nor is Alcaraz, I assume, but everyone has been playing fantastic tennis lately.
The dominance we were used to, or that we expected to see, is no longer guaranteed.
However, the season is long, and I’m sure the players I just mentioned, along with Sinner, will be the three competing for the world No. 1 spot by the end of the year."
Monte-Carlo
Tennis: the little-known truths about the offseason, between rest, stress and physical survival
What if tennis lost its soul? The case of robotized officiating, between tradition and a dehumanized modernity
Features - Saudi Arabia, injuries, war, and business: the fascinating underbelly of tennis revealed by TennisTemple
Davis Cup: between reforms, criticism and national culture