Novak Djokovic had the weight of tennis history on his shoulders and an Italian with dynamite on his racket strings to contend with but emerged victorious to earn a sixth Wimbledon and a record-levelling 20th Grand Slam title yesterday.
Matteo Berrettini, playing inspired tennis in his first Grand Slam final, unleashed everything in his formidable arsenal to rock Djokovic in a riveting contest.
But it was not enough to stop the indefatigable Serb, who found his best when required, to pull through 6-7(4) 6-4 6-4 6-3 on what looks like being a momentous day in the raging argument about who will go down as the greatest of all time.
Golden Slam
For the first time in his career Djokovic shares the lead for the most Grand Slam singles titles with Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal and looks primed to leave both in his wake.
In a year that is brewing into something extraordinary, the world number one has won the first three majors and will become the first man since Rod Laver in 1969 to complete the calendar-year Grand Slam if he wins the US Open in September.
Not only that but with the Olympics looming, the one title to elude Djokovic, he is within sight of the fabled Golden Slam – something no man has achieved.
The celebrations on a frenzied Centre Court, that at times sounded more like Wembley Stadium, were unconstrained after Berrettini chipped a backhand into the net to end the final.
Djokovic fell to his back before standing arms aloft, soaking in the acclaim of 15,000 fans who, while edging towards underdog Berrettini throughout the match, realised they were watching a special player making history.
Relentless
After chewing on a blade of grass, Djokovic threw his arms out to all four sides of stadium as the crowd roared ‘Nole’ before he climbed up into the stands to embrace his coaching team and even stopped for a selfie with a young fan.
“That was more than a battle. He has a true hammer, an Italian hammer and I felt that on my skin today,” Djokovic said.
When he won his second Grand Slam title in 2011, three years after his first, Federer owned 16 and Nadal nine. Yet he has reeled them in relentlessly, dropping just two sets over the fortnight at Wimbledon, and his thirst for silverware is unquenched.
“I have to pay a tribute to Rafa and Roger, they are legends of the sport and they are the two most important players I ever faced in my career and the reason I am where I am today,” Djokovic said on court.
“Something shifted in 2011. The last 10 years have been an incredible journey and it’s not stopping here.”
Federer was quick to congratulate Djokovic on his achievement.
The Swiss wrote on Twitter: “Congrats Novak on your 20th major. I’m proud to have the opportunity to play in a special era of tennis champions. Wonderful performance, well done!”