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Chung hands Djokovic a dose of his own medicine

China Daily | Updated: 2018-01-24 09:54
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South Korea's Chung Hyeon reacts after winning a point during his straight-sets fourth-round victory over Novak Djokovic at the Australian Open in Melbourne on Jan 22. [Photo/VCG]

Upstart S. Korean outlasts six-time champion to advance to quarters

MELBOURNE-For Novak Djokovic it must have felt like some nightmarish fight to the death against a clone of himself on Monday as Chung Hyeon stunned the six-time Australian Open champion with a display ripped straight out of the Serb's textbook.

The 30-year-old Djokovic, who has ruled Rod Laver Arena like no other, simply had no answer as Chung, nine years his junior, wore him into the ground to win 7-6 (4), 7-5, 7-6 (3) and become the first South Korean to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal, where he will face American Tennys Sandgren.

Time and again during their three-hour, 21-minute encounter, 14th seed Djokovic had Chung on the run but the world No 58 displayed almost superhuman court coverage to prevail in rallies he had no right to still be involved in.

It is exactly those defensive skills that have earned Djokovic 12 Grand Slam titles, and it was no surprise when, after claiming the biggest scalp of his career, Chung described the Serb as his idol.

Tellingly, Chung won 34 of the 54 rallies that exceeded nine strokes, most memorably when he slid at full stretch to hook a forehand winner past his opponent to take a 5-3 lead in the third-set tiebreak.

It proved the final straw for a weary Djokovic, who netted a forehand return on the next point and then shunted a backhand into the tramlines after yet more Chung defiance.

The ice-cool Chung barely celebrated, but after being warmly congratulated by Djokovic he walked across to milk the applause from the capacity crowd, including a sizeable Korean contingent.

To his credit Djokovic, who again wore a compression sleeve on his playing arm to protect the elbow that forced him out of action last year and was clearly causing discomfort, fought tenaciously like the great champion he is.

Had he grabbed the third set, a comeback might have materialized, although Chung, who frazzled fourth-seeded German wunderkind Alexander Zverev in five sets in the previous round, can apparently run all night.

"I was just thinking 'I'm up two-love in sets so if I lose (the third) I still have two more sets. I can play two more hours.' I'm younger than Novak so I don't care!" Chung said.

"I was just trying to copy Novak because he's my idol. My dreams have come true tonight."

Outplayed

Djokovic was always playing catch-up after dropping his opening two service games with a rash of double faults to trail 4-0.

He clawed back that deficit, hitting back from 4-1 in the second set and 3-1 in the third, but never got to grips with an opponent few will fancy facing.

"Congratulations to Chung on an amazing performance," Djokovic said.

"He deserved to win. Whenever he was in trouble he came out with some great passing shots and at the back of the court he was like a wall."

There were signs that Djokovic was in pain with his elbow in the first set and he required treatment on that and his feet after losing the tiebreak 7-3.

The relentless Chung moved 4-1 ahead in the second set but again Djokovic recovered, only to falter when serving at 5-6.

On set point, Djokovic pounded three consecutive forehands deep into Chung's backhand, each one returned at full stretch, before the Serb cracked and netted a forehand.

Djokovic fed off the energy of the crowd as he pushed for a break at 5-5 in the third set, but there was no escape as Chung refused to flinch in a gripping climax.

Reuters

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