Has a tennis player ever claimed that he likes the fact that Wimbledon follows so hard on the heels of the French Open? For decades, pros and fans and supporters of sane scheduling have cried out for more than two meager weeks between these very different major tournaments. Yet as soon as our wish came true and Wimbledon moved back a week, along came Novak Djokovic to make a strong case that the events are just fine as they are. Couldn’t be better, really, as far as he’s concerned.
“I think it’s actually great that after a couple of weeks we have another Slam,” Djokovic said at Wimbledon this year. “It’s very good because you get back in the competitive mode right away. You come here and feel the importance of this event; you can’t think about what happened at the French Open.”
It’s hard to say whether any other player shares, or will ever share, Djokovic’s enthusiasm for the blink-of-an-eye turnaround from clay to grass. But maybe that’s because so few of them could ever hope to do what he has done the last two years: Shake off the memory of a bitter defeat in the French Open final by coming back to beat Roger Federer for the Wimbledon title a little more than a month later.
Djokovic has long been the rubber-band man of tennis. With him, the term is appropriate both for physical and psychological reasons. During a rally, he can stretch and flex and contort his body into positions that have never been dreamed of by tennis instructors or textbook writers. And during a match, where he is prone to wild swings in mood and form, he has a unique—and if you’re a fan of his, heart-attack-inducing—ability to bend nearly to the breaking point, before snapping back into place just in time to win.
Now we can add the French Open and Wimbledon finals to his bounce-back list. Few champions have ever returned to the victory stand in London so quickly and convincingly after such devastating defeats in Paris. The question now, and the one that will ultimately define Djokovic’s legacy, is which of those performances—the wins at Wimbledon or the losses at Roland Garros—will become the norm for him.