Novak Djokovic has recruited Andy Murray as his new coach to help guide him to a historic 25th Grand Slam.
Novak Djokovic’s 2024 season marked a year of significant transition, as he failed to win a Grand Slam for the first time since 2017.
Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz dominated the season, with the Italian defeating Djokovic in the Australian Open semifinals and Alcaraz repeating his Wimbledon triumph over the Serbian.
Despite these disappointments, Djokovic achieved his primary goal by capturing Olympic gold, the one major accolade missing from his illustrious collection.
The retirements of Andy Murray and Rafael Nadal this year signalled the closing of a legendary chapter in tennis history, leaving Djokovic as the sole active member of the proverbial ‘Big Four’.
Still, Djokovic has shown no signs of slowing down and made a bold move by appointing Murray as his coach for the 2025 off-season and Australian Open.
This surprising partnership underscores his determination to remain a Grand Slam contender.
With his legacy cemented but his ambitions still burning, Djokovic’s next chapter is poised to be as compelling as ever.
Mats Wilander admitted he was shocked by the announcement of Murray coaching Djokovic but sees the potential for it to be a game-changing partnership.
He emphasized that Murray’s extensive experience competing against the tour’s best, as well as Djokovic himself, could provide the Serb with unique tactical insights.
My first reaction was that Novak Djokovic wants to win more Grand Slam tournaments,” he told Eurosport.
“Obviously to all of us that are tennis fans, we would love to see him win 25 Grand Slam titles and be considered the best of all time. So with Andy Murray helping him, I say that he thinks he can still win Grand Slam tournaments in 2025, and maybe even 2026.
“I think the message that Novak is sending is that he still thinks that he has some of his best tennis still in him, or he thinks that his best tennis is still ahead of him,” Wilander said. “It’s a strong [message] towards Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz and the best players in the world.”
“What Andy can do is he can tell Novak things that maybe Novak already knows, but Andy has played against all these players that Novak will face and Andy has seen them, he’s practised with them.
“He has talked to the likes of Jannik Sinner, to Carlos Alcaraz, to [Daniil] Medvedev, [Stefanos] Tsitsipas, [Alexander] Zverev,” Wilander continued, hopeful of a Murray-inspired Djokovic 2025 renaissance.
“He will not have secrets, but he will have other opinions about these guys’ games. I think there’s a lot of small details that Andy Murray will know that maybe Novak doesn’t think about.”
With Djokovic having finished 2023 at the top of the rankings on a huge 11,245 points, his slide down to seventh this year has been mostly self-inflicted.
The choice not to defend his Cincinnati title, a failed title defense at the US Open, and a withdrawal from the ATP Finals have all contributed to Djokovic’s ranking slide.
While winning a major means you have to play the best sooner or later, going in as the seventh seed means a meeting with Sinner may come as early as the quarter-finals.
Djokovic has made a career out of achieving milestone after milestone and looks unlikely to quit now, especially with just one last push required.
However, with the ferocious form the Italian is in on the hard courts, you have to wonder whether his dent in the rankings may come back to bite him in Melbourne.
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