The Kampala Report
  • Latest
    • Community
    • News
    • Trends
    • Education
    • Health
    • Africa
    • World
  • Money
    • Business
    • Finance
    • Farming
    • Tech
    • Winning Brands
  • Talk Back
    • Editorial
    • Op-Ed
    • Columnists
  • Politics
    • Parliament
    • Elections
  • Society
    • Entertainment
    • Relationships
    • Travel
  • Sports
  • Impact
    • Investigations
    • Special Reports
  • FACT CHECK
SUBSCRIBE
No Result
View All Result
  • Latest
    • Community
    • News
    • Trends
    • Education
    • Health
    • Africa
    • World
  • Money
    • Business
    • Finance
    • Farming
    • Tech
    • Winning Brands
  • Talk Back
    • Editorial
    • Op-Ed
    • Columnists
  • Politics
    • Parliament
    • Elections
  • Society
    • Entertainment
    • Relationships
    • Travel
  • Sports
  • Impact
    • Investigations
    • Special Reports
  • FACT CHECK
No Result
View All Result
The Kampala Report
No Result
View All Result
Home Sports

Novak Djokovic beats Nick Kyrgios for 7th Wimbledon title

bytheKR & AGENCIES
July 11, 2022
in Sports
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
Serbia's Novak Djokovic smiles as he holds his trophy after defeating Australia's Nick Kyrgios during the men's singles final at Wimbledon. (IMAGE: Courtesy | theKR Media)

Serbia's Novak Djokovic smiles as he holds his trophy after defeating Australia's Nick Kyrgios during the men's singles final at Wimbledon. (IMAGE: Courtesy | theKR Media)

WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on Twitter

WIMBLEDON, London: Novak Djokovic waited. He waited for Nick Kyrgios to lose focus and lose his way. Waited to find the proper read on his foe’s big serves. Waited until his own level rose to the occasion.
Djokovic is not bothered by a deficit — in a game, a set, a match. He does not mind problem-solving. And at Wimbledon, for quite some time now, he does not get defeated.

Djokovic used his steady brilliance to beat the ace-delivering, trick-shot-hitting, constantly chattering Kyrgios 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (3) on Sunday for a fourth consecutive Wimbledon championship and seventh overall.

The top-seeded Djokovic ran his unbeaten run at the grass-court Grand Slam tournament to 28 matches and raised his career haul to 21 major trophies, breaking a tie with Roger Federer and moving just one behind Rafael Nadal’s 22 for the most in the history of men’s tennis.

RELATED STORIES

Man United have reportedly made an enquiry for PSG striker Mauro Icardi

Debutants shine on weekend of huge drama

August 15, 2022
63
Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel clashes with Tottenham Hotspur manager Antonio Conte after their match at Stamford Bridge.

Chelsea 2 Tottenham 2: ‘Fair tackle’ as Tuchel insists no hard feelings after Conte clash

August 15, 2022
68
Austrian defender David Alaba celebrates scoring Real Madrid's second goal against Almeria

Alaba free-kick gives Real Madrid win to start title defense

August 15, 2022
69
Senegal's Kalidou Koulibaly celebrates after winning AFCON 2021. (IMAGE: URN | theKR Media)

Napoli FC at odds over players’ participation in AFCON

August 14, 2022
68

Among men, only Federer, with eight, has won more titles at Wimbledon than Djokovic. In the professional era, only Federer was older (by less than a year) than the 35-year-old Djokovic when winning at the All England Club.

This comeback on a sun-filled afternoon followed those in the quarterfinals, when Djokovic erased a two-set deficit against No. 10 seed Jannik Sinner, and in the semifinals, when No. 9 Cam Norrie grabbed the opening set. In last year’s title match at Wimbledon, Djokovic dropped the opening set. In the 2019 final, he erased two championship points against Federer.

There were two particularly key moments Sunday, ones that Kyrgios would not let go as he began engaging in running monologues, shouting at himself or his entourage (which does not include a full-time coach), earning a warning for cursing, finding reason to disagree with the chair umpire he fist-bumped before the match, and chucking a water bottle.

In the second set, with Djokovic serving at 5-3, Kyrgios got to love-40 — a trio of break points. But Kyrgios played a couple of casual returns, and Djokovic eventually held.

When that set ended, Kyrgios waved dismissively toward his box, sat down and dropped his racket to the turf, then groused, to no one in particular: “It was love-40! Can it get any bigger or what?! Is that big enough for you?!”

And then, in the third set, with Kyrgios serving at 4-all, 40-love, he again let a seemingly sealed game get away, with Djokovic breaking there.

The 40th-ranked Kyrgios was trying to become the first unseeded men’s champion at Wimbledon since Goran Ivanizevic in 2001. Ivanizevic is now Djokovic’s coach and was in the Center Court guest box for the match.

Kyrgios, the 27-year-old Australian, had never had been past the quarterfinals in 29 previous Grand Slam appearances — and the last time he made it even that far was 7 1/2 years ago.
In some ways, he stole the show Sunday. He tried shots between his legs, hit some with his back to the net, pounded serves at up to 136 mph and produced 30 aces. He used an underarm serve, then faked one later.

For all of the significant records and other factoids logged in the 560-page Wimbledon Compendium — including categories such as “ambidextrous players” or “runners-up who wore glasses in a final” — no mention is made of “underarm serves in a gentleman’s final,” but it seems safe to say that was a first.

Perhaps, in some ways, it would have been fitting for such a unique player to emerge as the champion at such a unique Wimbledon.

All players representing Russia or Belarus were banned by the All England Club because of the war in Ukraine; among the men that kept out of the field were No. 1-ranked Daniil Medvedev, the reigning US Open champion, and No. 8 Andrey Rublev. In response, the WTA and ATP professional tennis tours took the unprecedented step of revoking all ranking points from Wimbledon.

A woman who was born in Russia but has represented Kazakhstan for four years, Elena Rybakina, won the women’s trophy Saturday with a 3-6, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Ons Jabeur. It was the first Wimbledon title match since 1962 between two women making their Grand Slam final debuts, and Rybakina, at No. 23, is the second-lowest female champion at the All England Club since WTA computerized rankings began in 1975.

There’s more: Federer missed the tournament for the first time since the late 1990s because he is still recovering from a series of operations on his right knee. The No. 2 man in the rankings, Alexander Zverev, sat out after tearing ankle ligaments at the French Open. Three of the top 20 seeded men, including 2021 runner-up Matteo Berrettini, pulled out of Wimbledon after it began because they tested positive for COVID-19.

And Nadal withdrew before he was supposed to face Kyrgios in the semifinals, the first time since 1931 that a man gave walkover at Wimbledon in a semifinal or final.
As for Kyrgios, his talent is unmistakable. But over the years, he has drawn more notice for his preference for style over substance on court, his tempestuousness that has earned him ejections and suspensions, and his taste for the nightlife.

During the past two weeks alone, Kyrgios racked up $14,000 in fines — one for spitting at a heckling spectator after a first-round victory, another for cursing during a wildly contentious win against No. 4 seed Stefanos Tsitsipas in the third round — and caught flack for wearing a red hat and sneakers before or after matches at a place where all-white clothing is mandated. He and the world also learned that he is due in court in Australia to face an assault allegation.

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • WhatsApp
Tags: 7th Wimbledon titleNick KyrgiosNovak Djokovic

Do you have a story in your community or an opinion to share with us: Email the editor on  editorial@thekampalareport.com

LATEST UPDATES

  • Debutants shine on weekend of huge drama
  • Chelsea 2 Tottenham 2: ‘Fair tackle’ as Tuchel insists no hard feelings after Conte clash
  • Alaba free-kick gives Real Madrid win to start title defense
  • President Kenyatta meets Election Observers
  • CAESAR’S SUNDAY REFLECTION: Principled disagreement is sometimes needed

MOST POPULAR

  • Makerere dons threaten to sue University Council over alleged plot to reappoint Prof Barnabas Nawangwe as Vice Chancellor. (IMAGE: Courtesy | theKR Media)

    Makerere dons threaten to sue University Council over alleged plot to reappoint Prof Nawangwe as VC

    34 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • FULL LIST! Sejusa, Tumwine, over 30 other generals to retire from army

    167 shares
    Share 67 Tweet 42
  • Kiplimo favourite to win 10,000-metre Commonwealth gold medal

    31 shares
    Share 12 Tweet 8
  • Boxer Nakimuli settles for bronze medal at Commonwealth Games

    31 shares
    Share 12 Tweet 8
  • PICTURES! Pomp, colour as Agago Woman MP Beatrice Akello weds

    44 shares
    Share 18 Tweet 11

INVESTIGATION

Statements no longer count! US Senate asks Biden to slap sanctions on Ugandan officials over torture

Novelist Kakwenza Rukirabashaija shows Bobi Wine the scars of torture following his detention over insulting the First Family early this year. IMAGE: Courtesy/theKR media
byMIKE OPIO | theKR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
May 12, 2022
0
252

The United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations has asked President Joe Biden to slap sanctions against specific Ugandan government...

Read more

UNRA boss bitter over Kuwait firm writing to Museveni on Tirinyi-Pallisa-Kamonkoli road

Pallisa has seen the tarmacking of Tirinyi-Pallisa-Kumi and the Pallisa- Kamonkoli roads, connecting the towns of Tirinyi in Kibuku district, Kamonkoli in Budaka district, and Kumi district. (IMAGE: Courtesy | theKR Media)
March 15, 2022
0
323

KAMPALA: The contractual fallout between the Uganda National Roads Authority (UNRA) and Kuwait firm, Abuljebain Engineering Consulting Office (AECO) over...

Read more

South African Construction firm Mutoni on the spot for failure to finish Matugga pharmaceutical plant

President Museveni during the launch of the construction of the Dei Natural Products International Ltd plant in Matugga on June 3, 2020 (IMAGE: Courtesy | theKR Media)
byAGNES KICONCO | theKR Writer/Engagement Editor
January 4, 2022
0
246

KAMPALA: South African contractor Mutoni Construction (U) Ltd, which was contracted to build a pharmaceutical plant at Matugga on Bombo...

Read more

Custodian board chief Bizibu on the spot over allocation of Asian properties for 24 families

cap: Mr George William Bizibu, the executive secretary of the Departed Asians Property Custodian Board (IMAGE: FILE | theKR MEDIA)
bytheKR CORRESPONDENT
October 20, 2021
0
270

KAMPALA: Twenty four families of Asian origin have accused the Departed Asians Property Custodian Board (DAPCB) and the commissioner of...

Read more

About Us

The Kampala Report is a news media start up, and aims to become the leading news and information source in Uganda. We are known for our accurate, authoritative news content, diversity of opinion and analysis, covering the latest news and events from Uganda’s capital Kampala, the Ugandan countryside and East Africa regional contexts.

Learn more

Recent Stories

  • Debutants shine on weekend of huge drama
  • Chelsea 2 Tottenham 2: ‘Fair tackle’ as Tuchel insists no hard feelings after Conte clash
  • Alaba free-kick gives Real Madrid win to start title defense
  • President Kenyatta meets Election Observers

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Instagram

No Result
View All Result
  • Latest
    • Community
    • News
    • Trends
    • Education
    • Health
    • Africa
    • World
  • Money
    • Business
    • Finance
    • Farming
    • Tech
    • Winning Brands
  • Talk Back
    • Editorial
    • Op-Ed
    • Columnists
  • Politics
    • Parliament
    • Elections
  • Society
    • Entertainment
    • Relationships
    • Travel
  • Sports
  • Impact
    • Investigations
    • Special Reports
  • FACT CHECK