Murray, Djoker are new showstoppers

Thanks for the memories Roger and Rafa, but it’s the Novak and Andy show now.
Andy Murray’s Wimble-don triumph on Sunday, when he beat Novak Djokovic 6-4, 7-5, 6-4 in the final, was Britain’s first by a male player since Fred Perry in 1936.
But it also re-emphasised the new dominance at the Grand Slam level of the world’s two top players, both aged 26 and born just seven days apart.
Djokovic and Murray have now contested three of the last four Grand Slam finals.
In all 33 of the last 34 Grand Slams have been won by Djokovic, Murray, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, but seven of the last 11 have been taken by the world no. 1 Serb and the world no. 2 British player. This year alone, Djokovic has won his fourth Australian Open, lost a tight five-setter to Nadal in the French Open semi-finals before his runner-up spot to Murray at Wimbledon.
Murray was runner-up to Djokovic in Melbourne and skipped Paris because of a back injury.
But Federer, the holder of a record 17 majors, was a beaten semi-finalist in Australia and a quarter-finalist at the French Open. Nadal missed the Australian Open through injury and is under pressure never to play Wimbledon again to protect his increasingly troublesome knees.
Mats Wilander, the Swedish star who won seven Grand Slam titles in the 1980s, believes Murray and Djokovic are now the undisputed superpowers of the sport.
“I think Andy Murray can win six, seven, eight, nine, 10 majors. The only man that can stop him is Novak Djokovic,” said the Swede.
“These two are going to decide who gets ahead in the history books. I hope they both decide this is a rivalry that’s just going to grow and become great on all the different surfaces, in all four majors.”
Federer has seen his decision to slim down his schedule in 2013 backfire.
But he has surprised many by deciding to play two low-profile claycourt events before the American hardcourt swing at Hamburg from July 15 and Gstaad the following week.
Having defeated just one top-10 player all year — Jo-Wilfried Tsonga at the Australian Open quarter-finals — Federer is desperate to bounce back from his Wimbledon misery, where he lost in the second round to Ukraine’s 116-ranked Sergiy Stakhovsky in what was his worst Grand Slam defeat for a decade.
His shock Wimbledon loss ended his run of 36 consecutive Grand Slam quarter-final appearances, having not gone out of a major before the last eight since the 2004 French Open. Federer is adamant that he will be back next year at Wimbledon when he will be six weeks short of his 33rd birthday.
If he were to win a record eighth Wimbledon in 2014, he would become the oldest man to clinch the title, surpassing Arthur Ashe who was six days away from his 32nd birthday when he triumphed in 1975. “I still have plans to play for many more years to come,” said Federer.

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