Djokovic becomes third man to win 100 ATP titles with Geneva victory
Serbia's Novak Djokovic returns a ball to Poland's Hubert Hurkacz during their men's singles final match at the ATP 250 Geneva Open tennis tournament in Geneva on May 24, 2025. (Photo by VALENTIN FLAURAUD / AFP)
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Novak Djokovic became just the third man to win 100 ATP titles with a typically dramatic comeback victory over Hubert Hurkacz in the final of the Geneva Open on Saturday.
The 38-year-old, playing in
Switzerland in a bid to find form ahead of the French Open, recovered from
losing the first set to clinch a 5-7, 7-6 (7/2), 7-6 (7/2) win after three hours
and five minutes on court.
Djokovic joins Jimmy Connors and
Roger Federer as the only players with a century of tour titles.
"I had to work for it,
that's for sure. He was probably closer to the victory the entire match than
me," said Djokovic, who is the first man to win titles in 20 consecutive
years.
"I was just trying to hang
in there... this is what happens at this level. A few points decide it, an
incredible match... and I'm delighted to clinch the 100 here."
It was the former world number
one's first tournament triumph since clinching his maiden Olympic gold medal
against Carlos Alcaraz at the Paris Games last summer.
Djokovic had lost both of his
previous matches on clay this season prior to the Geneva tournament, against
Alejandro Tabilo and Matteo Arnaldi at the Monte Carlo and Madrid Masters
respectively.
But he decided to play at the
low-key clay-court event in a bid to find form ahead of the start of the year's
second Grand Slam event on Sunday at Roland Garros, where the Serb will be
targeting a record-breaking 25th major singles trophy.
It was Djokovic's first
tournament since splitting from coach and old rival Andy Murray, but he showed
no ill-effects.
Poland's former world number six
Hurkacz, now ranked 31st, is still waiting for his first title since April
2024.
"It's really inspiring how
you conduct yourself on and off the court," Hurkacz said to Djokovic.
The three-time Roland Garros
champion starts his French Open campaign against American Mackenzie McDonald on
either Monday or Tuesday.
Hurkacz's strong start
After a tight start, Djokovic saw
two break points come and go in the fifth game as Hurkacz battled to keep the
first set on serve.
The opener appeared to be
meandering towards a tie-break until Djokovic cracked in game 12, following a
loose forehand at deuce with a double-fault on set point to give Hurkacz a
one-set advantage.
Hurkacz dug deep to secure a
hard-fought hold to kick off the second set, staving off another break point.
The second set followed a similar
pattern to the first, but this time Djokovic was able to hold at 6-5 down to
force a tie-break with an ace.
The Serb found his groove in the
breaker, reeling off four straight points to send the match into a deciding
set.
But Djokovic immediately gave up
his serve in the first game of the third set, serving a double-fault when 40-30
up and then blasting a backhand long on break point.
Hurkacz then reeled off three
successive holds to love to edge towards the title, only to crumble in the
eighth game of the decider with two unforced errors and a double-fault to gift
Djokovic a way back into the final.
The Pole gathered himself to
secure a deciding tie-break in a tense 12th game.
But he crumbled at the crucial
moments with back-to-back errors from 3-2 behind in the breaker, leaving
Djokovic to reach yet another milestone in his illustrious career with an ace.


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