The secret to Djokovic winning against Sinner
Djokovic thinks the first two sets and the last three are like two different games. He used the rest time after the second set to help himself relax while telling himself through the mirror. Instead of blaming himself, he encouraged himself to be more confident and reorganized his thinking to find winning tactics. "Sometimes things don't go well, but the opponents are unstoppable and I need to have this conversation with myself," he said.
The 20-time Grand Slam champion also revealed that despite playing professionally for two decades, he sometimes doubted himself. "The toughest games are always fighting yourself on and off the field," the No. 1 seed added. "If I can beat myself, I feel that external factors gradually become favorable."
Sinner started well with two set sets of wins, but Djokovic never thought that you'd stop here, the Serbian Pass wins the triple set to the end of Cameron Norrie. "I always believed I could win back, based on experience like the same," you said.
Sinner didn't score a point when he served in the second set of the third set. Djokovic believes that is the key to the game. This is the seventh time he has won two sets behind, and his record in five sets at Wimbledon has risen to 10 wins and 1 loss. The former world No 1 believes mentality has also affected Sinner, when the 21-year-old had just reached the quarter-finals for the first time at Wimbledon.
Djokovic lifts the winning streak in Wimbledon 26, after defeating Sinner 5-7, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2-2. You go to the semi-finals and meet the Norrie owner of the Norrie's tyranny, the number one Serbia is only a Serbia from Grand Slam's first fight, which will help you cross the city of Roger Federer, on the Switzerland market.