Why Novak Djokovic s 2022 season only strengthens his case as the GOAT
Why Novak Djokovic's 2022 season only strengthens his case as the GOAT Novak Djokovic will finish the year in the Top-8 despite missing two Grand Slams and four Masters 1000 events If one had to pick 's best season on the ATP Tour, there are a few that will immediately pop into mind: the 2011 season, where he stitched together a 41-match win-streak to start the year and ended up winning three out of the four Grand Slams, being foremost among them. Then there is the 2015 season, where he won three Grand Slams, six Masters 1000 titles and the ATP Tour Finals, finishing the year with an overall winning percentage of 93%. There is also the 2021 season, where the 21-time Grand Slam champion once again lifted three Grand Slams and almost pulled off the Golden Slam-Calendar Grand Slam combo. Compared to those ridiculous standards, the 35-year-old's 2022 season doesn't feel nearly good enough. After all, the Serb has won only one Grand Slam and dropped down the rankings from World No. 1 at the start to World No. 8 at the moment. Only four trophies have entered his cabinet this year -- the Monte-Carlo Masters, the , the Astana Open and . Djokovic, who usually qualifies for the year-ending ATP Tour Finals sometime around the , also had to wait until after the to seal his spot in the competition for the 15th time and fifth time in a row. Even that came through the Slam champion exemption rule, leading to a flurry of activity on social media, with fans and former tennis players chiming in on the issue and calling into question the rule's existence. But underneath the radar, the former World No. 1 has quietly put in a season for the ages, whose legend grows even bigger if the trials and tribulations he went through during it are taken into consideration. First, Novak Djokovic was prevented from defending his title at the Australian Open, deported from Australia in ignominy after non-compliance with the country's vaccination-related entry protocols. The Serb's first match came at the Dubai Tennis Championship, where an early loss forced him to hand over the World No. 1 crown to . The former World No. 1 also had to miss trips to the Sunshine Double in Indian Wells and Miami, losing out on a potential 2000 ranking points. Djokovic's first clay match resulted in a loss against Alejandro Davidovich Fokina with more service breaks than he had ever faced in a two-set encounter. The Serbia Open in Belgrade saw the World No. 8 come into form, only to lose to Andrey Rublev in the final in front of his home fans with a bagel to boot. At the Italian Open after that, however, Djokovic saw his first sight of silverware, beating Stefanos Tsitsipas in the final to bring his season back. Just when it looked like he was coming into his own, the defending champion suffered a rather shocking loss against in the quarterfinals of the French Open, a loss that brought back painful memories of past drubbings on clay at the hands of the Spaniard.