Demon v Djoker: The Wimbledon showdown that is a year in the making
'But still, it was a brutal time for me last year, having to deal with all those emotions. [I'm] feeling good, ready to go, and I'm going to get my chance again, so I'm excited for that.'
A lot has happened in between. De Minaur ascended to a career-high No.6 in the rankings after his 2024 Wimbledon run, but the hip setback had wide-ranging repercussions, from costing him playing singles at the Olympics to spending months on the sidelines.
He somehow extended his grand slam quarter-finals streak at the US Open, but Brit Jack Draper mercilessly thrashed a clearly compromised de Minaur.
His hip has long recovered, and he made a maiden quarter-final at the Australian Open in January – but a second-round loss at Roland-Garros in May prompted him to reveal he was suffering from mental fatigue and needed a tennis detox.
The 26-year-old tumbled out of the top 10 ahead of this year's Wimbledon championships, and lost his only match on grass in straight sets, so expectations were modest.
A friendly draw helped de Minaur advance to the round of 16 for the second straight year, with his opening three opponents' combined average ranking a lowly 127. Djokovic will be a significant rise in class.
What the numbers say
Both players dropped just one set on their way to the fourth round, but Djokovic's serve stands out.
The Serbian superstar has hit 49 aces to the Australian's 12, his first-serve percentage shades de Minaur comfortably (73 per cent to 54), and he is winning 84 per cent of those points to de Minaur's 80.
Djokovic has dropped serve only once – at his first attempt to complete his win over Miomir Kecmanovic in the previous round – whereas de Minaur's been broken four times.
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De Minaur's ability to protect his serve will likely determine his fate, but he will fancy his chances of denting Djokovic's serving dominance, given he is the ATP Tour's leading returner statistically across the past year. Djokovic is 14th in the same metric.
De Minaur has converted 15 of his 42 break points (36 per cent) at Wimbledon this year, while Djokovic has broken 19 times from 53 chances (36 per cent).
There has been a gradual decline in de Minaur's first-serve percentage across the years as he takes more risks searching for power and cheaper points. Winning 80 per cent of first-serve points this fortnight is a great result.
But occasionally, his percentage sinks dramatically, including landing only nine of 27 on his first ball in the opening set against Arthur Cazaux in the second round. That is the sole set de Minaur lost. He made only 42 per cent of first serves in his most-recent match against Djokovic in Monte-Carlo last year – and that won't cut it.
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De Minaur has picked his spots well to come to the net, particularly in his past two wins over August Holmgren and Cazaux, where he won a combined 37 of 42 points (88 per cent) in that part of the court.
But Djokovic has also been dominant at the net, where he is winning 80 per cent of points for the tournament.
What they said
Alex de Minaur: 'Novak has completed the game. He's broken all the records. It's amazing for him to still be showing up and still showing that fire and desire to win more. He's a player who can find motivation and fire from anything – and that's extremely dangerous. You don't want to give him something to get motivated about because then you'll definitely see his absolute best side.'
Novak Djokovic: 'Alex has improved his game tremendously in the last couple of years. He's playing the tennis of his life. He's definitely knocking on the door of the final stages of grand slams. You're not super excited to play Alex de Minaur on grass, that's for sure, because he's so quick, and he's a complete player. He has gained pace on his serve as well. He hits his spots very well. [I'm expecting] a very tough challenge. I'm looking forward to it. I think it's going to be a great test to see where my game is at against a top player like Alex.'
Demon v Djoker match-ups
2023 Australian Open R4 (hardcourt)
Novak Djokovic d Alex de Minaur 6-2, 6-1, 6-2
How Demon reflects: 'Obviously, that first one we played was a whitewash. He was way too good, and I had no answers for him.'
2024 United Cup quarter-finals (hardcourt)
Alex de Minaur d Novak Djokovic 6-4, 6-4
How Demon reflects: 'It was an incredible moment to be able to overcome that previous result and actually finish on top. That was a huge stepping stone in my career and my confidence levels because the feeling I had after that first time we played wasn't great, and I was able to overcome that.'

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Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley is still ruing a second night of carnage at the Gabba in four seasons, jokingly suggesting the Brisbane venue should be knocked down immediately. Power trio Sam Powell-Pepper, Esava Ratugolea and Dante Visentini have been ruled out for the rest of the AFL season after all suffered injuries in Saturday night's brave loss against reigning premiers Brisbane. Powell-Pepper requires a reconstruction on his left knee after suffering the same injury to his right knee in round eight last year. Defender Ratugolea will be sidelined by a hamstring tear and young ruckman Visentini by an ankle injury. In a tight loss against the Lions at the Gabba in 2022, Port also suffered four injuries after leading at three-quarter-time. "It's not a great ground, we're not going back there again," Hinkley quipped to reporters on Tuesday. "Can we change that ground? "When are they going to pull it down and build something there for the Olympics? "Sooner the better. 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Perth Now
2 hours ago
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Port take aim at 'not great ground' after injury woes
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Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Missed chances and baseline warfare: The key moments from captivating Demon-Djoker clash
It was just the second time this tournament that the former world No.1 had dropped serve. But arguably the key moment in deciding where this set was headed came in the second game, when Djokovic had the chance to immediately break back on de Minaur's serve. Djokovic made a decent-enough return, which de Minaur countered with a backhand slice, but the Serbian superstar lost balance and awkwardly flayed a forehand well long. De Minaur held two points later for 2-0, then benefited from another erratic Djokovic serving performance in the fifth game. Djokovic dumped a mid-court backhand into the net, then double-faulted on the second point and again at break point to fall 4-1 behind. One last unforced error off Djokovic's racquet – his 16th for the set – handed de Minaur a 6-1 lead. Demon misses his chance Second set, Djokovic wins 6-4 Any number of points seemed like crucial ones throughout this set as Djokovic began to assert his authority on the contest, only for de Minaur to repeatedly hit back. After they traded breaks to begin the second set, Djokovic poured the pressure on again to restrict de Minaur to 30-40. An incredible 35-shot rally followed, ending with de Minaur missing a backhand slice down the line. Djokovic sensed the moment, putting his finger behind his right ear and urging the crowd to make some noise. But de Minaur reeled in his 3-1 deficit to again level the set through six games. Djokovic came out on top in another titanic rally in the seventh game – this time 31 shots – to leave de Minaur 0-30, and the Australian eventually relented on serve. However, the critical moment for the set was still to come as Djokovic served to level the match at a set-all. De Minaur had already had a break point, but the second one was where his big chance came, on a Djokovic second serve. The Aussie pounced on it, pounded a forehand at Djokovic's feet, then, on a mid-court ball, ballooned a forehand long. Djokovic clinched the set two points later. Impatience costs de Minaur Third set, Djokovic wins 6-4 Both players fended off a break point each to start the set, and they held until four-all, when Djokovic made his move. De Minaur found himself in a 15-40 hole, but a superb inside-out forehand set up the easiest of put-away volleys. On the second break point, he nailed a 206km/h first serve out wide – exactly what he was after – that enabled him to step into the court, but he sprayed a forehand wide going for a winner. De Minaur's aggressive mindset helped him throughout the match, but, just like the previous set, his impatience and lack of execution at a key time cost him dearly. Djokovic leaked a forehand error in the next game to fall to 30-all, but was celebrating a two-sets-to-one lead soon after when he won a 27-shot rally with the simplest of dinks into the opposite service box. The damage was done two shots earlier when he ripped a cross-court forehand that sent de Minaur scurrying off court before forcing him to sprint across the other side with an off forehand near the opposite sideline. Brutal baseline warfare Fourth set, Djokovic wins 6-4 After saving a break point in the opening game, de Minaur stormed to a 4-1 lead as he threatened to send the match to a deciding fifth set. Djokovic even faced a break point to go 5-1 down, where de Minaur could not quite chase down an angled drop volley that ended up being his only opportunity for the game. The 24-time major champion made it out of the game without further damage, then tightened the screws. De Minaur defended back-to-back break points on excellent second serves and baseline play that drew Djokovic errors and got him back to deuce. But the Australian went break point down again trying to force the issue on his forehand. This is where Djokovic showed his mettle. A 32-shot rally followed of side-to-side brutal baseline warfare, but Djokovic took the initiative on a de Minaur backhand slice to rip a cross-court forehand on an extreme angle before crushing an inside-out forehand winner. Loading Starting with the final two points of that game, Djokovic captured 14 of the last 15 to complete his four-set defeat of a gallant de Minaur, who was left ruing his performance on the biggest of points. De Minaur won 36 of 52 points on rallies lasting nine shots or longer – an extraordinary feat – but Djokovic claimed four such exchanges mentioned above of 27 shots-plus at clutch moments that helped decide the match. Marc McGowan travelled to Wimbledon with the support of Tennis Australia.