Jimmy
Connors shared his thoughts on a possible retirement for
Novak Djokovic while
comparing him to
Rafael Nadal. The American former world No. 1 discussed the
potential scenario that would lead Djokovic to consider retirement.
The 8-time
Grand Slam champion dismissed the idea that Djokovic has lost motivation,
considering the retirements of his main rivals: Roger Federer in 2022, and Andy
Murray and Rafael Nadal in 2024.
Connors:
Djokovic’s exit depends on next generation stepping up
Djokovic
has already secured almost every possible record in men’s tennis. After winning
the gold medal at Paris 2024, Djokovic has captured all the major titles,
adding to his 24 Grand Slam titles, 40 Masters 1000s, seven ATP Finals, and 428
weeks as world No. 1—records in which he has greatly surpassed his rivals and
which seem unlikely to be beaten by any future player.
In recent
years, Djokovic pulled ahead of Nadal, with whom he had been closely matched in
several statistics, although Djokovic hadn’t yet won the gold medal. He finally
achieved that in the latest Olympic Games, defeating
Carlos Alcaraz in the
final to complete the last remaining accomplishment in his incredible career.
“It’s hard
for me to say he has had a drop in motivation because he does everything
throughout the day to make himself as good as he can be,” the American said on
the Advantage Connors podcast. “With his training and his eating, everything
about his day is centred around tennis and being the best he can be.”
“I am
trying to say it the right way. Getting older is getting older. You have a lot
of young guys who are seeing maybe he’s not what he used to be, that old grey
mare. A little vulnerable. He’s not quite playing up to the standard we are
used to seeing.”
“But he has
got the kind of game I like. He has a good return, an aggressive return. I am
not counting him out ever. He’s got guts, the game, and intensity. He is like
[Rafael] Nadal, he’s not going to go out there unless he is ready to play,” the
8-time Grand Slam champion added. “We talk about Sinner and Alcaraz, but the
only way he’s going to say it’s time to go is if some of those other guys start
stepping up too, or else he’ll keep hanging on, and what’s wrong with that?”