Tennis analyst Gill Gross believes that hiring someone like
Andy Murray as a coach will give Serbia’s
Novak Djokovic a ‘unique advantage’
in next year’s Australian Open. The 37-year-old is regarded as the greatest player
in the history of men’s tennis in the singles category, having won as many as
24 Grand Slam titles.
Djokovic has gone through a mixed campaign. The Belgrade-born
star completed his trophy cabinet as he finally won an Olympic gold medal for
his country. However, that was his only big achievement this year. It was the
first time in seven years that Djokovic finished the season without a Grand
Slam title. Those performances led the former world number one to part ways
with his former coach Goran Ivanisevic.
Recently, Djokovic, in a post on his official account on social
media platforms, announced that he has hired his former rival Andy Murray as
his coach ahead of next year’s Australian Open. The 37-year-old, who is regarded
as the greatest British player in the history of men’s tennis in the singles category,
has recently retired from the sport after the Paris Olympics because of fitness
concerns.
That news sparked debate about whether hiring someone like
Murray, who remained his opponent for the majority of his career, so soon after
retirement, is the right call by Djokovic after a rather disappointing season
according to his own high standards. However, tennis analyst Gross has backed
the Serbian tennis star’s judgement while hiring Murray. Gross was recently
quoted in a report that highlighted that having someone like the Glasgow-born
star will give Djokovic a ‘unique advantage’ going into the first Grand Slam of
2024.
“Heading into 2025 Novak Djokovic’s next coach will be one
Andy Murray,” he said. “The three-time major champion, the former world No 1,
the two-time Olympic gold medalist. A man who Novak has battled 36 times in his
career will now be joining him in his coaching box, only about six months
removed from retirement. Murray is a guy who whose qualities have been very
evident as a player. He is highly opinionated, highly analytical, because of
those things he was known as a notoriously difficult player to coach because
coaches would come in and they would have certain opinions and often Andy would
have his own opinion. He has also studied all of these players. The fact that
he is so fresh off the tour I do believe gives him a pretty unique
advantage."