Djokovic leads Serbia to victory over Spain in ATP Cup final

Serbia captain Nenad Zimonjic lifts the trophy as he celebrates after winning the ATP Cup alongside (from left) Viktor Troicki, Nikola Milojevic, Dusan Lajovic, Novak Djokovic and Nikola Cacic. (Reuters)
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  • Second-ranked Djokivic had a 6-2, 7-6 (4) win over No. 1 Nadal on Sunday night

SYDNEY: Novak Djokovic beat Rafael Nadal and then went back on court within an hour and won the deciding doubles encounter to secure Serbia’s victory over Spain in the inaugural ATP Cup final.

Second-ranked Djokivic had a 6-2, 7-6 (4) win over No. 1 Nadal on Sunday night to level the final after Roberto Bautista Agut had given Spain a 1-0 lead by beating Dusan Lajovic 7-5, 6-1 in the first singles match.

After extending his lead to 29-26 in career head-to-heads with Nadal, and his supremacy over the Spaniard on hardcourts, Djokovic combined with Victor Troicki for a 6-3, 6-4 win over Pablo Carreno Busta and Feliciano Lopez.

“I’ll remember this experience for the rest of my life — it’s one of the nicest moments of my career,” Djokovic said. “I’ve been very fortunately blessed, had an amazing career over the last 15 years, but playing for a team, playing for a country with some of my best friends is just — you can’t match that. It’s too special.”

He joked in an on-court TV interview that the team would fly home to Serbia to celebrate before the Australian Open, which starts a week from Monday, but decided the party should start in Sydney.

“There’s a lot of Serbian people in Sydney,” Djokovic said. “If you want to make a celebration, we’re ready.”

Nadal, who hasn’t beaten Djokovic on a hard surface since the 2013 US Open final, withdrew from the doubles, citing fatigue, saying he had confidence in his teammate Lopez, a four-time Davis Cup champion.

“I have been playing a lot of tennis the last couple of days. My level of energy is a little bit lower than usual, because I played long yesterday, very long before yesterday, very long in (Perth),” Nadal said. “So it’s a team decision, and we believe in our team. That’s why we had success in the past.”

After playing six singles matches and two doubles matches in 10 days — on both the west and east coasts of Australia — less than two months after guiding Spain to the Davis Cup title in Madrid, Nadal urged the International Tennis Federation and the ATP to negotiate to form one world team championship.

“I think (ATP CUP) is a great competition, but at the same time — I can’t change my mind that two World Cups in one month is not real. So is not possible,” he said. “So we need to find a way to fix it and we need to find a way to make a big deal with ITF and ATP to create a big World Team Cup competition, not two. I think that’s a confusion for the spectators, and we need to be clear in our sport.”

Spain’s early lead put extra pressure on Djokovic, who has won a record seven Australian Open men’s singles titles. He hadn’t lost a singles match at the new 24-team tournament, and started like losing wasn’t a consideration.

“I started off the match, perfectly, really. Everything worked for me,” he said. “Serve got me out of trouble in the second set.”