American upsets world No. 1 Djokovic in Wimbledon's third round

Sam Querrey of the U.S celebrates after beating Novak Djokovic of Serbia in their men's singles match on day six of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London on Saturday.
Sam Querrey of the U.S celebrates after beating Novak Djokovic of Serbia in their men's singles match on day six of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London on Saturday.

LONDON — Novak Djokovic's 30-match Grand Slam winning streak ended stunningly Saturday with a 7-6 (6), 6-1, 3-6, 7-6 (5) loss to Sam Querrey in Wimbledon's third round.

Djokovic had won the past four major titles in a row — and was halfway to the first calendar-year Grand Slam for a man since Rod Laver in 1969.

"I believe in positive things in life, and I managed to win four Grand Slams in a row — two different seasons, though. I want to try to focus on that," the No. 1-seeded Djokovic said, "rather than failure."

Djokovic last exited as early as the third round at any major tournament all the way back in 2009, when he departed the French Open at that stage. He made at least the semifinals at Wimbledon every year since 2010.

Yet things began looking bleak for Djokovic when the match began Friday and he dropped the first two sets against Querrey, an American ranked 41st. Djokovic, normally so consistent, so efficient, never quite seemed to be himself, and after the match, asked whether he was 100 percent healthy, the 29-year-old Serb replied: "Not really, but it's not the place and time to talk about it."

Still, after play was halted Friday evening by rain — a recurring theme in this contest and the tournament as a whole — Djokovic came back out Saturday and played much better at the outset.

"He's on his way to possibly being the best ever," Querrey said, "and so you know he's mentally tough and he was going to come back."

Djokovic took the third set, then went up a break in the fourth at 5-4 by pounding a forehand winner that brought coach Boris Becker to his feet. But serving to even the match at two sets apiece, Djokovic faltered.

That game included two calls against Djokovic which, according to the BBC broadcast, were incorrect — but he was out of challenges and so couldn't ask for a review. Querrey, 0 for 6 on break points in the set until then, converted No. 7 when Djokovic's poor forehand volley found the net for 5-all.

After Querrey held for 6-5, Saturday's third rain delay arrived. When they resumed, Djokovic got to a tiebreaker, which he led 3-1. But Querrey hung in there, and a stray forehand by the big favorite sailed wide to end it.

"He overpowered me," Djokovic said.

It's the first loss for Djokovic at any major tournament in more than a year: He was beaten by Stan Wawrinka in the French Open final in June 2015. Since then, Djokovic won Wimbledon last July, the U.S. Open in September, the Australian Open in January, and the French Open last month.

How surprising was this result? Djokovic owns a total of 12 Grand Slam titles — including each of the past two at Wimbledon — while Querrey has never made it past the fourth round at any major. Plus, Djokovic won 8 of 9 previous head-to-head meetings.

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