Djokovic Returns to Melbourne: Can the 38-Year-Old Legend Win His 11th Australian Open?
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Novak Djokovic, the 38-year-old Serbian tennis titan ranked fourth in the world, touched down in Melbourne this week for the Australian Open starting January 18, marking his emotional return to Rod Laver Arena where he has claimed 10 of his 24 Grand Slam titles. Marca reports he shared a heartfelt moment Tuesday, touching the ground with his right hand and placing it on his heart before his first practice session on the court that once led to his 2022 deportation over vaccine issues. The crowd dynamic lingers too, after last years semi-final injury retirement against Alexander Zverev drew boos that Zverev quelled, urging fans to show love for the legend who has given 25 years to the sport.
Business whispers swirled as MarketWatch revealed Djokovics lavish Belgrade penthouse, bought for 1.09 million dollars in 2016 as a retirement pad on Pavlovac Lakes shores, is now renting for a jaw-dropping 17,542 dollars nightly. Complete with a private tennis court, gym, sauna, pool, wine cellar and gaming room steps from his parents Novak Cafe, its vacant amid his Slam chase, though he owns multimillion-dollar pads in Miami, Marbella and Soho too.
On social media, ATP Tour notes Djokovic headlined tributes to retiring Milos Raonic, posting on Instagram Stories, Congrats on an amazing career, @mraonic with emojis, joining stars like John Isner in celebrating the Canadians 8 titles and 8,445 aces.
No matches since his 102nd title in Athens last November, Djokovic skipped Adelaide warmup citing unreadiness per Economic Times, embracing preservation over preparation with just 13 events in 2025. Yet he notched a staggering milestone, 1,000 consecutive weeks in the ATP top 40, a record Marca and Firstpost hail as unbeatable. Hitting with a top-20 player in his debut Melbourne session per The Tennis Gazette, hes eyeing an 11th Aussie Open to break his Slam tie with Margaret Court, defying the Sinner-Alcaraz era as Daily Sabah frames it. Australian Open director Craig Tiley assured hell play 100 percent, eyeing 2028 Olympics before any farewell. At 38, with a body showing scars, Djokovics mental steel keeps rivals like Holger Rune whispering, nothing is impossible.
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