Djokovic bids to extend supremacy in Melbourne

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Djokovic bids to extend supremacy in Melbourne

Novak Djokovic of Serbia hits a return against Fernando Verdasco of Spain during the final of the Hopman Cup in Perth on Saturday. Tony Ashby / Agence France-Presse.

Defending champion Novak Djokovic returns to the Australian Open seeking his third consecutive trophy at Melbourne Park, where memories of last year's gut-wrenching final against Rafa Nadal still linger around Rod Laver Arena's blue center court.

Last year's record-breaking epic of five punishing hours and 53 minutes secured Djokovic his fifth Grand Slam title while establishing the 25-year-old as the game's indisputable iron man.

The marathon match would also serve as a portent for the year ahead for the steely-eyed Serb, who came under siege from his "Big Four" rivals but emerged from an attritional season with his world No 1 ranking intact.

If 2011 was the year Djokovic soared into the stratosphere on the back of three Grand Slam titles and an astonishing 41-match winning streak, he was brought gently back to Earth in 2012.

After winning his third Australian Open, Djokovic would add no further major titles, with the spoils shared by Nadal, Roger Federer and Andy Murray.

Federer, who shattered Djokovic's Wimbledon defense in the semi-finals on the way to his 17th major crown, would even prise the No 1 ranking away from the Serb before losing it again less than four months later.

Djokovic would taste further disappointment with a semifinal loss to Briton Murray at the London Olympics, where he was also upset by Argentine Juan Martin Del Potro in the bronze-medal match.

Murray, a good friend off the court, would later quash Djokovic's US Open title defense in a grueling five-set final.

Rather than sulk in the shadows with the spotlight trained elsewhere, Djokovic responded by thrashing a succession of opponents to win his next tournament, at the China Open.

He then exacted partial revenge for his US Open defeat by edging Murray for the Shanghai Masters title.

Federer's failure to defend his Paris Masters title effectively handed the No 1 ranking back to Djokovic, but there was little debate over whether the Serb had earned it, as he stormed to victory in the season-ending ATP Tour Finals.

The straight-sets win in the final over Federer gave him his sixth title for the season and was all the more impressive amid worries about his seriously ill father.

"I didn't really know how I would follow up after my incredible 2011, but I believe that I have to use the time where I'm playing the best tennis of my life," Djokovic said after winning his career-best 75th match of the year.

"It was a fantastic year, where I've had to face a lot of difficulties off the court as well."

Djokovic suffered a shock loss to young Australian Bernard Tomic when still jet-lagged at the team-based Hopman Cup in Perth last week, and was involved in a freak injury scare when a hoarding holding back autograph-hunters toppled and struck him on the knee.

He has otherwise enjoyed a sound lead-in to the year's first Grand Slam, winning an exhibition tournament in Abu Dhabi, and helping guide Serbia to within one victory of the Hopman Cup title.

Few would dare discount him at Melbourne Park, where he has reigned supreme for two years and enjoys a boisterous reception from the host city's prominent Serbian community.

There will also be no fear of a rematch with Nadal, the man who drove Djokovic to the brink of physical and mental exhaustion in the final in 2012, with the Spaniard pulling out after a virus stalled his recovery from a long-term knee injury.

The Rod Laver Arena crowd can look forward to further moments of pure theater from Djokovic, however, who muttered prayers to the heavens in the final throes of the Nadal classic before celebrating victory by tearing his shirt off his chest and roaring like a man possessed.

"I love the Australian Open. That court brings back the best memories of my career," Djokovic, who won his maiden Grand Slam title at Melbourne Park in 2008, said at the Hopman Cup.

"Obviously I know I can work on a few more things and adjustments to get it to the best possible level.

"But I am where I aim to be, where I want to be in this moment."

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