Pushing one of the all-time greats at a Grand Slam tournament is a measure of how far Norrie has come over the past several months.
After a chastening first-round exit at the Miami Open in March, Norrie flew home to Europe and had a deep think about the direction of his career.
The 2022 Wimbledon semi-finalist was perilously close to dropping out of the world’s top 100, struggling to regain form and confidence following a forearm injury which disrupted his 2024 season.
A heart-to-heart with his team followed. The collective conclusion was the group needed to lighten up a little, vowing to enjoy life on tour more again.
Since then, Norrie has reached the French Open fourth round – where he lost to Djokovic – and the Wimbledon quarter-finals.
Even another defeat by Djokovic did not leave him overly disappointed, given where he found himself earlier this year.
“It has been fun – I wouldn’t change anything in this tournament,” said Norrie.
“There is so much to smile about.”
Before the match, Norrie said he was “ready for anything” from Djokovic – including seeing him struggle with fitness issues before regaining his level.
That is exactly what happened on an entertaining night on Ashe.
Norrie wanted to turn the match into a physical contest, given Djokovic’s perceived vulnerabilities, but was unable to sustain his level.
“I wouldn’t change too much, I tried to play my brand of tennis, I tried to make it physical,” said Norrie.
“In the third and fourth sets I gave him too many cheap points and that was the difference.”
WWE Now working for the upstart freestyle wrestling promotion, Real American Freestyle, which was founded,…
Outclassing South Africa by 52 runs in the final of the 2025 Womenâ€s ODI World…
It was very much poetic and fitting that Deepti Sharma picked up the last wicket…
WWE WWE Saturday Night's Main Event was up against Game 7 of the World Series,…
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia -- Top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka put on a dominant serving display in her…
The WWE Universe will soon learn of John Cena’s final opponent, who will not be…
This website uses cookies.