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Being part of the Federer/Nadal era a career booster, says Novak Djokovic

ByReuters

Updated 06/06/2016 at 07:37 GMT

The moment Novak Djokovic accepted that being part of the Roger Federer/Rafael Nadal era was a chance, not a curse, everything improved for him.

erbia's Novak Djokovic (C) posing with his trophy flanked by his coach former German tennis player Boris Becker (C-R) in the locker room after winning the men's final match against Britain's Andy Murray at the Roland Garros 2016 French Tennis Open in Pari

Image credit: AFP

On Sunday, after winning his first French Open title, he was still behind the Swiss and the Spaniard in terms of major titles but he had achieved something the two have not yet managed -- holding all four Grand Slams at the same time.
When the Serbian won the first of his 12 majors, at the 2008 Australian Open, a 22-year-old Nadal had already won three Roland Garros titles and Federer, then 26, had claimed 12 of his record 17 grand slams.
"At the beginning I was not glad to be part of their era," Djokovic said with a smile after beating second seed Andy Murray in Sunday's Roland Garros final.
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Djokovic describes out-of-body experience after beating Murray

"Later on I realised that in life everything happens for a reason. You're put in this position with a purpose, a purpose to learn and to grow and to evolve.
"Fortunately for me I realised that I needed to get stronger and that I need to accept the fact that I'm competing with these two tremendous champions and then everything was uphill from that moment on."
While he could feel frustrated that Federer, Nadal, with 14, and to a lesser extent Murray, who has won two, deprived him of more Grand Slam titles, Djokovic believes the rivalries within the 'Big Four' have made him a better player, and tennis a better sport.
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Serbia's Novak Djokovic returns the ball to Britain's Andy Murray during their men's final match at the Roland Garros 2016 French Tennis Open in Paris on June 5, 2016

Image credit: AFP

"These two guys -- and Andy as well -- the rivalries with all three of the guys have definitely, in a big part... helped me to become a better player and helped me achieve all these things," he said.
"The rivalries that we have are important for the sport, and in one way or another you try to compare yourself to them and what they have achieved before.
"Nadal and Federer were so dominant in the sport when Andy and myself came in the mix."
Djokovic can now turn his sights towards a calendar Grand Slam that was last achieved in 1969 by Laver.
Having won the Australian Open and the French Open, he needs to win at Wimbledon and the US Open.
"I don't want to sound arrogant, but I think everything is achievable in life," he said.
"Whether or not I can reach a calendar slam, that's still a possibility. But I don't think about it right now. Right now I just try to enjoy this experience of winning the trophy that I had never won before."
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Highlights: Novak Djokovic wins maiden French Open title

OUR VIEW

Novak Djokovic has joined the pantheon of the greats; he is legitimately in the ‘greatest ever’ conversation. Would that have happened were he not encountered the talents of Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer? Djokovic claimed his first Grand Slam in 2008 but had to wait to 2011 to his second at the Australian Open, such was the talent of Nadal and Federer.
And now Roger Federer’s incredible haul of 17 is in sight. If Djokovic couples his career slam wit overhauling Federer then it is hard to argue against him being the greatest ever.
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