Djokovic has continued where he left off at the Australian Open
World number one Novak Djokovic began his Dubai Open campaign with a 6-1, 6-4 win over good friend Viktor Troicki on Tuesday.
According to AFP, Djokovic's proved too
strong for his fellow Davis Cup player with whom he grew up and shared tennis courts many times in the city of Belgrade.
The top-seeded Serbian moved so swiftly and turned defence into attack so suddenly that it was hard to believe four weeks had passed since he last played singles on the ATP tour.
The only blemish in Djokovic's performance was letting slip an early break of serve in the second set, when he delivered a moderate second serve and missed with a backhand drive to allow Troicki back to 4-4.
But he intensified his focus and broke again immediately, with some resilient containing and counter-attacking, and then closed out the match without fuss.
Afterwards, he told reporter: "Because I have not played for a while I was extremely focussed and committed to starting well. I played really, really well in the first set. I read his serve well, and I was aggressive in the court. So altogether I am satisfied with my performance and I hope I can continue," he concluded. That will be against Roberto Bautista Agut, the world number 55 from Spain."
Djokovic should have a semi-final against Juan Martin Del Potro, the former US Open champion, although the AFP reports that the Argentinian nearly did not survive beyond the first round.
Del Potro had to save four match points to beat Marcos Baghdatis, the former Australian Open finalist from Cyprus, by 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 (7/4).
Baghdatis, ranked 36, got his chances as Del Potro was serving at 4-5 in the final set, when the seeded player went 15-40 and then advantage point down.
On the first two match points Baghdatis was a little passive, allowing Del Potro to work his way out of difficulty, and on the third Del Potro launched a good first serve and a fine follow up forehand.
Earlier Nikolay Davydenko, who hopes to return to the top 20 this year as part of his farewell to the tour, brought comedy as well as an upset as he reached the second round.
The former world number three from Russia beat Janko Tipsarevic, the sixth-seeded Serbian, 6-0, 7-5 but took half an hour to capture the first two games, and fully 50 minutes to win the love set.
"After two games I was thinking 'match just starting - and I'm already tired', he said, creating a haggard expression.
Davydenko had a comic explanation for the sharp twist in the second set of a match which, having dominated, he found himself trailing by two breaks of serve.
"Really before the second set he, like, go to toilet and come back and start to play better. I don't know what he did there," he said, causing the press conference to rock with mirth.
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