Djokovic to undergo scans as shock Rome exit follows bottle drama
Novak Djokovic described his shock third-round elimination from the
Rome Open by Alejandro Tabilo on Sunday as "concerning", two days
after he was hit on the head by a bottle which he said has caused nausea and
dizzy spells.
Djokovic bid for a record-extending 41st Masters
1000 title was ended in just over an hour by Chilean Tabilo, who is ranked 32nd
in the world and claimed his first win over a top-10 opponent, 6-2, 6-3.
The 24-time Grand Slam winner said that his subdued
performance on a court where he has won six titles might have been due to the
blow suffered while greeting fans on Friday night.
He had initially laughed off being accidentally
struck on the head by a hard water bottle following his straightforward
second-round win over Corentin Moutet, by wearing a cycling crash helmet to
training on Saturday morning.
"I don't know, to be honest. I have to check
that. Training was different. I was going for kind of easy training yesterday.
I didn't feel anything, but I also didn't feel the same," Djokovic told
reporters.
"Today under high stress, it was quite bad --
not in terms of pain, but in terms of this balance. Just no coordination.
Completely different player from what it was two nights ago."
Djokovic also said that he would have scans to
"see what's going on" before the French Open in Paris, where he will
head not just worried by the after-effects of the bottle incident but also his
form.
The last time Djokovic got to Roland Garros without
a title to his name that season was in 2018, when his first honour of the
campaign came at Wimbledon.
With the French Open getting underway in two weeks
and where he is the defending champion, Djokovic admitted that "everything
needs to be better in order for me to have at least a chance to win" a
25th Grand Slam.
"The way I felt on the court today was just
completely like a different player entered into my shoes," added Djokovic.
"It's a bit concerning."
Djokovic early elimination means that the last major men's tournament before Roland Garros is now wide open with third seed Alexander Zverev beating home hope Luciano Drderi, ranked 54th in the world, 7-6 (7/3), 6-2.
Tabilo was a worthy winner against Djokovic after
tearing into his superstar opponent, claiming the biggest win of his career in
remarkable style by hitting 22 winners, making just four unforced errors and
not facing a single break point.
"Honestly in no moment was I like, Okay, I can
win this," said a delighted Tabilo.
"I was playing incredible tennis. Just wanted
to keep that level... The whole match I was just trying to take it point by
point, not think about the score. Every point was like the start of the
match."
Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka will face
Elina Svitolina for the first time since their handshake row at last year's
French Open after both cruised into the last women's last 16.
Second seed Sabalenka beat Dayana Yastremska, 6-4, 6-2
to set up a clash in the next round with Svitolina, a two-time winner at the
Foro Italico, who comfortably beat Anna Kalinskaya 6-3, 6-3.
Svitolina accused Belarusian Sabalenka of inflaming
tensions surrounding the Russia-Ukraine war for waiting at the net for a
handshake after beating Ukrainian Svitolina in the Roland Garros quarter-finals
in 2023.
Svitolina had already insisted she was not going to
offer one, as all Ukraine players refused to shake hands with Russian and
Belarusian rivals in protest at the ongoing war.
Sabalenka, who has never won in Rome but is a two-time champion on the Madrid clay, looks in good shape to at least match her 2022 run to the semi-finals.
Earlier fifth seed Maria Sakkari lined up a probable last-16 clash with Victoria Azarenka who beat 80th-ranked Egyptian Mayar Sherif 6-2, 6-7 (6/8), 6-3.

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