MELBOURNE, Australia — As only true champions do, Novak Djokovic assessed a tournament where he got within two sets of achieving a record 25th Grand Slam title as something to work on.
In an Australian Open final where both men were chasing history, 22-year-old Carlos Alcaraz came back to beat Djokovic in four sets on Sunday night.
''You're speaking to me 10 minutes after I lost the final, so of course I'm going to be a little bit bitter about losing,'' Djokovic said in his official post-final news conference. ''But, again, I lost to a No. 1 in the world and already a legendary player.''
It was the first time Djokovic has ever lost a final at Melbourne Park, where he's won 10 of his 24 Grand Slam singles titles. That's already a record in men's tennis and in the Open era. It's something he's still determined to improve on.
He ended a sequence of four semifinal losses at the Slams with a semifinal win over two-time defending Australian Open champion Jannik Sinner, one of the two men who've been blocking his path to that 25th championship for two years.
He took a set off the other one — Alcaraz — but couldn't complete the job, not quite recovering from the epic semifinal that didn't finish until after 1:30 a.m. on Saturday.
1 out of 2
''I knew that I'd probably have to beat two of them on the way to the title,'' Djokovic said. ''I beat one, which is great, so it's a step more further than I have gone in Grand Slams than last year. Very nice, encouraging.