Six-time champ Novak Djokovic stunned by qualifier Denis Istomin at Australian Open

Breaking down the details of one of the biggest men's tennis upsets in history, as No. 117-ranked Denis Istomin defeated six-time champion and No. 2 Novak Djokovic in the second round at the Australian Open.
Six-time champ Novak Djokovic stunned by qualifier Denis Istomin at Australian Open
Six-time champ Novak Djokovic stunned by qualifier Denis Istomin at Australian Open /

In a titanic upset—the biggest men’s tennis upset in recent memory—Uzbek wild card Denis Istomin knocked off defending champion and six-time champ Novak Djokovic at the Australian Open today, 7-6(8), 5-7, 2-6, 7-6(5), 6-4. There is now a chasm—not a hole—in the bottom half of the draw. After winning four straight majors through the spring, Djokovic has now lost at the last three. But this one is a true stunner. The King of Melbourne, Djokovic was sent off by a player who needed a wild card simply to get in the field. Incorporating as many of your questions as possible:

What happened?

Well, let’s start with Istomin, a veteran at the tail end of his career who was gifted a spot in the field—he played, and lost, Asian Challengers, for preparation—who played the match of his life. Against perhaps the best player in the history of this tournament and the best defensive player in recent memory, Istomin was sharper and more assertive, clubbing 63 winners. Then at the crucible moment of his career, her served out the match at 5-4 in the fifth set. “I feel sorry for Novak, I was playing so good,” he said afterward. Amen to that.

Denis Istomin upsets No. 2 Novak Djokovic in second round of Australian Open

How worried should we be about Djokovic?

Worried. Players have lapses. Athletes need mental breaks. Losing two straight Slams isn’t terrible, especially when you reach the final of one of them. But this was the event he’s all but owned since 2008. Losing in the second round to a player you usually beat in your sleep? Not being able to find a way to win against a player outside the top 100? At age 29 which, these days, is still a meaty part of your career? Now we’re in something approaching crisis mode.

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Scott Barbour/Getty Images

Istomin over Djokovic is the biggest upset since…..

I’m at a loss, especially if we limit this to men. Other top contenders have been knocked off at their choice Slam. Roger Federer lost at Wimbledon to Sergiy Stakhovsky. (But he was in his 30s and it was grass, where there are kooky results.) Rafa Nadal lost at the French Open to Robin Soderling in 2009. (But Soderling was a top 10-caliber player.) Djokovic—again, the duke of Melbourne—losing in the second round to a wild is just shocking, an all-time shocker. Maybe George Bastl beating Sampras at Wimbledon in 2002. But this was a stunner…

Australian Open day 4 results: Pliskova easily advances to third round

Is Djokovic injured?

Ironically we saw the top seed, Andy Murray, turn his right ankle last night, which we thought could change the draw. Djokovic, to his credit, made no mention to physical decline. “We both looked okay after four and half hours,” he said. His shots seemed to lack the usual punch. But he’s always had an allergy to fatigue and was still moving well after nearly five hours. “In the game of tennis,” he said gamely, “one guy beats the other guy.”

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Scott Barbour/Getty Images

Who is Denis Istomin?

He’s been around a while and is perhaps best known for being coached by his mother. He reached a high of No. 33 five years ago, but has declined since. He was here only because the Australian Open awards a wild card to a player from the Asia region. As a player from Uzbekistan, he was eligible.

Who wins this tournament now?

That scream you heard? It was the rest of the field collectively exalting. Andy Murray is the top seed and five-time losing finalist here (four of them coming against Djokovic.) Grigor Dimitrov is a player who is poised for a breakthrough. Really, the whole men’s draw changed on Thursday afternoon.

While others look to ascend, No. 1 seeds Kerber, Murray simply want to stay put

Five thoughts on the day session on Day 4

• Two of the beneficiaries from the Djokovic loss: Grigor Dimitrov and Alexander Zverev. Zverev sent off American Frances Tiafoe, who can take consolation in playing competitively against the men’s tennis Flavor of the Month.

• Make middle child jokes at your peril. But all hail Jenn Brady, the American qualifier and former UCLA star who advanced to round three with a win over Heather Watson.

• Not exactly daring to suggest that the fifth seed and finalist at the previous major is a player to watch. But Karolina Pliskova is dialed in, as the kids say. She won today 6-2, 6-0 over Anna Blinkova, scarcely stopping to Blinkova.

• Striking how little we are speaking about Gael Monfils, who is the sixth seed, his highest placement ever at a Grand Slam. The Monf has played seven sets and won six sets, beating Alex Dolgopolov—who makes Monfils look steady—on Wednesday, 6-3, 6-4, 1-6, 6-0.

• While she lost this point:

Carolina Garcia prevailed in three sets over countrywoman Oceane Dodin.

We’ll do Q/A tomorrow….

Snapshots from Day 4

Australian Open 2017 Day 4

Denis Istomin

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Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

"It is unreal. To beat Novak in five sets, it's a great win, you know. I'm still feel tired little bit. I didn't expect what I'm doing now and what I did on the court. I like the way I am playing. I mean, I feel just tired. I don't think about that I win against No. 2 in the world."

Ekaterina Makarova

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Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Grigor Dimitrov

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Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Caroline Wozniacki

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Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

Johanna Konta

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Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

"I think in turn, a lot of it is time. And then a lot of it is also, I don't know what it is about fate or being in the right place at the right time. I think some things need to come together, and, yeah, I love what I do, so hopefully I'll be around for many more years with my body staying healthy."

Dominika Cibulkova

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Milos Raonic

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Rafael Nadal

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"I know I have been working great. I know I have been working a lot and very well. I have been practicing at high level. So every time that I have the chance to go on court, I am able to have more confidence on what I'm doing. I have now a chance after tomorrow. That's an important thing for me. I'm very happy for that."

Denis Istomin

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Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

Gael Monfils

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Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Novak Djokovic

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Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

Jennifer Brady

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Jack Thomas/Getty Images

Denis Istomin, Novak Djokovic

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Scott Barbour/Getty Images

Mirjana Lucic-Baroni

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Mark Kolbe/Getty Images

Mirjana Lucic-Baroni

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Mark Kolbe/Getty Images

Daria Gavrilova

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Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

"I'm happy with the way I'm playing right now. Nothing much to improve. Just a few tactical things against players that I'm playing. I've been playing some big hitters the whole Aussie summer, to be honest. I'm just hustling."

Dominic Thiem

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Serena Williams

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"Honestly, it's not ideal. But at the end of the day, when I play players like Bencic and Safarova, they force me to play better. It forces my game from the very first day to be at a high level. So I think it's actually good. You know, I needed something to start really fast. I'm not going to complain about it."

Lucie Safarova, Serena Williams

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Lucie Safarova

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Published
Jon Wertheim
JON WERTHEIM

Jon Wertheim is a senior writer for Sports Illustrated and has been part of the full-time SI writing staff since 1997, largely focusing on the tennis beat , sports business and social issues, and enterprise journalism. In addition to his work at SI, he is a correspondent for "60 Minutes" and a commentator for The Tennis Channel. He has authored 11 books and has been honored with two Emmys, numerous writing and investigative journalism awards, and the Eugene Scott Award from the International Tennis Hall of Fame. Wertheim is a longtime member of the New York Bar Association (retired), the International Tennis Writers Association and the Writers Guild of America. He has a bachelor's in history from Yale University and received a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania. He resides in New York City with his wife, who is a divorce mediator and adjunct law professor. They have two children.