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Thiem scare for Djokovic

World No. 2 shrugs off early lethargy to see off Austrian

Novak Djokovic survived a scare at the start of his bid to regain the world No. 1 ranking as the Serb battled back for a 6-7 (10/12), 6-0, 6-2 victory over Austria's Dominic Thiem at the ATP Tour Finals yesterday morning (Singapore time).

Djokovic's 122-week reign at the top was ended by Andy Murray last weekend.

However, he can climb back into pole position if he lifts the Tour Finals title for a fifth successive year while winning at least two group-stage matches.

The 29-year-old remains on track to achieve that target despite a shaky first set in the opening match of the prestigious season-ending tournament at London's O2 Arena.

And amid all the questions about Djokovic's decline, he can still clinch the season-ending No. 1 spot for a third consecutive year and equal Roger Federer's record of six Tour Finals titles by the end of next week.

"Dominic started very well and we played on a very high level from the first point," Djokovic said.

"He had a very high serve percentage and was the tougher player in the key moments of the tie-break. I definitely did not want to let him get off to a good start in the second set."

Wimbledon finalist Milos Raonic beat flamboyant Frenchman Gael Monfils 6-3, 6-4 in the other match in Djokovic's group yesterday morning.

Djokovic, after shaking off his early lethargy, eventually blew Thiem away emphatically and is now 19-1 in his last 20 matches at the Tour Finals.

The world No. 2 was in the wars early on when he needed a bandage on the thumb on his right hand after his racket jammed into the court.

UNSETTLED

The 12-time Grand Slam winner staved off a break-point at 5-5, but Djokovic remained an unsettled figure, grumbling to a line judge: "Was it in or out? Or do you just not know?"

His gloomy mood was hardly improved when Thiem took the first set in a dramatic tie-break after the Serb had saved six set-points and squandered one of his own.

He slammed a ball hard into the court once the set was lost and it bounced into the stands, drawing a warning for unsportsmanlike conduct.

In danger of another loss, Djokovic was finally able to turn his anger into a positive at the start of the second set with some powerful winners.

Two breaks in the first three games gave him a lifeline and he took the set without dropping a single game.

London has been good to Raonic this year, with the Canadian reaching the finals of Wimbledon and Queen's, and he looked at home on his return to the English capital.

The 25-year-old broke in the second game of a first set which he won with minimum fuss.

Monfils, appearing in the Tour Finals for the first time, was no match for the big-serving Raonic and the world No. 4 wrapped up the win after he broke in the seventh game of the second set. - AFP.

Tennis