Djokovic, Azarenka Complete Sunshine Doubles

April 4, 2016 | By New York Tennis Magazine Staff
Azarenka_Credit_Matthew_Stockman_0
Photo credit: Matthew Stockman

Both Novak Djokovic and Victoria Azarenka followed up their victories at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells a couple of weeks ago by triumphing at the Miami Open this past weekend, completing what is known as the Sunshine Double.

On Saturday, Belarus’ Azarenka took on Svetlana Kuznetsova, the Russian who captured the Miami title 10 years ago in 2006. But Azarenka was just too much for Kuznetsova, overpowering her for a 6-3, 6-2 victory.

Azarenka broke immediately to open up a 2-0 in the first set and would go on to hold serve to win the opener. She would pick up the only two break points in the second set and relinquished nothing on serve the whole match, hitting 23 winners and just 18 unforced errors.

Azarenka now joins Steffi Graf and Kim Clijsters as the only two players to win both Indian Wells and Miami in the same year.

“It’s an honor to stand next to those amazing champions,” said Azarenka. “This just gives me even more inspiration and motivation to keep working harder, because this feels great.”

On the men’s side, Djokovic continued his dominance over the rest of the field, breezing past Japan’s Kei Nishikori 6-3, 6-4 on Sunday afternoon to capture the Miami Open title.

Nishikori struck first in this one, breaking in the opening game of the match. But Djokovic responded with a break, and one more break allowed him to go on to take the set 6-3.

In the second set, Djokovic broke for a 2-0 lead and never looked back, serving out the rest of the set to notch the straight-set victory for his sixth career Miami Open title.

“Every year that I come back to Miami I do go through those memories from back in 2007. It was the first Masters 1000 I won and opened a lot of doors for me,” Djokovic said of what the tournament means to him. “It gave me a lot of self-belief. I started to realize that I’m able to win the big trophies and to beat the best players in the world. So of course, this is a special place for me to come back to, now winning it six times. Obviously I don’t take any win for granted and especially the big ones. So it was my best performance of the tournament. It came at the right time against a great quality player.”

With the win, the 714th of his career, Djokovic passed his coach, Boris Becker, for 11th place on the Open Era match wins list.


New York Tennis Magazine Staff
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