Tennis-Djokovic targets record 25th Grand Slam but poor build‑up clouds Paris bid


Tennis - Italian Open - Foro Italico, Rome, Italy - May 8, 2026 Serbia's Novak Djokovic in action during his second round match against Croatia's Dino Prizmic REUTERS/Ciro De Luca

BENGALURU, May 20 (Reuters) - Novak ⁠Djokovic heads to the French Open with the singular goal of winning a record 25th ⁠Grand Slam title, but his chances of making history have dimmed thanks to a disrupted ‌2026 campaign that has left the Serb searching for sharpness.

Djokovic has played sparingly since losing to Carlos Alcaraz in the Australian Open final in February, the 38-year-old managing his workload as he deals with a niggling shoulder issue.

An early defeat by Dino ​Prizmic at the Italian Open this month and the decision to ⁠skip his Geneva title defence have ⁠left Djokovic with limited claycourt preparation ahead of the year's second Grand Slam, which begins on Sunday.

"It's not ⁠ideal," ‌he said.

"I don't recall the last time I had in the last couple years a preparation where I didn't have any kind of physical issues or health issues coming into the ⁠tournament.

"There's always something. A new reality that I have to deal ​with. It's frustrating. At the ‌same time, it's my decision to still perform in that state and condition. It is ⁠what it is."

Djokovic, who ​will be 39 when the action gets underway in Paris, is struggling to cope with the physical toll a career lasting more than two decades has taken on his body but it would be a mistake to write ⁠him off.

He overcame a knee injury that needed surgery to ​dismantle Alcaraz and claim Olympic gold on the red dirt of Paris only two years ago, showing the resilience that has underlined his glorious career.

However, mental toughness alone is no guarantee of success at this level ⁠and Djokovic knows what his game is missing.

"I'm not definitely where I want to be for the highest level and to compete at the highest level and to be able to get far," he added after his Rome campaign ended in the second round.

"Eventually you have to play. You have to start ​somewhere. I wanted to start earlier, but I couldn't. You just adapt ⁠to it and make the most of it.

"I train as much as the body allows me to. How ​it turns out on the court, that's really unpredictable."

With defending champion ‌Alcaraz sidelined by a wrist injury, world number one ​Jannik Sinner looms as the main obstacle should Djokovic rediscover his rhythm in time and progress deep into the French Open.

(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

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