Marko Djokovic Explained

Marko Djokovic
Residence:Belgrade, Serbia
Birth Date:20 August 1991
Birth Place:Belgrade, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia (modern Serbia)
Turnedpro:2007
Retired:2019 (last match)
Plays:Right-handed (two-handed backhand)
Careerprizemoney:US$ 89,765
Singlestitles:0
Highestsinglesranking:No. 571 (14 January 2019)
Australianopenjuniorresult:1R (2008)
Doublestitles:0
Highestdoublesranking:No. 323 (18 March 2019)
Updated:29 August 2022

Marko Djokovic (Serbian: Марко Ђоковић|translit=Marko Đoković, pronounced as /mâːrkɔ d͡ʑɔ̂ːkɔʋit͡ɕ/; born 20 August 1991) is a Serbian former tennis player. He is the middle of the three children of Dijana and Srđan Đoković,[1] younger brother of Novak and elder to Djordje Djokovic. Djokovic was included as a fifth player in a Serbian Davis Cup team for a quarterfinal tie against Croatia in the 2010 Davis Cup.

Tennis career

Djokovic appeared on the junior ITF circuit in September 2006. In July 2007, he failed to qualify for the Croatia Open Umag, losing to Pablo Andújar 6–2, 6–1 in the 1st round of qualifying.[2] He also played, with his elder brother Novak, one doubles match in his career, having been beaten by Édouard Roger-Vasselin and Mathieu Montcourt 7–5, 6–1. Djokovic also has lost in two Futures tournaments in Novi Sad in the first round, both times to compatriot Saša Stojisavljević. He contested the Australian Open juniors in 2008, losing in the first round to Clifford Marsland in 3 sets. Djokovic won his first junior title at the Montenegro Open in Podgorica, defeating Ljubomir Čelebić in the final.[3] In July 2008, Djokovic received a wildcard entry into the qualifying rounds of the Croatia Open Umag but was beaten by Italian Francesco Piccari.[4] In September 2008, in his first ever main ATP Tour event, he received a wildcard entry into the main draw of the Thailand Open.[5] He was defeated in the first round by Jarkko Nieminen 6–2, 6–0. On 7 May 2009, Djokovic, with Darko Mađarovski (as a wildcard pair), defeated ATP doubles world number 2 duo Daniel Nestor and Nenad Zimonjić, by 7–6, 2–6, [10–6], in the opening round of the Serbia Open, an ATP World Tour 250 tournament. This was Marko's first ever ATP win. He was included as a fifth player in the Serbian Davis Cup team for their quarterfinal tie against Croatia in the 2010 Davis Cup[6] – a standard practice of Tennis Federation of Serbia and Davis Cup captain Bogdan Obradović for each tie to invite a different talented young player to practice with regular players and gain necessary experience.[7] Djokovic was given a wildcard for the 2012 Dubai Duty Free tournament and opened the ATP World Tour 500 event against Andrei Golubev of Kazakhstan, losing in straight sets.[8] According to his elder brother Novak, he had stopped playing tennis in 2015,[9] but Marko has since played again in qualifying competitions on the ATP Challenger Tour since 2017, successfully surpassing this phase in the 2018 Copa Sevilla. The change in the ATP ranking points to start the 2019 season propelled Djokovic to a career-high ranking of world No. 574.[10]

Career statistics

Challengers and Futures finals

Singles 2 (1–1)

Legend
Challengers (0–0)
Futures (1–1)
OutcomeDateTournamentSurfaceOpponentScore
bgcolor=FFA07A Runner-up1.15 August 2010Novi Sad, Serbia F5Clay Aldin Šetkić1–6, 1–6
bgcolor=98FB98 Winner1.15 July 2012Belgrade, Serbia F5Clay Carlos Gómez-Herrera4–1 ret.

Doubles 6 (5–1)

Legend
Challengers (0–0)
Futures (5–1)
OutcomeDateTournamentSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
bgcolor=98FB98 Winner1.14 July 2012Belgrade, Serbia F5Clay Matthew Short Bojan Zdravković
Stefan Micov
7–6(7–4), 7–5
bgcolor=98FB98 Winner2.18 August 2012Novi Sad, Serbia F9Clay Carlos Gómez-Herrera Mate Čutura
Franjo Raspudić
6–4, 6–3
bgcolor=98FB98 Winner3.13 July 2013Belgrade, Serbia F4Clay Matthew Short Ivan Bjelica
Matej Sabanov
6–4, 6–4
bgcolor=98FB98 Winner4.9 November 2013Heraklion, Greece F18Hard Carlos Gómez-Herrera Luke Bambridge
Oliver Golding
6–1, 6–7(3–6), [13–11]
bgcolor=FFA07A Runner-up1.21 June 2014Belgrade, Serbia F2Clay Ljubomir Čelebić Jake Eames
Gavin Van Peperzeel
2–6, 0–6
bgcolor=98FB98 Winner5.11 November 2017Heraklion, Greece F8Hard Carlos Gómez-Herrera Conor Berg
Mousheg Hovhannisyan
6–1, 6–2

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Serbian players emerge from a broken country . 2009-02-17 . International Herald Tribune.
  2. Web site: Croatia Open Umag – 2007 Singles qualify drawn .
  3. Web site: Montenegro Open – Drawsheet . 2008-08-23 . juniortennis.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110725115753/http://www.juniortennis.com/ajt/tournamentinfo.php?t_id=16626&h_id=2515 . 2011-07-25 .
  4. Web site: Umag Open qualifying draw . 2008-08-23 . itftennis.com.
  5. Web site: Untitled Document . 2008-09-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080913034528/http://www.thailandopen.org/news_detail.php?nid=18&lang=eng . 2008-09-13 . dead .
  6. News: Marko je patriota! . 2017-11-12 . Večernje novosti . N. . Mandrapa . sr . 3 July 2010.
  7. News: Noletov brat pre Bozoljca i Krajinovića . 2017-11-12 . Press . S. . Đ. . sr . 5 July 2010.
  8. News: Djokovic's little brother fails to make his Marko . 2012-02-28 . atpworldtour.com . London . Paul . Newman . 28 February 2012.
  9. Web site: Djokovic says his younger brothers have added pressure.
  10. Web site: New Ranking System Bumps Novak Djokovic's Brother to Career-High Ranking. 2 January 2019.