As he marks the 20th anniversary of his 2002 Wimbledon title, Lleyton Hewitt knows the emotion Nick Kyrgios will experience as he faces Novak Djokovic in the final tonight.
London, Great Britain, 10 July 2022 | Vivienne Christie
Should Nick Kyrgios defeat six-time champion Novak Djokovic to claim the 2022 Wimbledon gentlemen’s singles title, he’ll join an elite group of Australian stars.
Kyrgios has the chance to become one of 16 Australian players to lift a gentlemen’s or ladies’ singles trophy at the All England Club.
Many milestone anniversaries of these victories have been celebrated this year.
It’s 70 years since Frank Sedgman swept the singles, doubles and mixed doubles titles at 1952 Wimbledon and 60 years since Rod Laver claimed the second of his four Wimbledon titles, on the path to a calendar-year Grand Slam, in 1962.
Perhaps most relatable for Kyrgios is the milestone 20 years since Lleyton Hewitt, now Australia’s Davis Cup captain, defeated Argentina’s David Nalbandian to claim his second Grand Slam singles title at Wimbledon in 2002.
“It’s such a special place for me.”
For @lleytonhewitt, there’s no place like #Wimbledon 🌱
Today, we celebrate 20 years since his stunning feat in 2002 🏆 pic.twitter.com/xYNJDun5i6— TennisAustralia (@TennisAustralia) July 7, 2022
Hewitt, who featured in Centre Court centenary celebrations at the 2022 Championships, vividly reveals the details of his win.
“There was a lot of pressure and expectation the whole tournament. It was my first time at Wimbledon going in as the world No.1 and the No.1 seed coming into the tournament,” he told Todd Woodbridge in a Channel Nine interview to mark his anniversary.
“It was completely different to the year before when I won at Flushing Meadows at the US Open and I was the real underdog going into the quarters, semis and final there.
“This was a different feeling. It was about controlling my emotions as much as anything, but I had incredible self-belief over those two weeks. I knew I was the best grass-court player in the world at that time.”
The self-belief proved justified, with the then-21-year-old Hewitt winning all but one of his seven matches in straight sets. After his quarterfinal against Dutch player Sjeng Schalken was a five-set marathon, Hewitt’s semifinal victory over British favourite Tim Henman may have been the Australian’s biggest test.
“It was like an Ashes battle,” Hewitt…
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