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When rivals turn allies: unpacking the Novak Djokovic-Andy Murray coaching arrangement

When rivals turn allies: unpacking the Novak Djokovic-Andy Murray coaching arrangement

Hiring a coach is not an exact science. There is no single foundational principle that guides athletes through this process and there is no overarching hypothesis against which a coach’s worth can be tested. It’s more abstract, less quantifiable.

In an individual discipline like tennis, it is all the more difficult. There is a need for personalities to match, and cohesion, trust and mutual respect are non-negotiable. If anything, luck often plays an outsized role in zeroing in on the right person.

Anticipated storyline

Against this backdrop, how does one look at the Novak Djokovic-Andy Murray combination? The mouthwatering — at least on paper — player-coach partnership will debut at the Australian Open, the season’s first Grand Slam tournament, that gets underway on Sunday, and is already one of the most anticipated storylines going into Melbourne.

Born a week apart in May 1987, the Serb and the Brit have known each other since childhood. And for two years in 2015-16, when Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal were off pace, theirs was men’s tennis’ pre-eminent rivalry, featuring 12 clashes, nine of them in finals, including three at the Majors.

Murray is a three-time Slam champion, eight-time runner-up and former World No. 1. In fact, the 37-year-old was an active player — though far diminished from his glory days — until August 2024. It is perhaps this pedigree, champion mentality and intricate knowledge of the ever-shifting sands of modern-day tennis that prompted Djokovic to turn to Murray.

Forging a weapon: Djokovic has had success picking coaches. He struck gold with Goran Ivanisevic, who helped him master the art of clutch serving. | Photo credit: Getty Images

Forging a weapon: Djokovic has had success picking coaches. He struck gold with Goran Ivanisevic, who helped him master the art of clutch serving. | Photo credit: Getty Images

At 37, Djokovic is in the last leg of his career. The 24-time Major winner hasn’t won a Tour-level title since November 2023 and is in the midst of his worst run at the Slams since 2016-18 when he went eight events without a trophy. He is entering the Australian Open — a title he has acquired a whopping 10 times — ranked No. 7 in the world. Starting 2008, the year of his first triumph Down Under, only once before has Djokovic touched down in Melbourne ranked outside the top-five — in 2018 when he lost in the round of 16.

Djokovic is also the last man standing from the famed ‘Big Three’ era, hoping to delay the inevitable takeover of the sport by the scintillating duo of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner. As the sport…

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