Novak Djokovic asserted that he will react if someone crosses the line as the reflected on getting embroiled in another crowd controversy after his R16 Wimbledon victory against Holger Rune.
Rune confronted Djokovic’s claim that fans were being booing and disrespectful to him and assessed that the crowd support didn’t affect the result as the 24-time Grand Slam champion was just better than him on the day.
The former World No. 1 produced a tennis clinic to edge out the Dane 6-3, 6-4, 6-2. During the on-court interview, the Serbian took aim at sections of the Center Court crowd he felt lacked respect by chanting Rune’s name as an excuse to boo him.
Here is what Djokovic told the Center Court directly: “To all the fans that have had respect and stayed here tonight, I thank you from the bottom of my heart and I appreciate it.
“And to all those people that have chosen to disrespect the player, in this case me, have a goooooooood night. Goooooood night, goooooood night. Very good night. Yeah.
“They were [disrespecting me], they were, they were. I don’t accept it. No no no. I know they were cheering for Rune, but that’s an excuse to also boo.
“Listen, I have been on the tour for more than 20 years. So trust me, I know all the tricks. I know how it works. It’s fine, it’s fine, it’s okay.
“I focus on the respectful people that have respect, that pay [for] the ticket to come and watch tonight, and love tennis and appreciate the players and the effort that the players put in here. I played in much more hostile environments, trust me… you guys can’t touch me.”
During his post-match press conference, the 7-time Wimbledon champion was asked if the tournament should take action against the crowd segments that step over the line.
“I don’t know what Wimbledon can really do about it,” said the 37-year-old. “In those particular moments, when the crowd paid their ticket, they have the right to be there and cheer the way they want to cheer.
“That’s absolutely, you know, how they choose to behave or support the player is really up to them. Yes, you could argue that maybe a chair umpire or whoever could step in during certain moments and calm them down.
“But there’s not much you can do, you’re not gonna take out the section of the whole stadium out because they’re behaving or showing disrespect. It’s just the way it is. It’s part of the sport.
“It’s one of the reasons we’re here, it’s why the tournament is so important historically and why we’re globally recognized as tennis players is because of the fans. Because of the interest they put into watching tennis matches, paying tickets.
“I respect that. I try to acknowledge that. All the true tennis fans that really respect players. Of course, you’re gonna support one player over the other. It’s solely up to them. It’s fully understandable. They have the freedom to choose who they back in the match.
“If someone steps over the line, I react. That’s basically what it was. After the match, I said what I said.”
Rune countered Djokovic’s claim that fans had used the same supporting chants in his previous matches with Djokovic and argued the support had been present for both the players.
“It all started at US Open the first time we played each other, when the crowd chanted my name and it sounded a little bit like ‘boo’,” the Dane told reporters.
“Then we played each other many more times, more like in Italy and France where they don’t pronounce my name the same way. Yeah, now we’re in England. If you don’t know what was happening, probably it sounded like ‘boo.’
“But, if we all know what happened, it was my name. He’s played so many matches since he played me last time. If he didn’t remember, it could probably sound different for him. But I don’t think it played a massive part in the match. He was just better than me today.
“Whether the crowd was this or that, I think it was great support for both players to be honest. They were supporting him on good points. They were supporting me. Nice scenes on Centre Court,” said World No. 15.
Djokovic will take on world No 9 in-form Alex de Minaur in the Wimbledon quarter-finals on Wednesday.