Novak Djokovic didn't defeat Jannik Sinner in the semifinals of Wimbledon 2026, and maybe he couldn't. He was able to dispatch the Italian in the semis of the Australian Open this year, but those kinds of wins are becoming more difficult to find.
A 39-year-old professional tennis player, even arguably the best player of all-time, against a high-end opponent who is just 24 years old is difficult, no matter what kind of success the older player has had. Which, of course, begs the question: Would Djokovic be able to beat an in-form Sinner if both were in their early mid-20s?
Djokovic asked that question himself during his loss to Sinner. After falling far behind and after Sinner hit an ace, the crowd reacted loudly, and someone voiced a question that wasn't clearly heard except by the Serbian. The player responded with the brutally bittersweet answer, "10 years ago maybe..."
If Novak Djokovic were 10 years younger a match against Jannik Sinner would be epic
Almost every athlete, as they age, will lose a half-step. That might not matter against lesser competition, but against someone of the same peer class, it does matter. Djokovic can beat most ATP players, but when he takes on Sinner or Carlos Alcaraz, the narrative changes.
Tennis devotees often debate who the best player ever is. Some point to Roger Federer, of course, and some even to players such as Bjorn Borg, depending on the surface. Does, in fact, an in-prime Rafael Nadal defeat an in-prime Borg at the French Open with the same type of racket? Nadal's has a ridiculous record of 112-4 at Roland Garros. Borg's is 49-2.
What no one knows, not even AI-generated games, is how well a young Djokovic would do against a young Sinner or Alcaraz (or young Borg or John McEnroe). The greatness of tennis is that it isn't just physical skill versus physical skill, but nuance and intelligence too. What a player did in 1965 could translate to 2026 if both opponents are playing with the same racket technology.
A 29-year-old Novak Djokovic (as he said, if he were "10 years younger") versus a 24-year-old Jannik Sinner would be elite. Having a Wimbledon final would make that even better.
The bittersweetness comes when Djokovic offers the possibility through a slight yearning. If an age change could become fact, things would be even better. Otherwise, we are left with what we saw in the Wimbledon 2026 semifinal between Djokovic and Jannik Sinner: Two great players, but one well past their prime and the other just entering it.
