
Djokovic wins five-set Wimbledon epic
Novak Djokovic defeats Felix Auger-Aliassime in the longest Wimbledon quarter-final in history at five hours and 15 minutes, to set up a meeting with Jannik…
- Center-left3
- Center3
- Center-right1
- Right1
2 agency rewrites / co-publications detected
Summary
Novak Djokovic defeats Felix Auger-Aliassime in the longest Wimbledon quarter-final in history at five hours and 15 minutes, to set up a meeting with Jannik Sinner in the final four at SW19. The 39-year-old struck a similar tone in his post-match press conference. Add us as a preferred source on Google Follow.
Furthermore, Novak Djokovic performed a little elbows-to-knees dance. The records - an eighth consecutive Wimbledon semi-final, the 15th of his career - did not matter. “Right now, it's all business,” Djokovic confirmed. Against Auger-Aliassime, an innocuous slide to a backhand led to him tweaking his left calf and needing a medical timeout.
In addition, His movement was hindered for the rest of the first set, particularly on serve, but he was helped on his way to taking the opener by a series of errors from the Canadian. Hopefully I can do it in a few more matches here.”.
Cross-referenced from 7 sources across 4 countries and 2 languages.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
Novak Djokovic defeats Felix Auger-Aliassime in the longest Wimbledon quarter-final in history at five hours and 15 minutes, to set up a meeting with Jannik Sinner in the final four at SW19.
reliability moderate3/4 sources
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
The 39-year-old struck a similar tone in his post-match press conference.
according to Sports IllustratedAdd us as a preferred source on Google Follow
according to Sports IllustratedNovak Djokovic performed a little elbows-to-knees dance.
according to New York PostThe records - an eighth consecutive Wimbledon semi-final, the 15th of his career - did not matter. “Right now, it's all business,” Djokovic confirmed.
according to The IndependentAgainst Auger-Aliassime, an innocuous slide to a backhand led to him tweaking his left calf and needing a medical timeout.
according to BBC SportHis movement was hindered for the rest of the first set, particularly on serve, but he was helped on his way to taking the opener by a series of errors from the Canadian.
according to BBC SportHopefully I can do it in a few more matches here.”
according to The Independent
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
Right side
- racket
- triumph
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
But then, this is Novak Djokovic.
omitted byLeft sideRight sidecovered byCenterRight sideNovak Djokovic defeats Felix Auger-Aliassime in the longest Wimbledon quarter-final in history at five hours and 15 minutes, to set up a…
omitted byRight sidecovered byLeft sideCenterRight side
Sources8 sources cross-checked
Center-right1
Right1