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Flight lessons on grass: Novak Djokovic and the art of staying up after falling down.
Wimbledon, 2022. Two sets down to the electric Jannik Sinner, Novak Djokovic lay prone on the turf, arms outstretched like a child testing invisible wings. Spectators read fatigue in the sprawl; the Serb read only altitude. From that horizontal prelude he rose, rearranged the match’s architecture, and soared to a five-set triumph that kept his SW19 dominion intact. The slide, the glance, the grin—captured here in this Wimbledon print—crystallises a career spent converting peril into propulsion.
The ledger is already carved in tennis marble: twenty-four Grand Slam trophies, seven year-end Masters titles, an eye-watering forty Masters 1000 crowns. Add Olympic gold, the 2010 Davis Cup that made Belgrade shiver with joy, the inaugural ATP Cup of 2020, and—more than eight years’ worth—428 weeks atop the rankings. Records bow; numbers blink. But numbers do not giggle at their own impersonations of Sharapova’s grunt, nor do they wolf down gluten-free pancakes at 6 a.m. before a Melbourne heat-session. Djokovic does both, delighting in the oddities that fuel his edge.
Consider a few footnotes: the childhood nights in bomb-lit Kopaonik when basement corridors became makeshift practice alleys; the habit of writing motivational messages on hotel mirrors; the 2013 US Open semi-final when he asked a ball-kid for an impromptu racquet-spin to decide return sides—then laughed all the way to a five-setter against Wawrinka. Each vignette pipes oxygen into the statistics, reminding us that the engine purring beneath the champion’s chest is part monk, part street juggler.
Technical sages praise his elasticity, that “air-market split” which seems equally at home on clay, cement, or this freshly shaved ryegrass. Rivals, too, concede: Roger Federer calls Djokovic “the great escape artist,” while Rafael Nadal once quipped, “You can’t shake a man who looks calmer at match point down than at breakfast.” When endurance melds with serenity, history is obliged to expand.
This photograph, printed on gallery-grade stock, freezes the hinge between chaos and command—the instant Djokovicdecides the script is his to edit. Hang it as a tennis poster, let the eye wander along the blades of grass stilled beneath his torso, and feel your walls stretch into Centre Court reverie. It is more than décor; it is a syllabus on perseverance, an invitation to lie down only to rise higher.
Secure your Novak Djokovic print today—an emblem of resilience for any study, office, or training nook. Allow this piece of tennis wall art to remind you daily: even when flat on the ground, the sky is still within arm’s reach.
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➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
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➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
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➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
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➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Flight lessons on grass: Novak Djokovic and the art of staying up after falling down.
Wimbledon, 2022. Two sets down to the electric Jannik Sinner, Novak Djokovic lay prone on the turf, arms outstretched like a child testing invisible wings. Spectators read fatigue in the sprawl; the Serb read only altitude. From that horizontal prelude he rose, rearranged the match’s architecture, and soared to a five-set triumph that kept his SW19 dominion intact. The slide, the glance, the grin—captured here in this Wimbledon print—crystallises a career spent converting peril into propulsion.
The ledger is already carved in tennis marble: twenty-four Grand Slam trophies, seven year-end Masters titles, an eye-watering forty Masters 1000 crowns. Add Olympic gold, the 2010 Davis Cup that made Belgrade shiver with joy, the inaugural ATP Cup of 2020, and—more than eight years’ worth—428 weeks atop the rankings. Records bow; numbers blink. But numbers do not giggle at their own impersonations of Sharapova’s grunt, nor do they wolf down gluten-free pancakes at 6 a.m. before a Melbourne heat-session. Djokovic does both, delighting in the oddities that fuel his edge.
Consider a few footnotes: the childhood nights in bomb-lit Kopaonik when basement corridors became makeshift practice alleys; the habit of writing motivational messages on hotel mirrors; the 2013 US Open semi-final when he asked a ball-kid for an impromptu racquet-spin to decide return sides—then laughed all the way to a five-setter against Wawrinka. Each vignette pipes oxygen into the statistics, reminding us that the engine purring beneath the champion’s chest is part monk, part street juggler.
Technical sages praise his elasticity, that “air-market split” which seems equally at home on clay, cement, or this freshly shaved ryegrass. Rivals, too, concede: Roger Federer calls Djokovic “the great escape artist,” while Rafael Nadal once quipped, “You can’t shake a man who looks calmer at match point down than at breakfast.” When endurance melds with serenity, history is obliged to expand.
This photograph, printed on gallery-grade stock, freezes the hinge between chaos and command—the instant Djokovicdecides the script is his to edit. Hang it as a tennis poster, let the eye wander along the blades of grass stilled beneath his torso, and feel your walls stretch into Centre Court reverie. It is more than décor; it is a syllabus on perseverance, an invitation to lie down only to rise higher.
Secure your Novak Djokovic print today—an emblem of resilience for any study, office, or training nook. Allow this piece of tennis wall art to remind you daily: even when flat on the ground, the sky is still within arm’s reach.
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.