Ice man Djokovic mauls Murray in Melbourne final

MELBOURNE, (Reuters) – Third seed Novak Djokovic  pulverised Andy Murray 6-4 6-2 6-3 to win his second Australian  Open today, dashing British hopes of a first men’s grand  slam champion in 75 years.
Eye-balling Murray with intent across the net, Serbia’s  Davis Cup hero completely dominated the Scot, who came out flat  and has now lost all three of his grand slam finals without  winning a set.
“I dedicate this title to my family, my brothers, my girl  Jelena back home, my people that have been with me for so many  years,” an emotional Djokovic said as he cradled the trophy.
“It has been a tough period for our people in Serbia,” added  Djokovic, who also paid tribute to the victims of the recent  Queensland floods.
“We are trying every single day to present our country in  the best possible way, so this is for my country Serbia.”

Novak Djokovic  with his trophy
Novak Djokovic with his trophy

Djokovic then saluted hundreds of noisy fans wrapped in  Serbian flags from the balcony of a television studio, holding  the trophy aloft soccer-style as they bounced up and down  singing below.
“This means the world to me,” he said. “Any grand slam title  is a huge achievement. I have dedicated my life to the sport.
“I’m still 23 and hopefully will have more chances to win  grand slams. It really gives me a lot of motivation. It’s a huge  confidence boost.”
Djokovic, who lifted his only previous major title in  Melbourne three years ago, got off to a scorching start in  energy-sapping heat supposed to favour fifth seed Murray.
Relentless pressure forced a forehand error from Murray,  giving Djokovic the first set against last year’s Australian  Open runner-up, who played with a tired, hang-dog look  throughout a surprisingly one-sided match.

MURRAY RATTLED
Murray, rattled by noise from Djokovic’s box and berating  himself for his ineptitude, began to unravel in the second set,  screaming at his own coaching team: “Be quiet!”
A fired-up Djokovic took a stranglehold on the final by  ripping another big forehand down the line, a dejected Murray  slumping in his chair muttering to himself in despair.
Djokovic went for the jugular, breaking for 3-1 in the third  set with a breath-taking backhand down the line, the Serbian  pumping his fists and roaring with delight.
Murray immediately broke back but Djokovic, ice in his  veins, blasted a forehand cross court to go 5-3 up and finished  the job with another crunching forehand the Scot could only dump  into the net after two hours 39 minutes.
Djokovic celebrated by throwing his racket, shirt and shoes  into the crowd as a packed Rod Laver Arena went wild.
Murray was bidding to become Britain’s first male grand slam  winner since Fred Perry in 1936.
He lost the 2008 U.S. Open final and last year’s Melbourne  final in straight sets, both times to Roger Federer.
“I’ll try to keep it together this year,” said Murray, who  had been reduced to tears by Federer last year.
“I won’t lose sleep over it. I want to try to win a grand  slam but if it doesn’t happen, it doesn’t happen.”