Despite staying in Madrid, Novak Djokovic has withdrawn from the Madrid Open, which leaves many open questions about his schedule But he recently clarified them.
>Djokovic had a very interesting but not good season. He only played a handful of events and failed to reach the finals in all of them. One of them was the last Monte-Carlo Masters, and it was a pretty solid performance from him, but certainly not at the level we’ve become accustomed to from him.
He doesn’t have many big expectations ahead of him. so not passing it shouldn’t be a big surprise to anyone. However, his schedule for the coming weeks remains a mystery, especially after he withdrew from the Madrid Open.
Nadal is greeted by fans as he arrives for practice … >This withdrawal surprised some people, but Djokovic always had a plan. His goals this year are the big events: Roland Garros, Wimbledon, the Olympic Games and the US Open. The rest serves as preparation and his current goal is to prepare himself physically for Roland Garros.
As part of this preparation, Djokovic will compete at the Italian Open in Rome, where he excelled in passing. He has won this tournament many times so returning to Rome makes sense in that regard.
For him, this is a much better event than the Madrid Open and the courses The match is quite similar to Roland Garros. Madrid is a very unique event. Due to its height, it doesn’t play very similarly to Roland Garros, so in that regard, he should avoid it.