The season might we just begun for Novak Djokovic. That's warning. The man who scaled 'Mount Everest' twice in 48 hours, is eyeing more peaks. Another couple of Slams. A golden rainbow. For now, the Roloand Garros champion, having conquered new territory that has moored him in tennis history, as the only man in the Open era to have won every major at least twice, is basking in a record that echoes the comprehensive quality of his craft. Then, it will be the grass of Wimbledon, where the five-time champion switched the narrative from the serve to the return. When the leaves yellow, the last major of the year, the US Open, will beckon. Between London and New York, in the land of the rising sun, lies the opportunity to make it a Golden Slam. Sunday Djokovic's coach Marian Vajda raised the possibility of a calender Golden Slam. A feat achieved only by Steffi Graf in 1988. Djokovic, who won the Australian Open in February, said, I have achieved things that a lot of people thought would not be possible. Everything is possible, I have put myself in a good position to go for the Golden Slam. Djokovic was in a similar position in 2016 when he was bounced out of the Wimbledon third round by an unsuspecting Sam Querrey. The Serb couldn't have picked a more difficult time to go for gold. This year, for the first time in seven years, there are only two weeks between the French Open and Wimbledon, add to that the pandemic, it's rules and restrictions. Djokovic noted that the quick turnaround from caly to grass, as differences go that's day and night quantum, wasn't ideal. "They are two completely different surfaces, you go trying to make that transition as efficiently as possible", he said. Unlike Roger Federer and Rafal Nadal, Djokovic's ambition is glorious in its overtness.
