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Novak Djokovic’s shock exit in Rome after freak incident opens door for Jannik Sinner to take world No 1 spot in Paris

  • Serbian was accidentally hit on the head by a water bottle while signing autographs at Italian Open
  • Two days later and off colour, he crashed to his earliest defeat in the tournament he has won six times

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Novak Djokovic suffers shock third-round exit to Alejandro Tabilo at Italian Open. Photo: Xinhua

Novak Djokovic’s shock exit from the Italian Open on Sunday could prove to be a decisive moment in the race for the world number one spot, as the top-ranked Serb prepares for his French Open title defence with Jannik Sinner poised to leapfrog him.

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Two days after accidentally being hit on the head by a water bottle while signing autographs in Rome, an off-colour Djokovic crashed to his earliest defeat in the tournament he has won six times after a 6-2, 6-3 third-round thrashing by Alejandro Tabilo.

Djokovic will remain 1,090 points ahead of Sinner before the year’s second grand slam begins on May 26, but the 36-year-old is on shaky ground as he will be defending 2,000 points in Paris and winning the title may not be enough to stay on top.

“It was a very unfortunate, unlucky situation … that guy leaned over the fence, and the bottle dropped from his rucksack and landed on my head,” Djokovic said, reflecting on the freak accident that hurt his chances to pull away from Sinner.

“It was unexpected. I wasn’t even looking up. Then I felt a very strong hit in the head. That has really impacted me. After that I got the medical care. Been through half-an-hour, an hour of nausea, dizziness, blood, a lot of different things.

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“I managed to sleep OK. I had headaches. Yesterday was fine, so I thought it’s OK. Maybe it’s OK. Maybe it’s not.

“The way I felt on the court was just completely like a different player entered into my shoes. No rhythm, no tempo, no balance whatsoever on any shot. It’s a bit concerning.”

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