MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA – JANUARY 28: Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates winning his semi final match against Roger Federer of Switzerland during day 11 of the 2016 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 28, 2016 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Scott Barbour/Getty Images)

Down 5-3 in the third set, Novak Djokovic looked up at his box and sighed. He had made quick work of Roger Federer in the first two sets of the Australian Open semifinal, winning 6-1, 6-2 in a match that didn’t even seem as close as the scoreline at the time.

Djokovic, who had 100—one hundred—unforced errors in a match earlier this tournament, had just six through the first two sets, to Federer’s 29. He hadn’t lost a game—and barely lost a point—on serve. Federer never even got to deuce on Djokovic’s serve through the first two sets, a blitzing run that took just 54 minutes to complete.

And then Federer woke up, or realized where he was after the dizzying first hour, to put Djokovic on his heels, make him realize he’s mortal, and know that Federer wasn’t going away that easy.

Federer won the third set 6-3, much to the Aussie crowd’s delight, in part because watching two legends battle like they did in set three is what tennis fans around the world had hoped for in this match, and in part, because those in attendance paid for a back-and-forth thriller and through two sets, had nothing but a one-sided beat down.

It wasn’t even that Federer did anything particularly wrong in the first two sets, it was more that Djokovic was playing at a level no one in the history of the game has seen. He got to every ball Federer sent his way. His first serve attack baffled Federer, putting the Swiss legend on his heels and making him question what in the world he could do compete in the match, let alone win.

For the match, Federer won just 61 percent of his first serve points, and just 49 percent of second serve points. Djokovic won 77 percent of his first serves and 66 percent of second. In the first set, Federer won just one point on his second serve. Djokovic lost just five points on serve the entire set. In the second set, he got better, winning 16 of 19 service points, while Federer tallied just 9 of 17 on his first serve, and 13 of 29 overall.

There was a sense of greatness coming from just one side of the court, making fans forget how otherworldly Federer was, and is, as a player. This wasn’t some first-round walkabout. This was Roger Federer, playing as good as anyone in the world right now, and Djokovic made him look like one of the ball boys picked up a racquet and started swinging.

“I definitely played unbelievable the first two sets,” Djokovic told Jim Courier during his on-court interview after the match. “But that’s what’s necessary against Roger.”

The biggest surprise of the second set was that Federer won two games. Djokovic was that dominant.

And, yet, something woke Federer up in the third set, like he realized going down the way he was to Djokovic wasn’t going to merely count as a loss in the Aussie semis, but in history. Getting beat the way he was through two sets is what changes legacies. Sure, Federer isn’t in his prime anymore, but the way Djokovic was taking this version of Federer down made people question if any version of Federer would have been able to compete.

This wasn’t Ali-Frazier, it was Ali against a punching bag wearing a bandana, holding a racquet.

Maybe that’s what woke Federer up. Or maybe it was just that a player of his caliber can’t be held down as long as Djokovic was doing it. It’s impossible, even at this age, to stop Federer for that long. He fought his way back into the match, down two sets to one, no longer worrying about having won just three games in the previous two sets.

And then the roof closed.

A 10-minute delay between the third and fourth sets left both players sitting, stewing and stretching until they could resume play.

The fourth set was sloppy by their standards, trading unforced errors along with service games to reach 3-3, before one of the great Federer-Djokovic games of their 45-match history.

https://twitter.com/Dimonator/status/692663138794246144/video/1

Sadly for Federer, and for those wishing for a fifth set between the two, that unbelievable point was left for naught, as the game ended with Djokovic breaking Federer for a fifth and final time in the match.

There was one more game to play, but the contest ostensibly ended when Federer dropped his final service game, losing after the next, 6-1, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3, in a match that started as lopsided as any of the previous 44 contests ever had, ending with a classic rally between two champions and reinforcing the point that Djokovic is as great right now as any player the sport has ever seen.

“Both Roger and Rafa have contributed to my career, to my success, because of these two rivalries that I’ve had, playing those two guys 100 times combined obviously made me a better player,” Djokovic told Courier. “I’ve worked very hard to get myself in a position to challenge them. It wasn’t easy, but right now I feel like I’m at the peak of my career and I’m trying to cherish every moment on the court.”

If Djokovic is at his peak, very few have ever reached one as high. He is 33-1 in his last 34 Grand Slam matches, dating back to the Australian Open last year. He has now reached his sixth Aussie Open final, winning each of the previous five. He has reached the semifinals in 22 of the last 23 Grand Slam events, getting to the finals in 17, with a chance to win his tenth.

The big four?

It’s starting to look more like the big one.

About Dan Levy

Dan Levy has written a lot of words in a lot of places, most recently as the National Lead Writer for Bleacher Report. He was host of The Morning B/Reakaway on Sirius XM's Bleacher Report Radio for the past year, and previously worked at Sporting News and Rutgers University, with a concentration on sports, media and public relations.

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