Novak Djokovic has reached the quarterfinals of the 2026 Australian Open with minimal court time and a crucial walkover, positioning him well for a potential record 25th Grand Slam title. At 38, the Serb benefits from rest and recovery after physical struggles in 2025. He faces Lorenzo Musetti next, with Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz looming as major threats.
Novak Djokovic's path to the quarterfinals at the 2026 Australian Open has been smoother than in recent majors, offering him a prime opportunity to claim a record-breaking 25th Grand Slam singles title and surpass Margaret Court's tally from 1973. The 38-year-old Serb, who has won 10 Australian Open titles and boasts a 102-10 record at Melbourne Park, arrived in optimal shape following 10 weeks of rest before the season. Three straight-set victories in the opening rounds, plus a fourth-round walkover against injured Jakub Mensik, have limited his court time to just 6 hours and 59 minutes—far less than the 11 hours he spent reaching the same stage last year, or over 9 hours at the other 2025 Slams.
This physical freshness contrasts sharply with Djokovic's 2025 campaign, where injuries hampered him in all four major semifinals: a hamstring issue after beating Carlos Alcaraz in the Australian Open quarters, a leg injury against Jannik Sinner at Roland Garros, a groin problem at Wimbledon, and exhaustion in the US Open semifinal versus Alcaraz. Despite those setbacks, Djokovic demonstrated his enduring quality by defeating Alcaraz in Melbourne and Alexander Zverev in Paris. "On any given day when I'm feeling good physically and mentally, when I'm playing well, I can challenge anybody, and I still believe I can beat all of them," Djokovic said. "If that's not the case, I wouldn't be here."
The walkover spared Djokovic additional wear, especially after Mensik's Miami final win over him last season, and provides a four-day gap before his quarterfinal against Lorenzo Musetti on Wednesday. Musetti, the fifth seed, has lost nine of 10 matches to Djokovic and admitted lacking clinical edge in past encounters. Should Djokovic advance, he could face Alcaraz or Sinner in the semifinals—both of whom have dominated recent Slams, winning the last eight between them since Djokovic's 2023 US Open triumph. Sinner seeks a third straight Australian Open title, while 22-year-old Alcaraz aims to become the youngest career Grand Slam winner. As the underdog, Djokovic downplays pressure, insisting this bid is not make-or-break, though at 38, time grows short—he turns 39 in May. His history in Melbourne suggests the stars may align for one final defining run.