Milestone Man: Dominant Djokovic Scores 100th AO Win

By Richard Pagliaro | Monday, January 19, 2026
Photo credit: Darrian Traynor/Getty

Playing his first match in two months, Novak Djokovic transformed Rod Laver Arena into a launching pad.

The 10-time AO champion landed a major Melbourne milestone in the process.

Two games into the third set, Djokovic went airborne launching a 109 mph forehand rocket winner that brought a smile to his face.

That was one highlight of Djokovic’s 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 dismissal of Pedro Martinez in his AO opener. 

It was Djokovic’s 100th career Australian Open victory. 

The 38-year-old Serbian superstar joins rival Roger Federer, who won 102 Melbourne matches, as the only other player in history—man or woman—to register 100 or more match wins at the Australian Open. Given Djokovic lost his first two AO matches, he’s gone a remarkable 100-8 since then winning a record 10 Australian Open championships.

Tonight, the fourth-seeded Serbian truly looked like the third best player in the world behind No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz, whom Djokovic defeated in the 2025 AO quarterfinals and two-time champion Jannik Sinner, who has beaten Djokovic five times in a row.

“It felt good tonight. Let’s see how it’s going to feel in a few days’ time,” Djokovic told the media in Melbourne. “Performance-wise, the feeling on the court, it was great. I couldn’t ask for more.

“Obviously a great serving performance. Just overall felt really good on the court that has made me feel good on it for so many times throughout my career. So let’s see what comes my way in few days’ time.”

In his pre-tournament presser, Djokovic conceded “I’m missing a little bit of juice in my legs, to be honest, to be able to compete with these guys at the later stages of a Grand Slam.”

One way to conserve leg strength is exterminate points quickly on serve.

Tennis terminator Djokovic did exactly that. In one of his most imposing serving performances, Djokovic served 77 percent permitted just five points on serve, including winning 11 of 13 second-serve points and pumped 14 aces against no double faults.

How dominant was the Djokovic serve? Djokovic delivered eight love holds and breezed through 16 of his last 17 points on serve in the match.

It all added up to a declarative two-hour triumph that sends Djokovic into a second-round showdown vs. Italian qualifier Francesco Maestrelli. 

Continuing his quest to win a record-extending 25th Grand Slam title, Djokovic raised his major record to 398-55.

A slick, sliding backhand pass down the line helped Djokovic gain the double break for a 5-2 second-set lead. 

Pounding down a pair of aces brought Djokovic two set points and he flashed a flying smash to seal a two-set lead.

Though Djokovic was clutching at his leg and stretching it at out times later in the third set, he was quick off the mark throughout. Reading the Martinez drop shot, Djokovic ran it down and nudged an angled winner to break for a 5-2 third-set lead.

Closing in style, Djokovic slashed successive aces for his 100th AO match win.

Richard Pagliaro is Tennis Now Managing Editor. He is a graduate of New York University and has covered pro tennis for more than 35 years. Richard was tennis columnist for Gannett Newspapers in NY, served as Managing Editor for TennisWeek.com and worked as a writer/editor for Tennis.com. He has been TennisNow.com managing editor since 2010.

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OLE MAN RIVER

Yeah, we’ll see how long that lasts! You can’t fool father time, no matter how great you are/were! We’ll see just how long his physicality lasts. Funny, I remember his father lambasting Federer for playing so long but here he has his son doing the same thing, hypocrite, that’s the way I see it!

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