BENGALURU: For any other player but Novak Djokovic, a below-par Australian Open at the age of 36 would have had pundits brushing up his tennis obituary. Djokovic, of course, is no ordinary player. Yes, the Serbian fell short of winning a 25th major at Melbourne Park last month but those same pundits have learned the hard way over the last 15 years that you write off Djokovic at your peril. Single-handedly flying the flag for the “Big Three” last year following Roger Federer’s retirement and in Rafa Nadal’s prolonged absence, Djokovic played through injury to win the Australian, French and U.S Open titles. A loss to Carlos Alcaraz at Wimbledon and a third defeat in his last four meetings with Jannik Sinner in Melbourne last month were cracks in his aura of invincibility but Djokovic was quick to shut down talk of terminal decline. “I still have high hopes for the Grand Slams, the Olympics and whatever tournaments I’ll play,” Djokovic said after his first loss at Melbourne Park for six years. “It’s not the feeling I’m used to. It has been incredibly satisfying to start most of my seasons with a Grand Slam win and I’ve never lost in semis or final of the Australian Open. “So this time it’s a bit different, but it is what it is. This tournament hasn’t been up to my standard or criteria or the level I’d normally play or expect myself to play, but it doesn’t necessarily mean it’s the beginning of the end.” Djokovic is scheduled to return in the Masters tournament at Indian Wells next month where he will again be in the crosshairs of early twentysomethings like Alcaraz, Sinner and Holger Rune. Although talk of a power shift may be premature, former player and sports psychology consultant Jeff Greenwald said fans were witnessing the rise of a new generation. “Part of the magic needed at the highest level of the game, in any sport, and perhaps even more in an individual sport like tennis, is the invincibility factor, enjoyed by all the greats at one point in their careers,” Greenwald told Reuters. “But as the new generation gathers confidence and experience this illusive gap narrows. “Alcaraz, Sinner and Rune have already proven they can beat the King of Grand Slams, while Father Time continues to descend and increasingly become an obvious liability.” DIG DEEPER Djokovic showed at last year’s ATP Finals that he is far from being a spent force as he outclassed the young guns en route to the title but Greenwald believes he may need to dig deeper to beat them in the future. “But if motivation is the quality to hold the next gen off a little longer, he’ll be able to find it to win a few more Grand Slams,” Greenwald, the author of “The Best Tennis of Your Life”, added. “In fact, it may be the final ‘chip’ he needs to rise to the occasion. But the window of time needed to add to his all-time best record is definitely narrowing fast.”