Chasing Roger Federer

Novak Djokovic ended his 2-year drought at Grand Slam tournaments on Sunday, winning his fourth Wimbledon title in convincing fashion. Having beaten world number 1 Rafael Nadal in an epic five-setter in the semifinals, Djokovic dismantled the tired South African serve specialist Kevin Anderson in a fairly one-sided final.

His fourth Wimbledon title brings Djokovic’s Grand Slam tally to 13, four short of Nadal’s 17 and seven behind Roger Federer’s record of 20 major titles.

As the following chart illustrates, Federer, Nadal and Djokovic currently play in a league of their own in terms of Grand Slam success. Since Federer won his first Wimbledon title in 2003, the three men won 50 out of 61 Grand Slam tournaments with Andy Murray and Stan Wawrinka the only other men to win multiple Slams during that 15-year period.

England vs. Croatia – What The Stats Say

In the end, England were somewhat cruising in their quarter final tie with Sweden, and now they can set their sights on a rather unpredictable Croatia. Having been very impressive at the group stage – comfortably winning all of their games – Dalić’s side has faltered a little in the knockout matches so far, needing extra time and penalties to get past Denmark and Russia. An optimistic England fan will say the Croatians are going to be fatigued after so many minutes on the pitch, but this tournament has already proven that anything can happen at a World Cup.

Looking to the stats for guidance, England have the edge historically with four wins, one draw and two losses (including friendlies). At the World Cup though, Croatia has a superior win rate and average goals per match and, with players like Modric and Rakitic on the pitch, they certainly won’t be pushovers.