A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, JULY 12, 2022 SPORTS Djokovic claims 7th Wimbledon title Fourth straight is his 21st overall Grand Slam BY HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer WIMBLEDON, England — Novak Djokovic waited. He waited for Nick Kyrgios to lose focus and lose his way. Waited to find the proper read on his foe’s big serves. Waited until his own level rose to the oc- casion. Djokovic is not bothered by a deficit — in a game, a set, a match. He does not mind problem-solving. And at Wimbledon, for quite some time now, he does not get de- feated. Djokovic used his steady brilliance to beat the ace-deliv- ering, trick-shot-hitting, con- stantly chattering Kyrgios 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (3) on Sunday, July 10 for a fourth consecu- tive championship at the All England Club, seventh overall there, and 21st from all Grand Slam tournaments. “It’s weird. I felt like he didn’t do anything amazing today,” said the unseeded Kyr- gios, offering an assessment with which some might not concur, given that Djokovic Julian Finney/Getty Images-TNS Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates winning match point against Nick Kyrgios of Australia during their Men’s Singles Final match at Wimbledon on Sunday, July 10, 2022, in London, England. accumulated 31 winners and merely eight unforced errors over the last two sets, while facing zero break points in that span. “But he was just so com- posed. That’s what I was just thinking to myself. In big moments, it just felt like he was never rattled. I feel like that’s his greatest strength: He just never looks rattled,” said Kyrgios, about whom those words likely have not been uttered. “He just looks completely within himself the whole time. Didn’t look like he was playing overaggressive, even though it felt like he was playing big.” Among men, only Roger Federer owns more Wimble- Lillard signs extension, looks forward to re-tooled Blazers Two-year deal worth $225 million, according to sources BY ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press Damian Lillard’s new con- tract with the Trail Blazers is a point of pride for the six-time All Star who has spent his entire career in Portland. “I don’t think that you earn something like this just by going out there and scoring a bunch of points,” he said. “Something that’s missing in our league is character, and the fight and the passion and pride about, you know, not just the name on the back, but the name on the front, and how you impact the people that you come in contact with.” Lillard agreed to a two-year extension through the 2026-27 season. A person with knowl- edge of the negotiations said the deal is worth $225 million. Lillard formally signed the extension with his son on his lap and his grandmother watching by phone from Oakland. He spoke at a news conference the evening of Saturday, July 9 at the NBA’s summer league in Las Vegas. Lillard will make about $59 million in 2025-26, then about $63 million the next year, said the person who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Friday, July 8 because the extension has not been an- nounced. He’ll make about $137 mil- lion over the next three seasons, before the extension begins. “There are two kinds of teams: teams that are looking for superstars and teams that are looking for one. We’re lucky enough to have one,” Blazers coach Chauncey Billups said. “One who wants to be here.” Lillard was limited to 29 games this past season because of a core injury that required surgery. The Blazers finished 27-55, their worst record since 2005-06. While Lillard was sidelined, the team cleaned house, pulling off a number of trades before the February deadline — including sending backcourt teammate CJ McCollum to New Orleans — that got the Blazers under the luxury tax and freed up cap space. The Blazers then made a se- ries of offseason moves to build around Lillard. Portland ac- quired Jerami Grant from the Detroit Pistons and signed free agent Gary Payton II, who was key to Golden State’s champion- ship run. don titles than Djokovic, with eight, and only Rafael Nadal owns more major trophies, with 22. “The more you win, it’s log- ical the more confident, the more comfortable you feel out there every next time you step out on the court,” said the top-seeded Djokovic, who was pleased to hear some specta- tors at Centre Court chanting his nickname, “No-le! No-le!” as he served out the final point of a tremendously well-played tiebreaker. As of now, Djokovic will not be able to try to pull even with Nadal by winning the U.S. Open, which begins in late August: The 35-year-old Serbian can’t enter the United States because he decided not to get any shots against COVID-19, the same reason Djokovic missed the Austra- lian Open in January. “I’m not vaccinated,” Djokovic said Sunday, “and I’m not planning to get vacci- nated.” Aside from his experience — 32 Grand Slam final ap- pearances versus one for the unseeded Kyrgios — his skill and his clutch gene shined in the concluding tiebreaker, and all of those qualities were pres- ent for two particularly pivotal games that helped swing the match. “Key moments,” Djokovic called them. They were games in which Djokovic steeled himself, and Kyrgios blinked. And games that Kyrgios would not let go as he began engaging in run- ning monologues, shouting at himself or his entourage (which does not include a full- time coach), earning a warn- ing for cursing, finding reason to disagree with the chair um- pire he fist-bumped before the match, and chucking a water bottle. With Djokovic serving for the second set at 5-3, Kyr- gios got to love-40 — a trio of break points. But Kyrgios played a couple of casual re- turns, and Djokovic eventually held. When that set ended, Kyrgios waved dismissively toward his box, sat down and dropped his racket to the turf, then groused to no one in par- ticular: “It was love-40! Can it get any bigger or what?! Is that big enough for you?!” Djokovic noticed. “He knew on this stage, when Nick starts to talk, he’s going to be vulnerable,” said Djokovic’s coach, 2001 Wim- bledon champion Goran Ivan- isevic. “That happened.” In the third set, with Kyr- gios serving at 4-all, 40-love, he again let a seemingly sealed game get away, with Djokovic breaking there. “It was a huge momentum shift,” Djokovic said, “because up to that point we were quite even.” Baker softball team wins tournament 12-under team 4-0 at Fruitland Baker City Herald A Baker City youth girls softball team went 4-0 to win the championship at the Mesa Duel in the Diamond tournament last weekend at Fruitland, Idaho. The Baker Dawgs, a 12 and under squad, beat the Nampa Elite 10-3 in the champion- ship game on Saturday afternoon, July 9. Baker’s Colbi Bachman was the winning pitcher, going seven innings. All three runs were unearned. Bachman, Macey Morgan and Jaxyn Ra- mos each had two hits for Baker. The Dawgs opened the tournament with a pair of games on Friday, July 8. Baker beat Sawtooth/Hartley 16-1, then routed the Nampa Pride, 17-0. Baker opened Saturday’s play with a 6 a.m. PDT game against the Infield Dia- monds, and the Dawgs, led by Bachman’s 4-inning no-hitter, won 10-0. “We played really well over the weekend,” said Steve Bachman, who, along with Jake Collier, Nathan Rayl and Brandi Sangster, is an assistant coach to the Dawgs’ manager, Jamey Bachman. The team’s roster is: Maley Martin, Jaxyn Ramos, Colbi Bachman, Macey Morgan, Kate Nilsen, Bailey Sangster, Claire Collier, Jocelyn Rayl, Hannah Sullivan and Lexi DelCurto. GARAGE DOORS With Thermospan TM doors, you have your choice of styles, colors and customizing options. N E -H I E NTERPRISES CCB#155399 2122 10th • Baker City • 541-523-6008 Text us your tire photo 541-519-8878 we will text back with a quote for new tires! Lew Brothers Tire Service 541-523-3679 210 Bridge St. Baker City, OR