<p>Novak Djokovic can reach a seventh Wimbledon final on Friday, driven on by the desire to capture a sixth title at the All England Club and record-equalling 20th Grand Slam title.</p>.<p>The world number one will be overwhelming favourite to defeat semi-final opponent Denis Shapovalov, the Canadian player he has already beaten six times out of six.</p>.<p>Victory for the Serb would send him into a Sunday championship match against either Italy's Matteo Berrettini or Poland's Hubert Hurkacz, the man who sent eight-time winner Roger Federer crashing in the quarter-finals.</p>.<p>Djokovic is playing in his 10th semi-final at Wimbledon and 41st at the majors while his progress at the event has comfortably taken his career earnings past the $150 million mark.</p>.<p>None of the other three pretenders have ever got this far at the tournament.</p>.<p>Only Berrettini has tasted the experience of a semi-final at the Grand Slams, at the 2019 US Open.</p>.<p>Apart from dropping the first set of his opener against British wildcard Jack Draper, Djokovic has been untroubled.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tennis/wimbledon-set-for-new-queen-as-barty-and-pliskova-reach-final-1006456.html" target="_blank">Wimbledon set for new queen as Barty and Pliskova reach final</a></strong></p>.<p>"I feel like I've been playing, hitting the ball well throughout the entire tournament, putting myself exactly where I want to be: semi-finals," said 34-year-old Djokovic who can reach his 30th Slam final on Friday.</p>.<p>"Not spending too much energy. Now I really have to be consistent from the first to last point in the next match, and hopefully another one on Sunday."</p>.<p>Djokovic has only dropped serve four times at this year's Wimbledon and faced just 15 break points.</p>.<p>Victory on Friday will take him a step closer not only to a sixth Wimbledon title but also to becoming just the third man in history to complete a calendar Grand Slam.</p>.<p>It's a feat so rare that it hasn't been achieved since Rod Laver swept all four majors in the same year for a second time in 1969.</p>.<p>"Sometimes things do look surreal for me but I try to live in the moment and take every opportunity I have on the court," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>Shapovalov, the stylish left-hander, has reached his first Slam semi-final by seeing off two-time Wimbledon champion Andy Murray and eighth-seeded Roberto Bautista Agut, a 2019 semi-finalist.</p>.<p>In the quarter-final, the 22-year-old had to mix style and steel to see off Russia's Karen Khachanov in five sets.</p>.<p>On Friday, he will need to have his service game, which has powered 60 aces so far, cranked up to the maximum.</p>.<p>Before this year, Shapovalov had only won one match at Wimbledon while his best Grand Slam performance was a run to the US Open quarter-finals last year.</p>.<p>"Novak is the best player in the world but I think anything is possible," said Shapovalov who has only won two sets against the Serb in his six losses.</p>.<p>Berrettini is the first Italian man in the Wimbledon semi-finals since Nicola Pietrangeli in 1960.</p>.<p>Adriano Panatta remains his country's last male champion at a Slam in the 1976 French Open.</p>.<p>Berrettini has a game made for grass, however, and arrived at Wimbledon with the prestigious Queen's Club title under his belt.</p>.<p>The 25-year-old world number nine is only playing his third Wimbledon but has stormed into the semi-finals on the back of a tournament-leading 79 aces, saving 20 of 25 break points.</p>.<p>"I'm a better player now. I have more experience. I had more matches on my shoulders. Everything that I am achieving, it's great, but it's not something that I didn't expect," said the powerfully-built Italian.</p>.<p>Hurkacz is only the second Polish man to make the last-four at Wimbledon after Jerzy Janowicz in 2013.</p>.<p>The 24-year-old's run to the semi-finals is impressive as he had won just one match on tour between his surprise Miami Masters title in March and the start of Wimbledon.</p>.<p>That dismal streak included defeat in the first round of the French Open to world number 154 Botic Van de Zandschulp and first-up losses in the grass court events at Stuttgart and Halle.</p>.<p>The defeat in Stuttgart was particularly painful as it came at the hands of Dominic Stricker, ranked a lowly 335 at the time.</p>.<p>However, his win on Wednesday was against a far more famous Swiss, eight-time champion Federer.</p>.<p>"Walking off the court realising that I won against Roger was a dream come true, especially here on grass in Wimbledon," said the world number 18 who had never previously got beyond the third round of a Slam before this Wimbledon.</p>
<p>Novak Djokovic can reach a seventh Wimbledon final on Friday, driven on by the desire to capture a sixth title at the All England Club and record-equalling 20th Grand Slam title.</p>.<p>The world number one will be overwhelming favourite to defeat semi-final opponent Denis Shapovalov, the Canadian player he has already beaten six times out of six.</p>.<p>Victory for the Serb would send him into a Sunday championship match against either Italy's Matteo Berrettini or Poland's Hubert Hurkacz, the man who sent eight-time winner Roger Federer crashing in the quarter-finals.</p>.<p>Djokovic is playing in his 10th semi-final at Wimbledon and 41st at the majors while his progress at the event has comfortably taken his career earnings past the $150 million mark.</p>.<p>None of the other three pretenders have ever got this far at the tournament.</p>.<p>Only Berrettini has tasted the experience of a semi-final at the Grand Slams, at the 2019 US Open.</p>.<p>Apart from dropping the first set of his opener against British wildcard Jack Draper, Djokovic has been untroubled.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tennis/wimbledon-set-for-new-queen-as-barty-and-pliskova-reach-final-1006456.html" target="_blank">Wimbledon set for new queen as Barty and Pliskova reach final</a></strong></p>.<p>"I feel like I've been playing, hitting the ball well throughout the entire tournament, putting myself exactly where I want to be: semi-finals," said 34-year-old Djokovic who can reach his 30th Slam final on Friday.</p>.<p>"Not spending too much energy. Now I really have to be consistent from the first to last point in the next match, and hopefully another one on Sunday."</p>.<p>Djokovic has only dropped serve four times at this year's Wimbledon and faced just 15 break points.</p>.<p>Victory on Friday will take him a step closer not only to a sixth Wimbledon title but also to becoming just the third man in history to complete a calendar Grand Slam.</p>.<p>It's a feat so rare that it hasn't been achieved since Rod Laver swept all four majors in the same year for a second time in 1969.</p>.<p>"Sometimes things do look surreal for me but I try to live in the moment and take every opportunity I have on the court," said Djokovic.</p>.<p>Shapovalov, the stylish left-hander, has reached his first Slam semi-final by seeing off two-time Wimbledon champion Andy Murray and eighth-seeded Roberto Bautista Agut, a 2019 semi-finalist.</p>.<p>In the quarter-final, the 22-year-old had to mix style and steel to see off Russia's Karen Khachanov in five sets.</p>.<p>On Friday, he will need to have his service game, which has powered 60 aces so far, cranked up to the maximum.</p>.<p>Before this year, Shapovalov had only won one match at Wimbledon while his best Grand Slam performance was a run to the US Open quarter-finals last year.</p>.<p>"Novak is the best player in the world but I think anything is possible," said Shapovalov who has only won two sets against the Serb in his six losses.</p>.<p>Berrettini is the first Italian man in the Wimbledon semi-finals since Nicola Pietrangeli in 1960.</p>.<p>Adriano Panatta remains his country's last male champion at a Slam in the 1976 French Open.</p>.<p>Berrettini has a game made for grass, however, and arrived at Wimbledon with the prestigious Queen's Club title under his belt.</p>.<p>The 25-year-old world number nine is only playing his third Wimbledon but has stormed into the semi-finals on the back of a tournament-leading 79 aces, saving 20 of 25 break points.</p>.<p>"I'm a better player now. I have more experience. I had more matches on my shoulders. Everything that I am achieving, it's great, but it's not something that I didn't expect," said the powerfully-built Italian.</p>.<p>Hurkacz is only the second Polish man to make the last-four at Wimbledon after Jerzy Janowicz in 2013.</p>.<p>The 24-year-old's run to the semi-finals is impressive as he had won just one match on tour between his surprise Miami Masters title in March and the start of Wimbledon.</p>.<p>That dismal streak included defeat in the first round of the French Open to world number 154 Botic Van de Zandschulp and first-up losses in the grass court events at Stuttgart and Halle.</p>.<p>The defeat in Stuttgart was particularly painful as it came at the hands of Dominic Stricker, ranked a lowly 335 at the time.</p>.<p>However, his win on Wednesday was against a far more famous Swiss, eight-time champion Federer.</p>.<p>"Walking off the court realising that I won against Roger was a dream come true, especially here on grass in Wimbledon," said the world number 18 who had never previously got beyond the third round of a Slam before this Wimbledon.</p>