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Novak Djokovic looked imperious in beating an overawed Denis Shapovalov 6-3, 6-4 Sunday to win his fifth Paris Masters final, clinching a 34th overall Masters title in fine style to move one behind record holder Rafael Nadal.
At 32 years, Djokovic has already won 77 titles in a stellar career and fully intends to add many more.
"That's one of the biggest reasons why I'm still playing professional tennis, to fight for these big trophies and to still be able to play the highest level,” he said.
Shapovalov was mostly outclassed, even though he was physically fresh having avoided a potentially grueling semifinal because the second-ranked Nadal pulled out beforehand with an abdominal strain.
Still, the odds were heavily stacked against the 20-year-old Canadian, who was appearing in his first Masters final.
Djokovic never appeared troubled on his way to a fifth ATP title this year — level best with Dominic Thiem.
He served out the match with a love hold, hitting a forehand winner before turning to look at his box and raising his arms in triumph.
"It was my best serving performance of the tournament." Djokovic said. "Denis maybe lost his focus a bit."
The big-serving left hander looked tense, making three unforced errors in his first service game and slipping quickly to 3-0 down against a composed Djokovic playing in his 50th Masters final and 111th overall. After botching a return on Djokovic's opening serve of the seventh game he whacked his racket into the ground in frustration.
Dropping only four points on his serve in the first set, Djokovic clinched it with another dominant serving game which included two aces and concluded with a volleyed winner at the net.
As Shapovalov's unforced errors resurfaced in the seventh game, Djokovic broke him again for a 4-3 lead.
Djokovic saved his first break point of the match at 30-40 in the next game when Shapovalov returned a sliced serve well wide.
With that, the briefest glimmer of hope was gone.
"I'm sure the best things are yet to come for you." Djokovic said to Shapovalov during the trophy ceremony.
Kind words, yet the gap to Djokovic's level remains huge.
"It's great to hear that, but I still have a long way to go." Shapovalov said. "I want to be beating guys like Novak so I have to improve, find a way to return better."
Djokovic has won every final he's played at Bercy Arena except for last year's against Karen Khachanov, which came after a three-hour semifinal slugfest against 20-time Grand Slam champion Roger Federer.
This year, Djokovic did not drop a set and heads to the upcoming ATP Finals in London looking to secure the year-ending No. 1 ranking for a sixth time. That would move him two ahead of Nadal, one ahead of Federer and Jimmy Connors, and into a tie with record-holder Pete Sampras.
"I'm sad to see that he's injured because that's not what you want to see. I know how that feels." said Djokovic, who struggled nearly two years with an elbow injury. "Historically he's had several injuries at the last part of the season, so I hope he can recover. Because without him, obviously the battle for No. 1, but also the tournament itself, is different."
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