Novak Djokovic jettisons Todd Martin to streamline his coaching team

WORLD No2 Novak Djokovic of Serbia has split with American coach Todd Martin, but says he will continue to work with Marian Vajda.

The 22-year-old Djokovic started working with Martin last August but said that working with two coaches had become too complicated.

"I'm not working with Todd Martin anymore," said Djokovic, who is playing at the Monte Carlo Masters this week. "I'm full-time with Marian again and hopefully we can have a lot of success."

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Djokovic, the 2008 Australian Open champion, said that the two coaching styles were not compatible.

"We tried to work with two coaches, and Todd is a fantastic person who has so much experience and he shared everything with me," Djokovic said. "But it just did not work out in the end and we separated with no hard feelings."

He added that there were difficulties when Martin worked on his serve.

"He tried to change that, but it was all to complicated in the end and now I'm back to the old one," Djokovic said.

Djokovic reached the Monte Carlo Masters final last year, losing to Rafael Nadal of Spain 6-3, 2-6, 6-1. It was the first set Nadal had dropped in Monte Carlo since the 2006 final win over Roger Federer, and gave Djokovic confidence that he could challenge Nadal on clay.

"After that match, I believed more that I can win against him," Djokovic said. "I played so many matches against Nadal and most of them were on this surface. In a couple of matches I was quite close and had equal chances to win."

Djokovic then lost to Nadal straight sets in last year's Rome Masters final, and then narrowly lost 3-6, 7-6 (7/5), 7-6 (9/7) in the semi-finals of the Madrid Masters, wasting several match points. "There are certain losses that you cannot delete from your memory right away and that was one of them," Djokovic said. "I was carrying this mental frustration, and I just felt bad about that match for the next two or three months."

Djokovic went on to lose in the third round of the French Open to Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany, and plans to make amends at Roland Garros later this year.

"I am really excited to come back (to clay) because I had a lot of success in 2009," he said. "But the tournament I really want to make my success is the French Open."