"Let's just take the sanitary pad out and paste it on the sick note," another Weibo said.
"Being on that court with the Serbian flag raising, singing the anthem, with the gold around my neck, I think nothing can beat that in terms of professional sport," he said.Home is where the heart is for a proud Serb like Djokovic.
There is one place, though, which he has regularly described as his "second home": Melbourne. Or, more specifically, Rod Laver Arena.Djokovic has won the Australian Open there on a record 10 occasions, making it the most successful tournament of his career.The events which he has won the most are:
Australian Open (10)Wimbledon, Paris Masters, ATP Finals (7)
Miami, Rome, Dubai, Beijing (6)
Djokovic's all-court prowess is reflected by the fact there are events played on three different surfaces in this list - Wimbledon grass, Rome clay and hard courts everywhere else.But Rozentals says the programme's funding is nowhere near enough.
"I don't know how much you need but it's certainly not £16,000," said Rozentals."When you have to cover rent, travel, food... and most athletes who train full-time are all living in London.
"They're very fortunate to have parent backing - I wasn't. I never had the ability to move to London because of financial struggles so I was always doing the travel from the East Midlands, where I live, to London, back-and-forth, back-and-forth."Rozentals, who won individual C1 silver at the World Under-23 Championships in 2023, is awaiting the outcome of the investigation.