Andy Murray's wait for a third grand slam title continues as the Scot was thwarted again by Novak Djokovic to lose his fifth Australian Open final.
Murray was blown away in a whirlwind opening set and he never recovered as the Serb proved himself the maestro of men's tennis again to win 6-1 7-5 7-6 (7/3).
Djokovic has now won a record-equalling six times in Melbourne to draw level with Roy Emerson and he boasts 11 major titles overall, climbing to joint-fifth on the all-time list alongside Rod Laver and Bjorn Borg.
Murray was bidding to end a run of four losing finals in Melbourne, three of which came against Djokovic, but he has never beaten the Serb after going one set down and there was little to suggest he would reverse that trend on Rod Laver Arena.
The world number two set his stall out early, attacking Djokovic's second serve in the very first exchange and then opening up a break point which his opponent saved with a backhand winner.
Murray's impetus, however, soon drained away as he thrashed a forehand into the net and then double-faulted to hand Djokovic the break.
When Djokovic feathered a drop shot which Murray failed even to get a racket to, one fan shouted "Give him a chance Novak!" - prompting chuckles among the crowd - and the foundations were laid for a procession as his opponent raced 3-0 clear.
Matters soon became more desperate for Murray, who conceded a second break for 5-0, and while the Briton did finally get on the board it was too little too late as Djokovic served out.
Murray ranted and raged to jolt himself into life but he came under pressure again at 1-1 as a Djokovic pass on the slide carved open the first of four break points.
One forehand into the net had Murray laughing in disbelief and then he was halted by a heckler sarcastically shouting, "Take a bit longer Murray!" after umpire Carlos Ramos had given him a time violation.
A dose of irritation may not have been a bad thing as Murray finally held with an ace and for the first time he began to stretch Djokovic, dictating more rallies and making less mistakes.
Frustrated, Djokovic spiked a ball into the court, but just as Murray looked to have gained a foothold he let it go again, chucking away the break when a backhand flew long.
Down 4-3, Murray dedicated his changeover to a monologue of grumbling, but it did the trick, as he broke back instantly with a line-clipping backhand.
The fightback though was temporary as Djokovic came again at 5-5, winning a 36-shot rally on Murray's serve, the longest of the match so far, before the Scot fired a tired backhand long.
Djokovic was serving for a two-set lead and despite consecutive double faults, he delivered, cementing his advantage when Murray's backhand hit the net.
The top seed's record in five-setters is 26-8 but any feint hopes of a comeback were quickly diminishing as a superb backhand winner broke Murray in the opening game of the third.
On the brink, Murray found some fire within and when Djokovic hit long he deservedly broke back for 3-3 to keep himself in with a chance.
Into the tie-break, however, and Murray's resolve crumbled as he served two double faults, his fourth and fifth of the match, to give Djokovic a 6-1 lead.
Murray pulled two points back but not a third as Djokovic served out with an ace to seal the title and when they met at the net Murray had two words for his conqueror: "too good".
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