Tuesday, 28 January 2014
Andy Murray fears 'inhumane' heat at Australian Open could kill someone
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Australian Open 2014: With temperatures in Melbourne heating up a mid-afternoon 'siesta' could be the answer
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Australian Open 2014, Andy Murray v Vincent Millot: live
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Andy Murray digs deep to win 23 consecutive points and defeat Vincent Millot in second round of Australian Open
There was a bagpiper out on the banks of the Yarra River this morning, accompanied a cardboard cutout of Andy Murray. But it was a long wait for both of them before the real Murray finally fought his way into the third round of the Australian Open at two minutes to midnight, local time.
Part of the delay was caused by a couple of long women’s matches on Rod Laver Arena – Maria Sharapova spent 3hr 28min over hers – and the closing of the roof in mid-afternoon when the “extreme heat policy” had to be applied.
Did Murray also allow himself to be kept out on court for longer than was strictly necessary? A harsh critic might say so. He was playing the lowest-ranked player left in the draw, world No 267 Vincent Millot of France, and could have been expected to breeze through in about 90 minutes.
But then Millot turned out to be a Jekyll-and-Hyde sort of tennis player: woeful one minute and brilliant the next. The third set was a real head-scratcher as Millot won four games in a row to go to 5-1. He even had a set point in the next game, but Murray roused himself to construct a fine point that he clinched with a backhand winner.
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15 Jan 2014This was the start of a 23-point unbroken sequence that made you wonder if Murray was trying to beat some kind of midnight curfew, as he famously did at Wimbledon against Marcos Baghdatis a couple of years ago (although that one was only 11pm).
“It was 6-5 when I went to serve for it, and someone shouted out, ‘You won 19 in a row,’” Murray explained afterwards. “I would say that's probably the most I'd ever won in my career by far.”
Murray’s bare statistics were not impressive, by his high standards, as he committed 31 unforced errors to place alongside his 25 winners. But he still powered through to the next round by a 6-2, 6-2, 7-5 margin, taking 2hrs 1min, and can now look forward to a meeting with old foe Feliciano Lopez on Saturday.
“Today I found tricky,” said Murray afterwards. “I found the opponent tricky. I found the conditions tricky. And I maybe didn't adjust as well as I would have liked. But I did okay.
“I played well in my first match; today, not so well. That's what it's going to be like for me now,” added Murray, who is coming back from a four-month lay-off following spinal surgery. “I'm going to have ups and downs. I just have to get through them and the consistency will come.”
Millot had joked before the match that he it was good of the organisers to jock Roger Federer off Rod Laver Arena to make room for him.
Yet it was also a strange call, given that he has only won one grand slam match in his career – Tuesday’s meeting with Wayne Odesnik. How would he react to playing in front of 15,000 people on one of the greatest stages in tennis?
Not brilliantly, was the answer after the first three games, as Millot coughed up no fewer than 10 unforced errors. One regulation forehand bounced before it reached the net.
But things improved from there, or at least became more competitive, as Murray rather lost concentration and began to play some indifferent tennis himself. A pair of double-faults helped Millot get off the mark by breaking serve in the fourth game.
The Frenchman’s most skilful early touch was the little backheel he played off a loose ball, passing it neatly to a bellboy, in keeping with his background as a potential professional footballer. (His father played for St Etienne alongside Michel Platini and his uncle won three caps for the French national side).
After coming through qualifying, he has played a lot of tennis in the last week, so it was not hugely surprising when Millot took an injury time-out late in the second set to deal with a sore calf. He had also been doing a lot of running. It often felt as if Murray was standing in the centre of the baseline and making him perform shuttles to left and right like in a drill.
But then, in the third set, a match broke out. What had the trainer given Millot? He decided to swing for everything and for a 20 minute spell his racket had the Midas touch. There were aces and return winners and some scorching drives down the line off both wings.
Murray finally broke back to move to 2-5, and then the magic dried up as abruptly as it had arrived. “He had been stepping right up to the baseline and hitting winners, basically,” Murray said afterwards.
“He’s ranked I think around 270 in the world. It shows what depth there is in the game just now and I thought he played a very good match.”
Murray also gave an update on his brother Jamie, who had suffered from heat stroke after playing – and winning - a doubles match before play was suspended at 1.52pm.
“He wasn’t in a great way,” Murray said. “It’s never happened to him before, having cramps like that either. When one part of your body goes and then, when you move, the opposite muscle goes. I don't know how dangerous they are, but they're very, very uncomfortable. When it happens the first time, it's pretty scary.
“So we just tried to make sure someone was with him throughout the day. You know, he drunk loads when he got off the court, and was finding it quite hard to eat. Hopefully he'll be fine tomorrow.”
Andy MurraySport »Tennis »Australian Open »Simon Briggs »Mobile »In Andy Murray
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Australian Open 2014: 'I'm just glad to win and get off humid court', says Andy Murray
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Andy Murray: I was distracted by Jamie's woe during Australian Open second-round defeat of Vincent Millot
This was another day of biblical extremes at the Australian Open: first searing temperatures, and then thunder, lightning and intense humidity. It was all too much for Jamie Murray, Andy’s older brother, who developed such serious heat exhaustion that he was laid low by multiple cramps.
Andy Murray also looked a little out of sorts as he played a peculiar match against Vincent Millot, the squat French left-hander who – at No 267 in the world – was the lowest-ranked player left in the men’s draw. But then, as Murray Jnr explained, he found it tricky to focus while his brother was racked with pain.
“What was happening with Jamie was more important than my match,” said Murray after his up-and-down 6-2, 6-2, 7-5 win. “It was a little distracting as well and you just try not use up any extra energy.”
After beating Go Soeda on Tuesday, Murray had already questioned whether the authorities at Melbourne Park are too cavalier with the players’ health and safety.
But this was different. It was his own flesh and blood.
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16 Jan 2014“It is easy to say Jamie was only playing doubles and it’s not as physically demanding as the singles,” Andy explained.
“It wasn’t so much that he was cramping but that he was scared. He’s never dealt with anything like that before and being on your own, it’s difficult, so I tried to make sure someone was around him the whole day.”
At least both Murray brothers won their matches. Jamie was playing with his regular partner John Peers, a Melburnian by birth, against two more Australians: Matt Reid and Luke Saville. They scored a 7-6, 7-6 victory in 1 hr 50 min, and it was not until later that Jamie’s exertions began to catch up with him.
“He was a bit tired and sore when he came off the court,” said Murray, “but then it hit him like an hour and a half later. I’ve never had it like that.
“He was struggling for a good three, four hours after the match. He’s never had real cramps like that either. I don’t know how dangerous they are, but they’re very, very uncomfortable. One part of your body goes, and then, when you move, the opposite muscle goes. When it happens the first time, it’s pretty scary.
"Hopefully he’ll be fine tomorrow.”
Murray and Peers had started their match in the Rod Laver Arena soon after 11am, when the temperature stood in the high nineties.
A couple of hours later, the mercury climbed above 110F (43C) for the first time in this extraordinary week, prompting tournament referee Wayne McEwan to invoke the “extreme heat rule” and suspend play for around four hours.
Not before time, said many of the players.
Later, a deluge of gobstopper-sized raindrops flooded the courts and knocked the singles players even further behind schedule. Andy Murray was far from being the last man off court when he finally subdued Millot at 11.58pm.
Having been 5-1 down in the third set, he saved a set point in the next game, and then sprinted for the line with an unbroken sequence of 23 straight points.
Although Murray once won 14 straight points against Feliciano López – the Spaniard who also happens to be his next opponent here – he reckoned that this was comfortably the longest streak of his career.
Millot, who had won only one grand slam match in his career, made an unpredictable opponent. How would he react to playing in front of 15,000 people on one of the greatest stages in tennis?
Not brilliantly, was the answer after three games. One regulation forehand bounced before it reached the net. But then, at the start of the third set, he suddenly started playing like the eponymous Laver – another powerfully built 5ft 8in leftie.
For 20 minutes, there were aces and return winners and some scorching drives down the line off both wings.
Then Murray broke back to move to 2-5, and the magic dried up as abruptly as it had arrived.
So now for Saturday’s third-round match against López, a man Murray holds a 7-0 head-to-head record against. Although perhaps this López will be different, given that he shaved off his trademark Pre-Raphaelite locks on New Year’s Day.
“I was in the ice bath with him after our first-round match and talking to him about it,” said Murray. “He got the all clear from his girlfriend before he did it, no bets or New Year resolutions. But for me his hair was something that made him Feliciano. He’s a bit different now.”
One woman who may be disappointed is Murray’s mother Judy, who once gave López the self-explanatory nickname “Deliciano”.
“What can I say?” López smiled. “Judy is so fine.”
Australian OpenSport »Tennis »Andy Murray »Simon Briggs »Mobile »In Australian Open
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Andy Murray races into fourth round of Australian Open with straight-sets win over Feliciano Lopez
Andy Murray maintained his perfect record against Feliciano Lopez to reach the second week of the Australian Open without dropping a set.
The fourth seed had beaten Lopez in all seven of their previous meetings but this was seen as the first real test of Murray's form following back surgery.
It was a test he passed with flying colours in Melbourne, playing a superb tie-break at the end of a tight first set and then pulling away to win 7-6 (7/2) 6-4 6-2.
And Murray will be a hot favourite to reach the quarter-finals given he plays 119th-ranked lucky loser Stephane Robert next, in round four.
The Scot said: "It's been a good start. It was very tricky conditions the first couple of matches with the heat but today was beautiful conditions to play in.
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17 Jan 2014"We get to play in front of full crowd when it's like this so it was a great atmosphere. I don't know why but every time I've come here since I was 18 I've had great support."
Despite his great record against Lopez, Murray had needed almost four hours to see off the Spaniard in their last meeting at the US Open in 2012.
And this time it was not an auspicious start for the fourth seed, who lost four straight points to drop serve in the opening game, but he retrieved the break straight away.
The 40C temperatures had disappeared, much to the relief of most players, but cool weather was not what necessarily what Murray wanted as he gets his body used to playing best-of-five-set matches again.
The Scot had several chances to move a break ahead in the sixth game but Lopez came up with good serves every time.
Murray looked frustrated as Lopez levelled at 5-5, and his mood was not helped when more big serving helped the Spaniard save two set points and force a tie-break.
But Lopez was hanging on and he was outplayed in the tie-break, Murray stringing together a succession of good, aggressive points.
He brought up four more set points with a forehand winner and clinched it with another forehand that Lopez could not get back.
Murray has an excellent record against left-handers, which he attributes largely to having grown up playing against his brother Jamie.
Aside from Rafael Nadal, who has beaten him 13 times in 18 meetings, Murray has now only failed to win three times against left-handers in 50 matches.
He made the perfect start to the second set with an immediate break of the Lopez serve, the Spaniard seeming to suffer a hangover from losing the opener.
Both men held serve relatively comfortably for the rest of the set, which suited Murray just fine as he took it on his first chance, a HawkEye challenge failing to save Lopez.
Murray had won the first two sets against the Spaniard in New York as well, only to find himself embroiled in a near four-hour battle, but the chances of that happening again were remote, even more so when Lopez dumped the ball into the net to drop his serve again at the start of the third set.
The 32-year-old appeared to have resigned himself to his fate and Murray, who was playing an extremely solid match, broke again to lead 4-1.
That quickly became 5-1 and the Scot clinched victory on his first match point, celebrating with an understated fist pump.
Andy MurraySport »Tennis »ATP Tour »Australian Open »Mobile »In Andy Murray
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Australian Open 2014: Andy Murray strolls into fourth round
Andy Murray continued his domination of left-handers by swatting aside Feliciano Lopez 7-6 (7-2), 6-4, 6-2 to reach the Australian Open fourth round.
Murray's win over the big-serving Spaniard was his 14th in succession against southpaws and set-up a last 16 showdown with 'lucky loser' and Frenchman Stephane Robert.
The 33-year-old Robert is ranked 119th in the world and made the main draw only after German Philipp Kohlschreiber pulled out at the start of the tournament.
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Stéphane Robert targets Goliath Andy Murray in Australian Open fourth round
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Australian Open 2014: 'Dom the bom' Inglot still furious a decade after failing to beat Andy Murray
Ask a casual tennis fan to identify the five Britons who entered the men’s doubles here, and the one most likely to draw blank looks would be Dominic “Dom The Bomb” Inglot.
Jamie Murray is a member of tennis’s first family, Colin Fleming and Ross Hutchins have been Davis Cup regulars, and Jonny Marray won Wimbledon in 2012. Whereas Inglot’s biggest claim to fame used to be that he acted as Paul Bettany’s body double in a Hollywood film, also called Wimbledon.
But all that will change, in time, if Inglot – a 6ft 4in behemoth with a 140mph serve – continues to be the last man standing in these events. It is now a year since any of the other British men outperformed him at a grand slam.
Having come into the Australian Open as British No 1 in doubles – a title he claimed for the first time just over a week ago — Inglot and Filipino partner Treat Huey scored a fine win on Sunday over seventh seeds Rohan Bopanna and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi. They will play in the quarter-finals tonight.
Asked yesterday whether the No 1 ranking was important to him, the ever-chatty Inglot replied: “Absolutely. I’m going to be using that when I go back to the bars and try to find girls.” Will that work? “I hope so! I’ve never had the opportunity before unless I lied, and some girls are good at reading a lie.”
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18 Jan 2014“I’m really pumped about it,” he said, with a straighter face. “It’s definitely one of the things you want growing up, you want to win slams, represent your country in Davis Cup, win Olympics and be your country’s No 1 player.”
Inglot could be an outside shot for Davis Cup selection when the team to face the USA is announced on Tuesday, though he admits that Fleming is likely to be ahead of him in the queue. “It’s not just about playing well, but playing well together,” he said. “Andy
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Australian Open 2014, Andy Murray v Stéphane Robert: live
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Andy Murray moves into Australian Open 2014 quarter-finals with four-sets win over Stéphane Robert
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Australian Open 2014: Roger Federer to face Andy Murray in quarter final after defeating Jo-Wilfred Tsonga
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Australian Open 2014: 'Jo Wilfried-Tsonga was a big test for me' says Roger Federer
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Australian Open 2014: Andy Murray v Roger Federer, first of the year's 'superclashes'
What did Stefan Edberg say to Roger Federer before he took the court on Monday?
Something to the effect of “Courage, mon brave,” judging by the way Federer kept rushing the net like a dervish.
The question is whether he will be as bold – or as clinical – against Andy Murray on Wednesday.
There is no such thing as a dull meeting between Federer and Murray, but this one promises to be especially fascinating.
If the 2014 Australian Open has been the tournament of the supercoaches, this will be its first superclash.
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20 Jan 2014This quarter-final might almost sound like a reconstruction staged by a historical society, given that Edberg and Ivan Lendl faced off no fewer than four times in Melbourne, withhonours shared at two wins apiece.
In broad terms, their modern charges look to follow the same patterns: Federer coming forward to volley like a more debonair Edberg, Murray pursuing the “power baseline” game that Lendl all but invented.
But if the outline might be familiar, the staging will be completely different. You might as well compare West Side Story to Romeo and Juliet.
Tennis culture evolves, and the best players evolve faster than the rest.
Indeed both Federer and Murray have moved on significantly since they last faced each other, in the semi-final of this event a year ago.
Federer has not just hired Edberg, but fixed his back trouble and switched to a larger, 98-inch racket, which has been working supremely well for him over the past week.
Lendl and company might not want to study Monday’s 6-3, 7-5, 6-4 victory over Jo-Wilfried Tsonga too closely, for fear of becoming demoralised.
It felt like a flashback to Federer’s salad days.
As for Murray, he has not just won Wimbledon but addressed a chronic injury of his own by having an irregular piece of bone shaved off one of his vertebrae.
He has returned to the tour with more mobility than we have seen from him in at least 18 months, particularly on his double-fisted backhand, which is now smoother and more adaptable. The downside is a lack of matches.
We saw a hint of this on Monday when Murray faced Stéphane Robert, the first lucky loser to reach the fourth round of the Australian Open, and a man who belongs on a different plane of the sport.
As Murray said: “I dominated 95 per cent of the match.” But the other five per cent arrived at an inconvenient moment.
At the end of the third set, Murray had two match points on his own serve at 5-4, and then two more in the tie-break, but allowed them all to slip away – an aberration that cost him an extra half-hour on court.
It was a good thing that in the fourth set his superior conditioning kicked in, as Robert started cramping and Murray – who had comprehensively destroyed one of his rackets just before it started – eased to a 6-1, 6-2, 6-7, 6-2 victory.
He still spent only 2hr 42min on Hisense Arena (half an hour less than Rafael Nadal needed to subdue Kei Nishikori in three sets on Monday), so that outbreak of ‘Fergie time’ was hardly a disaster.
But it was hard to imagine a fully match-tight Murray wasting so many opportunities.
Unless, of course, he happened to be playing Novak Djokovic in the Wimbledon final.
“I can’t honestly say my expectations are as high as if I’d been playing for the last four months,” Murray admitted.
“It’s been a good effort to get to the quarter-finals of a slam this soon after back surgery.
But now I’m not far away from winning the event. Anyone that’s in the quarters is close.”
Murray is covering all eventualities there.
But then, it has been hard to gauge the level of his tennis – probably even for Murray himself – because of the eccentric cast list thrown up by the draw.
Uniquely, in his history of 32 grand slams, he has faced three opponents outside the top 100.
While Murray was happy to ease his way into the tournament, this was not perhaps the ideal preparation for facing Federer – a shot-making genius whose new racket appears to have shaved at least a couple of years off his age.
“Roger took the ball very early today, and he was always taking my time away,” a chastened Tsonga said. “Everything was going quick. He was playing unbelievable.”
The odds must incline towards Federer, which is not something you would have anticipated when he blew up so horrendously against Tommy Robredo at the US Open.
That was only four months ago, and yet this great magician has shown an ability to regenerate that would impress Doctor Who.
Expect him to step into the court against Murray’s second serve – a long-time weakness that had improved significantly under Lendl’s guidance, but appears to have regressed again during Murray’s time off.
Against Robert, Murray averaged 82mph on the second serve, and won 52 per cent of the points.
Federer’s equivalent figures were 94mph and 69 per cent, even though he was facing a much stronger opponent.
“I like playing the best,” Federer said, sounding more bullish than he has for a while.
“And you need to take it to them. You need to play aggressive against the top guys, me included.
"You don’t want to wait for stuff to happen. I think that usually is good for success.”
Murray’s record against Federer is a mixed one: 11 wins from 20 meetings, but only one win from four meetings in the grand slams.
That came here, in last year’s semi-final, when Federer became so frustrated that he blurted an unprintable epithet in Murray’s direction.
Since then, the great man has been short of form and certainty.
But whoever wins, the conclusion will be the same. “He’s back.”
Australian OpenSport »Tennis »Andy Murray »Roger Federer »Simon Briggs »In Australian Open
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Andy Murray v Roger Federer preview: Australian Open quarter-final sees rivalries renewed with Lendl v Edberg
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Andy Murray beaten by Roger Federer in Australian Open quarter-finals as Swiss sets up Rafael Nadal semi-final
An exhausted Andy Murray saw his Australian Open dream fade away on Wednesday night, as he was unable to match a classy performance from a revitalised Roger Federer.
This tournament has been a story of near-misses for Murray in the past, but 2014 had seemed to offer possibilities when Novak Djokovic went out in the quarter-final and Rafael Nadal developed a blister on the palm of his serving hand.
Yet Federer was too strong, closing out a 6-3, 6-4, 6-7, 6-3 victory with an ace to reach his 11th consecutive semi-final in Melbourne. Afterwards, Federer suggested that “Andy might have been carrying something,” based on the way Murray lost pace – both around the court and on his serve – as the match went on.
“My serve slowed down a bit in the fourth set,” Murray admitted in the interview room, “especially the first of couple points when I was getting up after the change of ends. But I've come a long way in four months. Obviously right now I'm very disappointed.
“There's maybe some things I would have done a bit differently if I was ever to have surgery again. But it's the first time I ever went through something like that. I don't know how many players have come back from surgery and won the first grand slam back. It’s very unlikely to happen.
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20 Jan 2014“A lot of work went into this slam compared with other ones where you have a few weeks to prepare. This time I had a long time to prepare, maybe just not enough matches.”
Murray must be cursing his luck that he never ran into Federer during the great man’s form slump in the latter part of last year. Instead, he came up against a man reborn, a shot-making genius whose new 98-inch racket has transformed his game like a magic wand.
Federer was mesmerising in the first two sets as he served with dead-eyed precision, drifted into the net with the stealth of an assassin and coughed up none of the cheap errors that had characterised his play last season.
Murray played some strong tennis himself – perhaps not on a par with the inspiration he delivered at Wimbledon seven months ago but still solid by any normal standard. And yet he did not earn a single break point until the end of the third set, a remarkable statistic for a man who normally returns so well.
It was only at the moment of last resort that Murray roused himself. He was broken in the ninth game of the third set with the help of a controversial pick-up by Federer that flew over his head at the net. A slow-motion replay revealed that the ball had bounced twice, just a fraction before Federer made contact with it.
At the next changeover, Murray got stuck into umpire Pascale Maria for the error, and Maria seemed to be asking whether he wanted to call the supervisor. Instead he came out fuelled by a grievance and finally earned a break – even as Federer was serving for the match – to help force the set into a tie-break.
Federer had to put up with more frustration as Murray saved two match points, coming back from 6-4 down in the tie-break to take it 8-6 and take the contest into a fourth set.
The pace of play slowed down a little now, as Federer started showing signs of tension and Murray clearly began to struggle with his body. In the eighth game, Murray muffed three consecutive forehands to go 0-40 down, and though he summoned up a couple more big serves, he could not stave off the inevitable for long.
“Roger started off the match playing great, great tennis,” said Murray. “He plays a pretty high tempo, so the points are fairly quick‑fire. The ball's coming at you quickly. As much as I would have liked to have returned better, he served very well.
“I changed my tactics a little bit, started playing a little bit more aggressive, and that was maybe my undoing at the end, because I really started going for my shots to get myself back into the match. When I got broken in that fourth set, I went for three balls. Maybe one or two of them weren't there to be hit.”
Federer was slick and confident enough to raise real optimism that he might be able to challenge Rafael Nadal, his greatest nemesis, in Friday’s semi-final. Murray tried to unpick his backhand side but it was rock solid, whether on the slice or the topspin drive.
Murray and his camp must have expected that Federer would win most of the shorter points. Federer is so good at the one-two punch – a big serve followed by the scything forehand winner.
What might have surprised them was the way Murray was unable to get any purchase in the longer rallies. Federer moved with ease and grace along the baseline and timed his sallies to the net with total authority. His defence has rarely looked better.
It was a masterpiece of tactics as well as execution, and suggested that the input of Stefan Edberg has been as much of a factor in Federer’s vastly improved performances at this tournament as the new Wilson racket.
Australian OpenSport »Tennis »Andy Murray »Roger Federer »Simon Briggs »In Australian Open
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Andy Murray v Roger Federer, Australian Open 2014 quarter-final: live
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Australian Open 2014 highlights: Andy Murray against Roger Federer
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