Wednesday September 12, 2012
Britain hails its new superhero
BRITISH leaders, tennis chiefs and former players hailed Andy Murray on Tuesday after the Scot became the first British man to win a Grand Slam in 76 years.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said Murray’s triumph in defeating Serbia’s Novak Djokovic in the US Open final was continuing Britain’s “golden summer of sport” following the Olympics and Paralympics.
British tennis insiders meanwhile praised the influence of coach Ivan Lendl in turning Murray into a Grand Slam champion.
“Delighted Andy Murray is continuing a golden summer of sport by winning the US Open. A truly great victory,” Cameron said on Twitter.
Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond said Murray was now a “legend” in his homeland. “Congratulations to Andy Murray on what was a fantastic performance,” he said in a statement.
“This is another brilliant win over Novak Djokovic and continues an amazing year for Andy. Now Olympic and US Open champion, Andy truly is a Scottish sporting legend and I’m certain that more grand slam titles will follow.”
Roger Draper, chief executive of the Lawn Tennis Association, said Murray winning the Olympic gold medal last month and following it up with the US Open title was “a phenomenal achievement,” he told BBC radio.
“He’s done it in an era where you’ve got not just Roger Federer - the greatest player that’s probably ever lived - but you’ve got Rafa Nadal, Novak Djokovic as well.”
Former British number one Greg Rusedski, who lost in the 1997 US Open final, said Lendl had a big hand in Murray’s victory. — AFP
The Scot “found a way to get it done and found a way to control his emotions.
“He can thank Ivan Lendl for that. You have to give him so much credit for what he’s done, to keep believing in what he’s done,” he told Sky Sports television.
“It shows you what a champion he is and, having won this, he can go on to win many majors and maybe end the year as the world number one.”
Former British number one Roger Taylor, 70, a four-time Grand Slam semi-finalist, added: “So much confidence has come from Andy’s Olympics win and Lendl has added a great presence.
“Andy is on top of the world, very few people can beat him and now with the added confidence from the Olympics I am sure he will go on to win many grand slam titles and become number one in the world.
“Finally British tennis is back on the map.” — AFP
- Mixed reaction to Chong Wei’s remarks on Lin Dan’s wild card
- Formula One: Increased venom as F1 tyre war erupts again
- Badminton: Coaches voice out frustration over new lighting system at Putra Stadium at Bukit Jalil
- Cai Lin breaks 200m freestyle record
- Djokovic crashes in Rome, ailing Sharapova pulls out, Federer wins
- China play it cool; Past records mean nothing, says chief coach Yongbo
- Learn Spanish Hafizh as part of plan to conquer MotoGP
- Table tennis: Leading Chinese quartet power into last 16 of world meet
- Shankar hopes Sri Lanka will shine at Sudirman Cup
- KLHC don’t want final to go into extra-time or shootout
- O'Gara retires to take up coaching role
- Shields up to push claim for higher honours
- Dane Hoyer Larsen elected BWF president
- Crusaders slap down upstart Blues in soggy Christchurch
- Cycling: Leader Van Garderen wins California time trial
- Golf: Keegan Bradley maintains Byron Nelson lead
- Golf: Korda seizes lead at Mobile Bay LPGA
- Bradley stays in charge, Guan exits
- Hall of Famer Venturi dies aged 82
- Formula One: Increased venom as F1 tyre war erupts again
