Tuesday January 29, 2013
Murray needs to find killer instinct
Emotion s in check: Andy Murray shed no tears for the Australian Open final loss to Novak Djokovic and gave an assured speech in defeat. — EPA MELBOURNE: Andy Murray has the physique, the technique, the demeanour and the belief. Now all he needs is the killer touch.
For more than an hour, the Scot dominated the Australian Open final, leaving world number one Novak Djokovic blinking, agitated and gasping for breath.
Three break points in game two of the second set, and the champion was on the ropes. But Murray’s chance came and went, and Djokovic gratefully grasped his reprieve.
Eventually it was a familiar story as the Serb reeled off sets two, three and four, and then kissed the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup late in the night at the Rod Laver Arena for the third time in successive years.
Murray, US Open trophy in his cabinet and a veteran of six Grand Slam finals already, shed no tears for the loss and gave an assured speech in defeat.
Afterwards, he was proud of his achievements in recent months, when he has reached three straight Grand Slam finals, and finally won one, along with the Olympic singles title.
“Well, I mean, there’s going to be some obvious reasons for me feeling a little bit better. The last few months have been the best tennis of my life,” he said.
“I made the Wimbledon final, won the Olympics, won the US Open. I was close here as well. It was close. No one’s ever won a Slam, the immediate one after winning their first one. It’s not the easiest thing to do. And I got extremely close.”
Crucially, Murray also mastered Roger Federer for the first time in a Grand Slam match, downing the 17-time major winner over five semi-final sets in which he was always the likely victor.
“I have to try and look at the positives of the last few months, and I think I’m going the right direction.
“This is the first time I’ve beaten Roger in a Slam over five sets,” he said.
“I think I dealt with the situations and the ebbs and flows in that match well. I felt much more comfortable on the court today than even I did at the US Open, so that has to be a positive.”
So comfortable, in fact, that Murray even stopped in the middle of a second serve, at 2-2 in the second-set tie-breaker to catch a falling feather. He missed the serve and lost the set.
Murray’s physical handlers have transformed a spindly youth into a powerful specimen, thanks to his regime of beach running, weights, bikram yoga, protein shakes and daily dinners of 50 pieces of sushi.
His coach Ivan Lendl has given him the mental steel to win Grand Slams. Now he needs to find the ability to apply the coup de grace and quickly put opponents away when he is in front.
“He said, ‘Bad luck’. That’s it. There’s no point going into huge detail about the match two minutes afterwards,” Murray said of Lendl. “We’ll go away and spend a bit of time apart.
“When I go to start training over in the States, we’ll discuss not just this match but the start to the year and the things I need to improve on if I want to keep getting better.” — AFP
- Gritty Indonesia give mighty China a huge scare
- BAM must stop rewarding mediocrity or be doomed
- Nicol David sails into quarter-finals of British Open in 35 minutes
- Yong-dae believes luckless run in world meet will end in Guangzhou
- Chong Wei urges team-mates to put Cup exit behind
- BAM secretary: It all depends on Kien Keat and Boon Heong now
- Kelly overcomes scare to clinch title in KLGCC
- Malaysia to host 2016 World Table Tennis meet
- Nor Aliyah smashes 18-year-old 200m record in MSSM meet
- Nadal wants to create history at Roland Garros
- Yong-dae believes luckless run in world meet will end in Guangzhou
- Easier for Pandelela without Ruolin and Koltunova
- Hafizh hopes Aragorn will be a happy hunting ground
- Malaysia to host 2016 World Table Tennis meet
- Nicol David sails into quarter-finals of British Open in 35 minutes
- Britain’s Hamilton confident of grabbing pole in Monaco
- Serena out to tame French Open demons
- Ferrari’s Alonso backs Mercedes, blasts Red Bull
- Nico Rosberg fastest in opening Monaco GP practice
- Tautuaa all fired up to spearhead Dragons’ attack in Palembang
