Edmund Ends Murray's Eastbourne Comeback

  • Posted: Jun 27, 2018

Edmund Ends Murray’s Eastbourne Comeback

Top Brit gains his first FedEx ATP Head2Head win against Murray

Kyle Edmund has had bigger wins on bigger stages, such as during his Australian Open semi-final run in January. But the 23-year-old might have earned one of his most meaningful victories on Wednesday at the Nature Valley International in Eastbourne.

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The top Brit beat mentor and countryman Andy Murray 6-4, 6-4 to advance to the quarter-finals of the ATP World Tour 250 event. Murray, a former World No. 1 on the comeback from hip surgery, hadn’t lost to Edmund in their FedEx ATP Head2Head series (2-0), including a 2016 matchup on grass at the Fever-Tree Championships.

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But much has changed for both players in the past two years. Edmund has cracked the Top 20 – he’s playing at No. 18, one off his career-high ATP Ranking – and Murray missed almost an entire year of tour-level action. Before last week’s Fever-Tree Championships, the Scot hadn’t played for 342 days, since his 2017 Wimbledon quarter-final loss against American Sam Querrey.

Murray, however, beat Stan Wawrinka in his Eastbourne opener and competed well against his confident countryman on Wednesday. More importantly, probably for him, he showed no visible signs of his hip injury affecting him on court. Murray raced behind the baseline, chasing cannons from Edmund’s forehand, without pulling up.

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It was that shot, though, the same one that has carried Edmund to a home inside the Top 20, that helped him beat his 31-year-old off-season training partner. Edmund broke in the opening game when Murray shanked a forehand off the court, and he littered their rallies with big forehands, forcing Murray to stay feet behind the baseline. Murray tried to pick on Edmund’s weaker wing, his backhand, but Edmund defended it well, rarely going a few shots without seeing another forehand.

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In the second set, it looked as if Murray might rally. At 1-1, he came back from 15/40, peppering the crowd with his familiar rally cries of “Let’s go!” and “Come on!” But Edmund was too solid and too strong, even when on the run and even when hitting his backhand. He stumbled while first serving for the match at 5-2, but Edmund recovered in the 10th game and held to 15.

Edmund will next meet Kazahkstan’s Mikhail Kukushkin, who saved all seven break points to beat Spaniard David Ferrer 6-2, 6-0.

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