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'I love playing tennis. I miss it a lot' – how Murray recovered from 'lowest point'

  • Posted: Jun 17, 2018
2018 Fever-Tree Championships on the BBC
Venue: Queen’s Club, London Dates: 18-24 June
Coverage: Watch live on BBC Two, BBC iPlayer, BBC Red Button, Connected TVs, the BBC Sport website and app.

Three-time Grand Slam champion Andy Murray is set to make his competitive return to action at Queen’s Club this week after almost a year out with a hip injury.

The 31-year-old Briton talks about the decision to have surgery in January, and his recovery, in his regular BBC Sport column.

Moving towards the start line now feels great and I’m really looking forward to playing again. There have been times where I have been practising on the court and not managed to get to the start line.

With sport you play to win but when you are away from something you love doing for almost a year you realise you’re playing because you love it.

I didn’t start playing to win Wimbledon or get to number one in the world. I never believed that was something I was going to do or something I thought about when I was a kid growing up.

I played tennis because I loved it and continued doing that throughout my whole career.

Of course pressure comes as you get older and start to do better but when you step away from the sport for a long time then you look at things a little bit differently.

  • Winning Grand Slams still possible – Murray
  • Will surgery give Murray a new lease of life?

Emotional Instagram post showed I was hurting

I posted a message on my Instagram page just before the surgery – that was a tough time for me.

A lot of things get written and you don’t always have the opportunity to respond to what has been said.

When, after six months of not competing, you’re still not good enough to be where you want to be and looking like you’re going to have to have surgery, it’s the lowest point you can get to in your professional career.

People might say, “oh, you’ve got it great” – which I’m aware that we do and I’m very lucky I get to play tennis for a living.

But that’s what I’ve been doing since I was a child, and when you’re not able to do something that you love it’s tough.

That was why I posted on Instagram, because at the time I was getting asked lots of questions and I didn’t have all of the answers.

Surgery was the only option

It had been six months since I last played, in the quarter-final at Wimbledon, but I wouldn’t say I gave the hip a fair chance to fully recover until after the US Open.

I was trying to play the US Open at the end of August, which I said at the time was probably a mistake, but after that I did pretty much everything that was recommended by doctors.

I love playing tennis. I miss it a lot

I was rehabbing, trying to get stronger, not spending much time on the court, trying to take a bit of the load off my hip and allow it to calm down. Then I tried to build up a little bit and tried to get ready for Australia.

I was doing lots of really good stuff in the gym but then I wasn’t translating it on to court.

I was still feeling uncomfortable when I was on the court, and then that was when I decided I had to have the surgery.

No athlete wants to go through surgery. You want to avoid it. But it was at the stage where that was what was being recommended me and I went ahead with it.

I was surprised by the ‘very little’ pain

Surgeries can go wrong but I’ve never had the mindset – like when I had back surgery – that it was going to go badly.

I thought this is going to go well.

I’d been in pain for quite a long time. With my hip it had been six months but I had been in a bit of discomfort for quite a few years before that as well.

I wanted to get better, I wanted to feel like my normal self again. I wasn’t seeing the negative side of it.

After the operation I had very little pain actually.

Because of the way they do the surgeries now, I think it was a little different to before when they had to cut you open to do it.

The scars are very, very small and I wasn’t in much pain but also I wasn’t allowed to do a whole lot. I was on crutches for two days and after that got rid of the crutches and started to move around a bit – slowly.

That was something that surprised me, I was expecting to be in a lot more pain after the surgery from what I’d heard but I was back up and walking after 48 or 72 hours.

That’s why the recovery from a lot of hip surgeries are a bit faster now because before it was crutches for four to six weeks.

That means you have a lot of muscle wastage so it then takes time to build that back up before you can start training properly again.

Whereas with this I was back on the bike after 10 days, doing some exercise, and that feels good.

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Recovery didn’t affect family life

After surgery in Melbourne, my mum was there and my team, so I was in the house watching the Australian Open, not doing a whole lot.

When I got back home, it didn’t really affect my family life too much. I was trying not to be on my feet for hours and hours a day, but there were no restrictions in terms of walking around.

I’d like to tell you I watched lots of box sets to get me through the long hours, but that wasn’t really the case.

When I got back the rehab started. Spending six to eight hours a day rehabbing. And it is boring, not a whole lot of fun.

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Because I was also doing that before the surgery it had been like the best part of nine months that I had been doing that stuff, so it’s frustrating and tiring at times.

But the thing that keeps you going is that I love playing tennis. I miss it a lot. That’s why I’ve been doing everything to try and and get back playing again.

The support I have received has also been amazing and I’m thankful for all the messages, it makes going through everything that bit easier.

While I’ll be nervous, it will be great to finally step back on the court.

Andy Murray was speaking to BBC Sport’s Jonathan Jurejko.

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Dan Evans beaten by Alex de Minaur in Nature Valley Open in Nottingham

  • Posted: Jun 17, 2018

Britain’s Dan Evans was beaten in the final of the Nature Valley Open in Nottingham by Australian teenager Alex de Minaur.

Evans was competing in his first final since he returned in April from a year’s ban for taking cocaine but lost 7-6 (7-4) 7-5 in an entertaining match.

It is just his fourth defeat in 20 matches since his return.

The win for 19-year-old De Minaur, ranked 96 in the world, gives him his first ATP Challenger title.

De Minaur took the first set on a tie-break before the pair exchanged breaks of serve in the second set.

The Briton, 28, denied De Minaur when the Australian was serving for the match at 5-4 but, after being broken to love in the following game, failed to repeat the feat shortly after.

Evans, who will rise from his current ranking of 530 after reaching the final in Nottingham, will continue his comeback Fever-Tree Championships at Queen’s next week after being awarded a wild card.

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Federer beats Raonic to win Stuttgart title on return

  • Posted: Jun 17, 2018

Roger Federer beat Milos Raonic to win the Mercedes Cup in Stuttgart, his first event for two and a half months.

The Swiss had not played since the Miami Open in March, after choosing to miss the clay-court season, but the win in Germany gives him a 98th Tour title.

Federer, 36, beat Canadian Raonic 6-4 7-6 (7-3) in the final.

The 20-time Grand Slam champion had already secured his return to number one in the world rankings with victory over Nick Kyrgios in the semi-final.

The only break of serve came in the third game of the match with Federer clinching it with a backhand winner.

The second set was again tight as both players’ serve dominated on the grass court but Federer edged it on a tie-break.

“I played very well throughout the tournament, it is a great comeback for me. I am so happy to have won,” said Federer.

“I was hoping to play a couple matches here but I have played four and won them all. The last few have been very good.

“I hope I keep it up at Halle and Wimbledon. It will give me a boost as well being back at world number one.”

Federer also sat out the clay-court season in 2017 but last year lost on his return in Stuttgart before going on to win the Gerry Weber Open in Halle and claim an eighth Wimbledon title.

He will again compete at Halle next week, aiming for a record 10th title, before Wimbledon which begins on 2 July.

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German Joy: Petzschner/Puetz Win Stuttgart

  • Posted: Jun 17, 2018

German Joy: Petzschner/Puetz Win Stuttgart

German duo defeat Lindstedt/Matkowski in straight sets

Philipp Petzschner and Tim Puetz captured their first tour-level title as a team, defeating Robert Lindstedt and Marcin Matkowski 7-6(3), 6-3 on Sunday at the MercedesCup.

Petzschner and Puetz become just the second all-German team to win the MercedesCup, joining 2008 titlists Christopher Kas and Philipp Kohlschreiber. The German duo won 90 per cent of first-serve points and did not face a break point in the 82-minute clash.

Petzchner has now won eight tour-level doubles crowns after his second triumph in Stuttgart. The 34-year-old lifted the title in 2011, alongside Austria’s Jurgen Melzer. It is Puetz’s first tour-level title.

“[To win my] first title is amazing… with a good friend in Germany,” shared Puetz.

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Lindstedt and Matkowski were bidding to win their 23rd and 19th tour-level titles, respectively. The Swedish-Polish tandem was contesting its first tour-level final.

After solid serving from both teams, a tie-break was needed to decide the first set. After trading mini-breaks in the opening stages, Petzschner and Puetz pounced at 6/5. After a strong return from Petschner, Puetz took the initiative at the net, using quick reactions to get the better of Matkowski.

The Germans added to their advantage early in the second set, extracting early errors from their opponents, before capitalising on a Lindstedt double fault, to lead 2-0. From there, Petzschner and Puetz continued to dominate on serve, winning their fourth love service game of the set to secure the title on their first championship point.

“They were serving pretty well, especially in the first set with a high percentage of first serves. We didn’t really get our chances but we knew if we could get to the tie-break we would have a good chance,” said Petzschner. “We stared connecting way better on the returns late in the first set… We were raising our level in the match and I think it was a deserved win in the end.”

Petzschner and Puetz receive 250 ATP Doubles Ranking points and split €35,550 in prize money for lifting the trophy. Lindstedt and Matkowski gain 150 points and share €18,690.

“From the second match we played pretty well… I think we relaxed a bit after winning the first match and [it was] a wonderful week and I am very happy to end it with a title,” said Puetz.

Did You Know?
Tim Puetz has now won five doubles titles this season. Prior to securing his maiden tour-level title at the MercedesCup, the 30-year-old won four ATP Challenger Tour doubles crowns. Puetz captured titles in Noumea, Yokohama and Lille before success at Aix En Provence with Philipp Petzchner in May.

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Rodionov Makes History For Austria With Maiden Title

  • Posted: Jun 16, 2018

Rodionov Makes History For Austria With Maiden Title

19-year-old speaks to ATPWorldTour.com after winning his first ATP Challenger Tour title in Almaty, Kazakhstan

If Jurij Rodionov has been flying under the radar over the past year, he will be a household name soon enough. Dominic Thiem is undoubtedly the face of Austrian tennis, but the World No. 7 could have some company at the pinnacle of the game in the near future.  

At the age of 19 years and one month, Rodionov claimed a slice of history for the European nation on Saturday, becoming just the fourth Austrian teenager to win an ATP Challenger Tour title. He is the youngest to do so since 1986, when both an 18-year-old Thomas Muster and a 17-year-old Horst Skoff achieved the feat.

Rodionov lifted his first trophy on Saturday in Almaty, Kazakhstan, ousting Pedja Krstin 7-5, 6-2 to cap an impressive week at the clay-court tournament. He is just the second teenager to win a Challenger title this year, joining Rudolf Molleker (Heilbronn). 

2018 #NextGenATP First-Time Winner Spotlight: Molleker | Polmans | Hurkacz

Rodionov’s victory in Almaty is as improbable as it is impressive. The teen was appearing in only his fifth Challenger main draw, all of which have resulted in quarter-final finishes or better. When given the opportunity to compete against the best, he has taken full advantage.

Last year, Rodionov made his first big splash at the $125,000 event in Ningbo, China, registering arguably the comeback and upset of the year, after rallying from 3-6, 1-5 down to stun Jordan Thompson for his first Top 100 win. He was ranked No. 691 at the time and now the 19-year-old is projected to ascend to a career-high No. 292 in the ATP Rankings on Monday.

You May Also Like: Austrian Teen Claims Challenger Comeback, Upset Of The Year

Born in Nuremberg, Germany, to Belarusian parents, Rodionov decided to play under the Austrian flag in 2015 after his father moved the family there for work. He admits that football was his first love, but wasn’t allowed to play until age six, so he decided to pick up a racquet.

Rodionov spoke to ATPWorldTour.com following his victory in Almaty…

Jurij, congrats on winning your first Challenger title. Talk about how it feels.
Now it feels amazing, but during the match I was feeling all the pressure. My serve wasn’t working very well, but after match point it was a big relief for me. Now it’s a really good feeling.

You are just the fourth Austrian teenager to win a Challenger title. What are your thoughts when you hear that?
Wow, I didn’t know that. It’s a great achievement and I’m very proud of myself and my great team who supported me throughout this long week. All these hours in the gym finally paid off.

You beat some strong players during the week. What went right for you?
Pretty much everything. I talked with my coach about tactics every day and it worked on the court. I’m just happy I could play like I did this week.

To come through qualifying and win a title is never easy. How did you stay mentally focused all week?
That’s a good question and I don’t know, to be honest. A lot of players and coaches ask me that. I don’t know. Somehow it just works and I’ve stayed focused. It’s been a long week. I’m proud of that.

Rodionov

How much confidence did you take from Loughborough and Shymkent to go even further here?
Yes, a lot of confidence from those events. Before Loughborough I didn’t play my best tennis, but after that I gained a lot of confidence and put it together in Almaty. I’m playing my best tennis now.

You got one of your biggest wins over Yannick Hanfmann in the semis. Do you now believe that you can compete with these top players?
Well, last year I already beat Jordan Thompson. He was Top 100. I knew I could compete against the best, but I lacked a bit of consistency. I was working on that throughout the year in 2017. Now I believe even more that I can compete with these players.

You are up to a career-high in the Top 300. Did you set any goals at the start of the year and what are they now?
At the start of the year, my goal was to win a Challenger and to be in the Top 250. So the first goal I already achieved and the second one I’m very close. We’re only halfway through the year, so I’m in a good position.

2018 #NextGenATP Challenger Winners (born 1997 or later)

Player Age Tournament
Rudolf Molleker 17 yrs, 6 mos. Heilbronn, GER
Jurij Rodionov 19 yrs, 1 mo.  Almaty, KAZ 
Taylor Fritz 20 yrs, 3 mos. Newport Beach, USA
Reilly Opelka 20 yrs, 8 mos. Bordeaux, FRA
Marc Polmans 20 yrs, 9 mos. Launceston, AUS
Jaume Munar 21 yrs, 1 mo. Prostejov, CZE
Hubert Hurkacz  21 yrs, 3 mos.  Poznan, POL 

For those of us who don’t know much about you, tell us something. What do you enjoy doing off the court? Do you have any passions outside of tennis?
I’m a big football fan. I support Arsenal FC. Other than that, I just enjoy time with my friends. Going out, eating out with them. The casual stuff.

You are also up more than 30 spots in the Race to Milan. What are your thoughts on the Next Gen ATP Finals?
Of course it would be nice to get there, but hopefully next year. It’s a bit too soon for this year. I’m focused on getting better at the Challenger level and improving my game. Maybe next year it will be my goal.

ATP Challenger Tour 

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Nature Valley Open: Johanna Konta reaches Nottingham final

  • Posted: Jun 16, 2018

British number one Johanna Konta reached the final of the Nature Valley Open in Nottingham for the second year in a row after a straight-set win over Donna Vekic.

Konta beat the defending champion from Croatia 6-2 6-3 in a match delayed for over an hour because of rain.

She will face top seed Ashleigh Barty from Australia in Sunday’s final.

Barty defeated Japanese third seed Naomi Osaka 6-3 6-4 in the opening semi-final.

Konta had looked strong early on in the blustery conditions against Vekic with the Croat requiring treatment on a leg injury at the end of the first set.

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Heavy rain then started to fall, forcing the players off court.

On the resumption, Konta broke to go 2-1 up in the second set but although an increasingly emotional Vekic broke back, the Briton broke again for a 4-3 lead.

With the Vekic forehand becoming more erratic, Konta held on for the win.

“It was challenging for both of us with the rain delay but I am happy to have battled through,” said Konta.

“Ash is a very crafty and talented player, and likes this surface. She has improved since last year and it will be a tough match for me.”

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Zverev Faces Early Test In Halle

  • Posted: Jun 16, 2018

Zverev Faces Early Test In Halle

Federer seeks 10th title, with Thiem making his 2018 grass debut

Alexander Zverev has reached both of his grass-court ATP World Tour finals at the Gerry Weber Open in Halle, losing against Florian Mayer in 2016 and Roger Federer last year. But if he is to break through at his home tournament and lift a trophy on the mown lawns for the first time, he will have to be sharp from the get-go.

In the first round, the German will confront Borna Coric, who has beaten Zverev in two of three FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings. The Croatian won in Cincinnati three years ago and at the 2017 US Open. But in the Miami quarter-finals this March, Zverev earned his first triumph in their rivalry.

Both players have shown good form this season. Zverev captured his third ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title in Madrid, and went on to win three five-setters in a row to reach his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Roland Garros. Coric, on the other hand, is 4-3 against opponents inside the Top 11 of the ATP Rankings in 2018, and he advanced to the semi-finals at Indian Wells and the quarter-finals in Miami.

Zverev could also potentially face a stiff challenge in the quarter-finals against No. 8 seed Richard Gasquet, who is competing in the Libema Open championship match on Sunday. While Zverev leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 4-0, three of the matches have gone to three sets, with the German triumphing 7-5 in the third set in Monte-Carlo earlier this year. Last year in Montreal, Zverev saved match point against Gasquet after a 49-shot rally, eventually coming out victorious.

Fourth seed Roberto Bautista Agut and No. 7 seed Kei Nishikori are also in Zverev’s bottom half of the draw. And then there’s the matter of Federer, who has triumphed in Halle nine times. The Swiss is not only in form, reaching Sunday’s final at the MercedesCup to extend his winning streak on grass to 15. But the 36-year-old has a 59-6 record in Halle, with all six of those losses coming against players who broke into the Top 5 of the ATP Rankings during their career.

Federer opens his campaign against Aljaz Bedene, who he beat at this year’s Australian Open in straight sets. The earliest the top seed has lost at the tournament is the quarter-finals.

The first seeded player Federer could face is a familiar foe in World No. 22 Philipp Kohlschreiber. If they meet in the quarter-finals, the Swiss will take confidence in knowing he has won all 13 of his FedEx ATP Head2Head meetings against the sixth seed. Federer has beaten Kohlschreiber three times in Halle, with their most recent match at the event, in 2015, going to a final-set tie-break.

Roland Garros finalist Dominic Thiem, the No. 3 seed, will make his 2018 grass-court debut against a qualifier or lucky loser. In his quarter, No. 5 seed and Stuttgart semi-finalist Lucas Pouille faces in-form #NextGenATP Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas in an interesting opener. That will be the pair’s first FedEx ATP Head2Head meeting.

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Gasquet Books Place In 30th Final

  • Posted: Jun 16, 2018

Gasquet Books Place In 30th Final

Frenchman to face countryman Chardy on Sunday

Richard Gasquet reached his 30th tour-level final, beating Australia’s Bernard Tomic 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-2 on Saturday at the Libema Open.

The second seed converted five of seven break points en route to a one-hour, 48-minute victory to reach his second final of the season. In February, Gasquet reached his sixth consecutive Open Sud de France final, losing in straight sets to Lucas Pouille.

Gasquet came within two points of victory at 6/6 in the second-set tie-break, but Tomic held his nerve to force a decider. The World No. 30, not to be disheartened, secured an early break of serve to lead 2-0 before charging to victory. The World No. 30 improves to 8-2 in his FedEx ATP Head2Head series with Tomic, who was contesting his first tour-level semi-final since the 2016 Fever-Tree Championships. Gasquet will face countryman Jeremy Chardy in Sunday’s final.

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Chardy reached his first tour-level final in nine years, beating Australia’s Matthew Ebden 6-4, 7-5 in one hour and 32 minutes.

The 31-year-old, who last reached a championship match at the 2009 MercedesCup (d. Hanescu), hit 14 aces and saved both break points he faced. The Frenchman had lost his past seven tour-level semi-finals dating back to his 2009 triumph in Stuttgart. Chardy maintains his perfect FedEx ATP Head2Head record against Ebden, improving to 4-0.

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After falling to his lowest ATP Ranking (No. 100) since 2 January 2012 on 5 March this year, Chardy has enjoyed an impressive resurgence. The World No. 72 reached the Round of 16 at the first two ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events of the year, in Indian Wells and Miami, and has since reached the TEB BNP Paribas Istanbul Open semi-finals. Chardy also won last week’s Surbiton Trophy on the ATP Challenger Tour.

Did You Know?
Richard Gasquet won his first two ATP World Tour titles on grass in Nottingham (2005-2006). But, since those back-to-back triumphs, the Frenchman has not won another title on the surface.

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