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Andy Murray column on Novak Djokovic, beating Querrey and meeting Zverev

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2017
2017 Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 16-29 January
Coverage: Live radio and text commentary of every Andy Murray match on BBC Radio, the BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app. Watch highlights on BBC Two and online from 21 January.

I thought I was pretty good in my win over Sam Querrey. I certainly played better than the first two matches. Sam’s a tough opponent with a big game so I was happy with it.

I probably warmed up for the match on three or four different occasions. Svetlana Kuznetsova was up a set and 4-1 on court before me, and then all of a sudden it was 3-0 in the decider to Jelena Jankovic. Then there was an injury time-out at the end.

You start warming up as soon as it gets to near the end of the match and then you just have to wait and hang around. It’s really tough but there’s not a lot you can do. I was ready to go out there for about an hour and a half.

The tough part is the mental side of it. You have to be switched on as you might just be about to go on and play in a Grand Slam match. It’s about trying to find a way of staying relaxed and not using up too much mental energy.

The support in the arena was great. The court we were playing on isn’t a ticketed court so you get really enthusiastic fans watching. Anyone can come in and watch – I think it’s $45 for the day. And with Dan Evans playing on the court after me, the Brits have been there all day. It was loud crowd, so I really enjoyed it.

‘I’ve known my next opponent for 17 years’

Next up is Mischa Zverev. We’ve known each other since we were 12 years old, so for 17 years. We’re the same age and we grew up playing against each other in the juniors.

He’s a very quiet guy, and very calm on the court. He plays serve-volley tennis which you don’t see a lot nowadays and he’s improved so much over the last few months. His brother, Alex, is one of the best players in the world right now and they train together all the time. Their parents coached them so whenever I was playing with Mischa, when Alex was only tiny he would be on the side of the court with a racket in his hand.

There’s quite a different age gap between them and me and my brother but it’s always nice to have your family around you and to have someone who understands what it’s like to be a professional athlete – the stresses and everything you go through – it definitely helps.

‘Djokovic deserves a break’

Everyone was surprised by Novak Djokovic’s exit in Melbourne, for sure. But out of the last few Grand Slams he made the final of the US Open, the third round at Wimbledon and won the French Open. Every single player on the tour, bar one or two, would sign up for those results. When you compare it to what his standards are, he’ll probably be disappointed. But if you compare it to every other tennis player in the world, his last 12-18 months have been phenomenal.

I think everyone needs to give him a bit of a break. It is hard to keep up the intensity week after week, that’s why everyone has been so impressed by the group of players at the top of the game over the last few years.

The same guys have been there for the last 10 years because their performances in the major events have been incredibly consistent. They’re always in the finals and semi-finals. So when it doesn’t happen once, everyone is really surprised and shocked.

But I think the players themselves are a lot more understanding, as we know how difficult it is and how incredible the consistency has been over the last few years. It’s almost inevitable it will drop off at some point.

  • Andy Murray was talking to BBC Sport’s Caroline Chapman

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Australian Open 2017: Andy Murray beats Sam Querrey to reach round four

  • Posted: Jan 20, 2017
Australian Open 2017
Venue: Melbourne Park, Melbourne Dates: 16-29 Jan
Coverage: Daily live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online from 21 January.

Top seed Andy Murray made short work of American Sam Querrey to reach the fourth round at the Australian Open.

The Briton, 29, won 6-4 6-2 6-4 on the Hisense Arena, the third show court at Melbourne Park.

Murray, who hopes to finally win the title after finishing runner-up five times, goes on to face Germany’s Mischa Zverev, the world number 50.

Fellow Briton Dan Evans takes on Australian 27th seed Bernard Tomic later on Friday.

“I felt better and better as the match went on in terms of my movement,” said Murray, who had turned his ankle during his previous match.

“I was a little bit hesitant maybe at the beginning. It was a little bit sore but I was moving well at the end, so that was very positive.”

  • Live scores, results and order of play
  • Champion Kerber cruises into last 16
  • Feature: Has Djokovic’s desire burned itself out?
  • How to follow the Australian Open on the BBC

Murray makes no mistake

Querrey was the man who upset then world number one Novak Djokovic at Wimbledon last summer, but Murray made sure he did not fall victim to another shock after the Serb’s surprise defeat by Denis Istomin on Thursday.

With six-time champion Djokovic out, Murray is a clear favourite among many observers to finally land the third leg of the career Grand Slam.

Querrey gave the Scot plenty to think about in the early stages of their third-round match, attacking the net and hurrying the top seed, but a first-serve percentage of just 57% was not enough to keep Murray at bay.

The American missed a fleeting chance with a break point in game eight and Murray immediately took advantage, getting the break himself in the next game with a beautiful lob.

He took a firm grip on the match with a run of six out of seven games, easing through the second set with two more breaks.

Murray punched away a winner to break at the start of the third set but there was a flurry of resistance as Querrey reeled off three straight games to lead 3-2.

There was no sustained comeback, however, as Murray once again turned up the pressure with his return of serve to break for a fifth time on his way to a comprehensive victory.

“Sam, especially in the first set, was hitting a huge ball,” added Murray.

“There was a key moment at 3-4 when I saved a break point and then managed to break the next game and had the momentum after that.”

Wawrinka through in tough section

Murray will start as a strong favourite against Zverev, but there is plenty of danger lurking on the Scot’s side of the draw.

Former winner Stan Wawrinka, the US Open champion, is through to the last 16 after a 3-6 6-2 6-2 7-6 (9-7) win over Serbia’s Viktor Troicki.

The Swiss, a potential semi-final opponent for Murray, will play Andreas Seppi next after the Italian beat Belgian Steve Darcis 4-6 6-4 7-6 (7-1) 7-6 (7-2).

Should Murray get past Zverev on Saturday he could face a daunting quarter-final against four-time champion Federer, seventh seed Berdych or fifth seed Kei Nishikori, with Slovakia’s Lukas Lacko the outsider in that section.

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Top Seeds Advance, Defending Champions Ousted

  • Posted: Jan 19, 2017

Top Seeds Advance, Defending Champions Ousted

American duo upset defending champions Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares

Top seeds Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut successfully began their Australian Open title quest, advancing to the second round with a 6-2, 6-3 win over Adrian Mannarino and Adil Shamasdin in exactly one hour on Thursday. The all-French duo next face Jerzy Janowicz and Marcin Matkowski.

Sam Querrey and Donald Young caused the biggest upset in the doubles draw thus far, ousting defending champions and second seeds Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares in the first round. The Americans needed to capitalise on just their one break point chance in the 72-minute match for a 6-3, 7-6(5) win over the British/Brazilian team. Next up for Querrey and Young in the second round is the all-Russian duo of #NextGenATP star Karen Khachanov and Andrey Kuznetsov.

Sixth seeds and 2016 ATP Finals runners-up Raven Klaasen and Rajeev Ram advanced to the second round with a 6-3, 7-5 win over Aliaksandr Bury and Paolo Lorenzi. No. 7 seeds Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo, a new team for 2017, beat Swedes Johan Brunstrom and Andreas Siljestrom 7-5, 4-6, 6-4 for a meeting in the second round with Nicholas Monroe and Artem Sitak.

Eighth seeds Daniel Nestor and Edouard Roger-Vasselin needed just 57 minutes to beat Andres Molteni and Diego Schwartzman 6-0, 6-4. A clash with home hopes Marc Polmans and Andrew Whittington awaits the Canadian/French team in the second round.

Elsewhere, tenth seeds Treat Huey and Max Mirnyi came from a set deficit to defeat Leander Paes and Andre Sa 4-6, 7-6(3), 6-4. Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah, the No. 14 seeds, beat brothers Ken Skupski and Neal Skupski 6-3, 6-4 and Jurgen Melzer and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi ousted No. 13 seeds Mate Pavic and Alexander Peya 6-4, 2-6, 7-5.

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Australian Open 2017: Britain's Andy Murray and Dan Evans prepare for third round

  • Posted: Jan 19, 2017
Australian Open 2017
Venue: Melbourne Park, Melbourne Dates: 16-29 Jan
Coverage: Daily live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online from 21 January.

Britain’s Andy Murray has no injury worries heading into his third round match against American Sam Querrey at the Australian Open on Friday.

The world number one was assessed by a doctor after rolling his right ankle in Wednesday’s win over Andrey Rublev.

Murray is due to feature in the second game on the Hisense Arena in Melbourne, where play begins at 00:30 GMT.

British number four Dan Evans is also in action as he takes on Australia’s Bernard Tomic following Murray’s match.

  • Live scores, results and order of play
  • Six-time champion Djokovic knocked out
  • Analysis – Has Djokovic’s obssession burned itself out
  • Williams and Nadal progress in Melbourne
  • Konta wins but Watson and Edmund lose
  • How to follow the Australian Open on the BBC

Murray in pole position?

Murray admitted his ankle still felt sore on Thursday, but the Scot was able to practice unhindered and spent an hour and a half training on Court 17 at Melbourne Park.

“Thankfully I can put weight on it and I was moving around fine in practice,” said the 29-year-old. “Once I started moving around it felt all right.”

Murray has reached the Australian Open final five times and lost on each occasion, with four of those final defeats coming against Novak Djokovic.

The Scot replaced Djokovic as number one in the world last November and, after the Serb suffered a shock second-round exit to world number 117 Denis Istomin, Murray is being touted as the favourite to win in Melbourne.

“You always pick the number one in the world as favourite, so I had Andy Murray,” two-time Australian Open finalist Pat Cash told BBC Radio 5 live. “But five matches is a long way to go.”

Murray remains focused on Friday’s meeting with Querrey, who beat Djokovic at Wimbledon last year and knocked Jamie Murray and partner Bruno Soares out of the men’s doubles on Thursday.

“The most important thing will be to serve well because that then puts pressure on his service games,” said the British number one.

“I’ll just try to make as many returns as I can. Once I get in the rallies I should do OK.”

Evans eyes third round

Murray’s compatriot Evans is aiming to make it past the third round of a Grand Slam for the first time.

He previously beat Tomic in four sets in the second round of the US Open in 2013, but Tomic won their last encounter at the 2015 Davis Cup.

The pair also met in Miami in 2012 when Tomic’s father suggested Evans – then ranked in the 300s – was not good enough to practice with his son.

“I’m not going to bother saying anything about that again,” Evans said.. “He confronted me about that. We’ll leave it at that.”

Best of the rest

Defending champion and world number one Angelique Kerber will play Czech Kristyna Pliskova, four months after beating her twin Karolina in the US Open final.

Fourth seed Stan Wawrinka plays Serbian Viktor Troicki while Roger Federer will face 17th-seeded Czech Tomas Berdych.

Canadian Eugenie Bouchard, who reached the Wimbledon final in 2014, meets American Coco Vandeweghe and Venus Williams plays China’s Ying-Ying Duan.

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Cash fears Djokovic's best days are behind him

  • Posted: Jan 19, 2017

Novak Djokovic has “lost his edge” and is “a shadow of what he was at his peak”, says 1987 Wimbledon champion Pat Cash.

The defending champion lost in five sets in round two of the Australian Open to world number 117 Denis Istomin.

The Serb, 29, won four Grand Slams in a row between 2015 and 2016 but has made only one of the past three finals.

“If we were doubting it before, we confirmed he’s not the same player he was six months ago,” said Cash.

Speaking to BBC Sport, the Australian added: “[Thursday’s defeat] just shows that Novak has absolutely lost his edge, there’s no doubt about that.”

  • Watch: Cash reflects on Djokovic exit
  • Analysis – Has Djokovic’s obsession burned itself out?
  • Live scores, results and order of play
  • Konta wins but Watson and Edmund lose
  • Williams stays on course for record win

Djokovic – who has slipped to number two in the world with Andy Murray taking the top spot in the rankings – completed a career Grand Slam in June 2016 when he beat Murray in the French Open final, but has struggled for form since then.

The loss to Istomin was Djokovic’s earliest exit from the Australian Open since 2006, when he was beaten in the first round by American Paul Goldstein.

“I’d love to see him competing, to be a true number two fighting for that number one spot, but at this rate I don’t think we will see that,” Cash said.

“It’s clear that it’s a mental thing. He’s done everything he needed to do and wanted to do in his career.”

Djokovic denies lack of intensity

Six-time Australian Open champion Djokovic double-faulted nine times in an error strewn performance against Istomin.

He denied he had lost intensity since completing the career slam, adding that he “forgot about it” when he began a new season.

“It’s not a time now to go so deep into it. I didn’t reflect on that at all at this stage,” he said.

“It’s just that, it’s one of these days when you don’t feel that great on the court, don’t have much rhythm, and the player you’re playing against is feeling the ball very well.”

Since winning the French Open in June, Djokovic has been knocked out in the first round of the Rio Olympics and lost both his US Open title and his status as world number one.

“It’s not like this technique has fallen off. There’s obviously a big confidence thing, but now he makes mistakes and it is a mental thing,” Cash added.

“Maybe it’s his time to say I’m not quite the same player that I was but I can still perform well.”

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