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'Murray must plan for Djokovic task'

  • Posted: Feb 01, 2016

Andy Murray arrived back in the UK from Melbourne no closer to cracking the code required to defeat Novak Djokovic in a Grand Slam.

The world number two played some outstanding tennis in the second and third sets of the Australian Open final. And yet he still left the court with nothing to show for it, and without a win over the Serb at this level since the 2013 Wimbledon final.

A first Melbourne title always felt a bit of a long shot this year. Murray left home a couple of days after Christmas, and had to cope for five weeks with the understandable anxiety of being so far away from his heavily pregnant wife.

He says he would have flown home immediately had Kim gone into labour, but he knew he was very unlikely to have made it back in time.

An emotional month became even more turbulent when Kim’s father Nigel Sears collapsed on the Rod Laver Arena while watching his player Ana Ivanovic during the first Saturday night session.

Murray is very close to his father-in-law and went straight to the hospital after completing his third-round match. He returned the next day, and considered flying home, before the doctors gave Sears the green light to do the same.

Murray had return flights on hold for several days. Having a bag packed and next to the front door is excellent practice for an expectant father, but it must be very unsettling when you are trying to negotiate the latter stages of a Grand Slam before attempting to dethrone the runaway world number one.

When Murray lost his quarter-final to Roger Federer at the Australian Open of 2014, in his first major event since back surgery, he said it would have been “completely stupid” to expect him to win the title so soon. Victory this year was more plausible, but these were still a very challenging set of circumstances for a very emotional man.

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Murray played extremely well throughout his time down under, but he will have plenty of food for thought while on paternity leave. He is hoping to return for Great Britain’s defence of the Davis Cup, which begins against Japan in Birmingham in the first week of March.

The first Masters events of the year follow in Indian Wells and Miami, before the European clay-court season heralds the start of the countdown to the French Open.

More pivotal clashes with Djokovic seem inevitable in the four months that will define the season, with Wimbledon, the Rio Olympics and the US Open all following on from Roland Garros.

Nemesis Novak

So what will Murray’s approach against the now 11-time Grand Slam champion be?

His start in Melbourne was well below par, and there was no indication of a clear strategy emerging until he found himself a set and a break down. By then it was arguably too late, as Murray has never beaten Djokovic after dropping the first set.

The world number one made his now customary exceptional start, but there was little sign of the breathtaking aggression and neatly timed approaches to the net which later highlighted Murray’s stirring counterattack.

Djokovic summed it up best after the match, when he commented: “I felt he was pretty neutral from the back of the court.”

Murray has the tools to push Djokovic all the way, as he showed in last year’s French Open semi-final and when he beat him in the final in Montreal.

But he also knows the task is unlikely to get any easier. Djokovic is allowing himself just a few days off, before switching his attention to the next challenge on the horizon.

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Konta breaks into world top 30

  • Posted: Feb 01, 2016

Britain’s Johanna Konta has broken into the world’s top 30 for the first time.

Konta, 24, jumped from 47 to 28 in the WTA world rankings after reaching the semi-finals of the Australian Open, where she was beaten by Angelique Kerber.

The German, who stunned world number one Serena Williams in the final at the weekend, moves up to second.

British number two Heather Watson, knocked out in the first round in Melbourne, has fallen six places to 85.

The full rankings are available on WTA website.

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Can Djokovic become the greatest?

  • Posted: Jan 31, 2016

It was a familiar ending, a habitual champion winning once again. The second best player in the world could not topple him, and seemingly no-one can.

The Big Four is now the Big One.

Novak Djokovic’s record-equalling sixth Australian Open title was his third consecutive Grand Slam and the 11th of his career, putting him alongside two of the sport’s idols, Rod Laver and Bjorn Borg.

A beaten Andy Murray, comfortably conquered in straight sets, smiled as he reached for the on-court microphone. “I feel like I’ve been here before,” he quipped. Yet what to do about it?

It was the Serb’s fourth win over the Briton in the Melbourne final, and his 11th in their past 12 matches.

But the complex puzzle of how to beat Djokovic in a Grand Slam is not only Murray’s to solve. Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, owners of 31 major titles between them, cannot crack the code and neither can anyone else, while the 28-year-old Djokovic has time to improve, to hunt more records, to become the greatest ever.

The Lionel Messi of tennis

Former British number one Andrew Castle likens the Australian Open champion to Barcelona and Argentina footballer Lionel Messi. They inhabit a different planet to the rest.

“The bar has never been as high in men’s tennis,” says Castle.

“I cannot believe what I’m watching and Novak Djokovic is undoubtedly moving towards being considered the sport’s all-time greatest player, and that’s quite something, particularly in this generation.

“I cannot think of a more eminent, more illustrious sportsperson in the world. There’s Lionel Messi and his Ballons d’Or, and Serena Williams with her 21 Grand Slam titles, but I cannot think of anybody more notable than Djokovic. It’s amazing.”

The ruthless ‘street fighter’

Djokovic’s ruthless accumulation of titles, winning four of the past five Grand Slams, is spellbinding.

For the past couple of years, the Serb has seemed to play with a cloak of invincibility, making a muggle of every elite player.

“He doesn’t miss anymore,” says former Australian Open finalist John Lloyd in astonishment.

“He’s always been a great defender but now he seems to be able to defend and hurt you at the same time. He’s improved everything. His serve, he’s better at the net – his coach Boris Becker has helped there – and in some ways his instincts are more aggressive.”

In 2011 Djokovic won 43 matches in a row and collected three Grand Slams, but his statistics in 2015 were even better. He won 82 of 88 matches – a 93% win percentage – and the present-day Djokovic is more ruthless on the grandest of stages.

Last year, the man Becker describes as a “street fighter”, won 11 of 15 finals and became only the third player in the open era to reach all four Grand Slam finals in a calendar year.

“Mentally, he doesn’t think he can be beaten,” says Lloyd.

The Becker effect – creating an aura

After losing three consecutive Grand Slam finals, Djokovic recruited six-time Grand Slam champion Becker in 2013 and the German, says Lloyd, has given his pupil an edge.

Djokovic has backed up this theory, revealing it was a pep talk from his coach during a third-set rain delay that was key to winning his third Wimbledon title against Roger Federer last year.

“To say Boris is confident in himself is an understatement and I mean that in a positive way,” says Lloyd. “The night before a match they all have doubts, all the greats, just a tiny little bit, but when you have someone like Boris there it makes a huge difference.”

Can the Serb be beaten in a Grand Slam? Stan Wawrinka was the only player to do so last year, beating him in the French Open final and preventing Djokovic claiming the only major that has eluded him.

The 34-year-old Federer, a 17-time Grand Slam champion and still the world number three, has been beaten in the last three Slam finals the pair have contested. Indeed, the Swiss last beat the world number one in a Grand Slam in 2012, the semi-finals at Wimbledon.

“It’s going to take an unbelievable performance,” says Lloyd.

“A player can have a day like Wawrinka did at the French, when everything just went in – it can happen. But Djokovic has an aura, which gives him an extra few points, even against Federer.

“Federer hasn’t beaten him for a while in a best of five; Federer knows it, Novak knows it. With Federer you can never tell facially but I can guarantee there’s doubt.”

Aggressive, magnificent, smart – and beaten

Murray has now racked up five losses in Australian Open finals and it’s Djokovic who has been his tormentor on four of those occasions, as he often is against the Briton.

During the two hours and 53 minutes of Sunday’s contest, the Scot created opportunities in the second and third sets but once Djokovic had eased to a 5-0 lead in the first, restricting his rival to five points in the first 20 minutes, the course of the match had been set.

Murray has played better, but was he bad? No, Djokovic was just superior.

“Murray came after him, he tried to be very aggressive, but Djokovic just blunted his attack and was able to dominate proceedings,” says Lloyd. “The first set set the tone. I thought Djokovic was exceptional.

“I liked that Murray was going for the second serve more. Ironically, it cost him the third set tie-break when he got those two double faults, but that’s the sort of thing he needs to do from now on.

“I thought his backhand was magnificent, his serve was very good. His forehand did break down a little bit and that was the one area he needed to be solid with.”

Castle believes the Scot got his tactics “spot on”, praising Murray’s “superb” backhand and aggression.

“Against anybody else, Murray would have beaten them, but what happened? He lost in straight sets to Djokovic,” says Castle.

“Murray’s had a brilliant career but with Djokovic he’s looking at a different level again and it’s going to be fascinating watching Murray go forward.”

‘I’d show him what he looks like till he’s sick of it’

The Scot has created history, ending Britain’s 77-year wait for a men’s Wimbledon champion and, last year, leading Britain to a first Davis Cup win since 1936, but can he catch Djokovic?

Castle believes “taking care” of the world number one is the last remaining goal of Murray’s career.

“He must be thinking about that in practice every time,” he says. “Every time he’s lifting weights, every time he’s moving to the forehand. That’s how good Djokovic is.

“Andy will make whatever changes are required because he’s that professional, but it will be a hell of a grind. It takes months to make the smallest of margins.”

For Murray to succeed in Grand Slam finals again, Lloyd says the former Wimbledon and US Open champion must stop directing negative energy towards his coaching team.

“The mental side was what I thought let him down again,” says the former Davis Cup player.

“There was far too much negative body language, looking up at his box. When you’re doing that nonsense it’s sending a message out and Djokovic is feeding off that. When Djokovic sees that, he’s thinking ‘I’ve got this guy’.

“He’s got to cut that out if he’s going to beat Djokovic. I’d replay that match to him and show him what he looks like – I’d show that to him until he’s sick of it, so it’d just be like watching a horror film.

“I’m not saying he should be a robot, but the energy needs to be far more positive. He won two Grand Slams with his previous coach Ivan Lendl when he cut all that out. It’s in his hands.”

Can Djokovic surpass Federer?

Murray was expected to board the first flight back to the UK to be with his pregnant wife Kim, and should he need guidance on combining fatherhood with on-court success he need only look at Djokovic, father of 14-month-old Stefan.

Fatherhood, after all, has not stopped the Serb chasing history.

He will again set his sights on winning a calendar Grand Slam and, should he do so, will draw level with Nadal on 14 Grand Slams. After that? Federer’s 17 titles, which both Lloyd and Castle believe is an achievable target.

“He’s got to keep the hunger,” says Lloyd. “At some stage the desire to train four hours every day ends, but at the moment it hasn’t.

“Players, whether they say it or not, love records. He’s equalled Laver and Borg, he wants to win the French Open and wants to become the greatest player of all time. These are all incentives. They have to have something to keep motivating them and this guy wants to break records.

“He’s still got another four great years in him. If he can keep the focus who knows how many more he can win.”

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AO Doubles Final One For The Purists

  • Posted: Jan 30, 2016

AO Doubles Final One For The Purists

Control of net key in Murray/Soares vs. Nestor/Stepanek showdown

Jamie Murray was five years old when Daniel Nestor made his pro debut in 1991. Much has happened since. Nestor, now 43, has partnered with a variety of players — most notably Mark Knowles, Nenad Zimonjic, Max Mirnyi and Sebastien Lareau — to win eight Grand Slam men’s doubles titles, four Barclays ATP World Tour Finals crowns, 28 ATP World Tour Masters 1000s, and an Olympic gold medal at the 2000 Sydney Games. He’s also occupied the No. 1 slot in the Emirates ATP Doubles Rankings, making the Serbian-born Canadian one of the sport’s most accomplished achievers.

“Daniel’s had an amazing career,” said Jamie Murray, who with brother Andy Murray became the first siblings to reach finals in both men’s singles and doubles at a major since Reggie Doherty/Laurie Doherty at Wimbledon in 1906. “He won his 1,000th match in Sydney. He’s been a great role model for me. He’s somebody who I’ve looked up to from a young age when I started playing doubles.”

Now 29, Murray is about to face his role model in the final of the 2016 Australian Open. The Scotsman and partner Bruno Soares of Brazil will take on Nestor and another veteran, 37-year-old Czech Radek Stepanek, on Saturday night in Rod Laver Arena.

“They’re a very strong team, a very experienced team,” observed Soares. “Nestor is one of the all-time greats in doubles. Both of them, they’ve won here before, so they know what it feels like to win the Aussie Open final.”

The Murray/Soares partnership is a new one, launched only weeks ago. This is just their third tournament together. They kicked off 2016 by reaching the semis in Doha (l. to Lopez/Lopez), before taking the title in Sydney (d. Bopanna/Mergea). En route to the Melbourne final, the No. 7 seeds dispatched Marray/Qureshi 6-4, 6-4; Fyrstenberg/Janowicz 7-5, 6-3; No. 11 Inglot/Lindstedt 6-3, 6-4; No. 13 Klaasen/Ram 6-7(3), 6-4, 7-6(3); and Mannarino/Pouille 6-3, 6-1. Murray has now reached the final of the past three Grand Slams, the first two with Australian John Peers. But he’s still seeking his first major title.

For their part, Nestor and Stepanek advanced with wins over Hsieh/Yang 6-1, 7-5; No. 10 Kubot/Matkowski 7-6(4), 6-1; Andujar/Carreno Busta 5-7, 6-4, 6-4; No. 14 Huey/Mirnyi 6-4, 6-4; and Cuevas/Granollers 7-6(11), 6-4.

“It’s Jamie’s third Slam final in a row, so we have to expect a very tough match,” said Stepanek, himself a two-time Slam champ in doubles (2012 Australian Open, 2013 US Open, both with Leander Paes).

“For me, it took a couple of Grand Slam finals to get through,” said Nestor. “I imagine they’re going to play their best match. They’ve experienced this already, so they’re going to be very tough to beat.”

Saturday’s match-up will likely come down to which team can play the more aggressive tennis and assert themselves at the net. Experience is most certainly on the Nestor/Stepanek side, but Murray/Soares have shown that they can hang with the big boys, too.

“It’s going to be a pure doubles game, everyone trying to take control of the net,” Soares asserted. “We’re going to have to try to do that before them. We’ll try to make a lot of returns, pressure their serves.”

“They’re going to be very tough to beat in this situation because they’ve been there and done it before,” said Murray. “We’ve also been to Grand Slam finals but we haven’t won, so I guess that’s an edge they’d have over us.”

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How does Murray beat Djokovic?

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2016
Australian Open: Djokovic v Murray
Venue: Melbourne Park Date: Sunday, 31 January Time: 08:30 GMT
Coverage: Live radio commentary on BBC Radio 5 live Sports Extra, plus text commentary on the BBC Sport website. Highlights on BBC Two from 14:05 GMT.

Andy Murray says the past does not matter, but having lost three Australian Open finals to Novak Djokovic just how does he beat the Serb?

Sunday’s match will be the 31st time the two players have met, with Djokovic having won 21, including 10 of the past 11.

Murray, 28, reached his fifth Melbourne final with a hard-fought five-set win over Milos Raonic on Friday. No-one has played in more finals of an individual Grand Slam without winning one.

But how can Murray beat the world number one? BBC tennis commentators Andrew Castle and John Lloyd provide a few pointers.

‘It’s about what happens on Sunday’

Since Murray won the 2013 Wimbledon final, the Briton has beaten Djokovic only once in 11 matches – in the Rogers Cup last year.

But the world number two is not concerned by the history between the pair.

“It’s one tennis match. It doesn’t matter what’s happened in the past really – it’s about what happens on Sunday,” he said.

“Novak loves playing on this court. We’ve played a bunch of times here, but hopefully it can be a different result.

“People like to read into what’s happened in the past, but Stan Wawrinka beat Rafa Nadal in the 2015 final here and I don’t think he’d won against him in 13 attempts.”

Murray is also not concerned by having one day fewer to rest than Djokovic, who only needed four sets to beat Roger Federer in the semi-finals on Thursday.

“If you play a quick match on the Friday, it doesn’t really make a huge difference,” said Murray.

“It isn’t ideal if you play the five sets, but Novak also won here the time we played five hours and then he played a six-hour final. So it’s do-able.”

‘Draw on the positives’

The odds seem stacked against Murray. Djokovic has a perfect Australian Open final record, winning on all five appearances.

However, the Scot does have some high-profile wins over the Serb, including the 2012 US Open final and the 2013 Wimbledon final.

Lloyd, an Australian Open finalist in December 1977, thinks the Murray camp will be focusing on those two victories.

“This will come down to his coach Amelie Mauresmo,” said Lloyd. “They will be thinking and talking about the two Grand Slam finals Andy has beaten Novak in and won’t be thinking about the losses.

“Draw on the positives, you’ve beaten him before and you can do it again. It’s not as if he is not getting wiped off the floor when he loses.

“He has a good attitude and other people will have written him off and Andy will like that.”

‘He can’t trade from the back of the court’

Murray is confident he has the right strategy and skills to defeat Djokovic.

“I need to keep to my game plan very well, not have any lapses in concentration and just play the best I can,” he said.

Former British number one Castle thinks Murray will also have to mix his style of play if he is to deny Djokovic an 11th Grand Slam title.

“Murray will need to go in with a game plan, give it absolutely everything and go for it,” said Castle. “I don’t think that over five sets in Australia he can stay back and trade from the back of the court.

“If you’re number two in the world and are as stubborn, massively determined and as fit as Andy is then you don’t walk out there thinking, ‘I will lose this one’.

“OK, he has lost 10 of the past 11 but he has beaten Novak Djokovic in a Wimbledon final and a US Open final and other times as well. In the French Open semi-finals [in 2015] in the third and fourth sets he blew Novak off the court. It was amazing.”

Will Murray do it?

“I think he can beat him, but it will be tough,” said Lloyd.

“The thing about Andy Murray and Novak Djokovic is that their games cancel each other out but Novak seems mentally to be able to hang in there just a bit longer and the pressure seems to tell with Andy.

“But Andy was very good mentally against Raonic and I have a good feeling for this. It’s going to be close but I think Andy will sneak it.

“The Australian fans want Andy to win and they’re thinking it’s Andy’s time – I do too.”

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Australian Open Doubles Final Preview

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2016

Australian Open Doubles Final Preview

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Murray beats Raonic to reach final

  • Posted: Jan 29, 2016
Australian Open
Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 18-31 January
Coverage: Live radio commentary on the men’s and women’s finals from 08:30 GMT on Saturday and Sunday, plus live text commentary on the BBC Sport website.
Highlights: Watch on BBC Two, online and BBC Sport app from 13:00 on Saturday and 14:00 on Sunday.

Britain’s Andy Murray reached his fifth Australian Open final by winning an epic five-set battle with 13th seed Milos Raonic.

World number two Murray was broken in the first game of the match and his 25-year-old Canadian opponent went on to take the first and third sets.

But the 28-year-old Scot prevailed 4-6 7-5 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 6-2 in a gruelling four-hour contest.

Murray will meet defending champion Novak Djokovic in Sunday’s final.

“It was tough in that third set. In the tie-break he didn’t miss a single serve and it is frustrating when you don’t get a say in the points,” said Murray, who has been a runner-up in the tournament four times.

“Over the match, I got a better read on his serve and that was crucial.”

The result means Murray and older sibling Jamie are the first brothers in the Open era to reach the finals in both the men’s singles and men’s doubles events at a Grand Slam.

Jamie Murray and Bruno Soares will play Daniel Nestor and Radek Stepanek in the doubles final on Saturday.

The Murrays’ fellow Scot Gordon Reid is on course for an Australian Open double after reaching the final of the men’s wheelchair in both the singles and doubles.

Raonic’s stunning start

Much has been made of distraction off court for Murray during this tournament, with wife Kim heavily pregnant at home in Britain, and her father Nigel recovering from illness.

The Scot had come through the first five rounds relatively unscathed but made the worst possible start to his sixth Australian Open semi-final, as Raonic went on the hunt for a place in his first Grand Slam final.

The 6ft 5in Raonic stunned Murray by breaking him in the first game and the Briton failed to execute three break points on the Canadian’s serve as he fell 2-0 behind.

Raonic, who was unbeaten in 2016 having won the Brisbane Open earlier this month, was then able to rely on his trademark big serve to see out the first set without much drama.

Murray fights back

Raonic held off two breaks but rarely threatened on his opponent’s serve, and Murray’s patience was rewarded as he took the second set 7-5.

After five games were won to love in the third set, it became a matter of who was going to crack first.

A tie-break followed, and big-serving Raonic was in his element. He raced into a three-point lead and, with two set points, he won it with his 13th ace of the match.

But Murray’s confidence was not affected and he made sure he took the match all the way by breaking late in the fourth to take it 6-4.

Raonic looked to be struggling through injury and fatigue, and called for a medical time-out before the start of the fifth. As the Canadian tired, Murray seemed to get stronger and he took the final set with ease.

“He definitely slowed down in the fifth set for sure which was unfortunate for him,” the Scot said of Raonic’s injury.

“I obviously got a bit lucky on that but you just try to focus on your side of the court.”

Raonic said: “That’s probably the most heartbroken I felt on court, but that’s what it is.”

Match analysis

BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller

Raonic came out of the blocks like Novak Djokovic: breaking Murray to love in the opening game and tormenting him with serves to the body at 140mph.

The leg injury which denied the Canadian the chance to make the deciding set truly competitive was cruel on someone who had played so magnificently, yet Murray had been his equal throughout. He actually won a higher percentage of first-serve points than Raonic, and won two out of every three points on his much maligned second serve.

Murray also kept his emotions much more in check than he was able to earlier in the week: he will need a repeat performance come Sunday’s final.

Can Murray beat Djokovic?

Former Wimbledon champion Pat Cash: “This match won’t have taken an awful lot out of Murray – the rallies weren’t that long. He was moving very well at the end and was playing confidently. He knows where he failed in last year’s final against Djokovic. He knows he must keep the pressure up and can’t afford any lapses.

“Last year he was at himself the whole time. He shouldn’t have been but he couldn’t stop himself and for his sake I’m hoping he has learnt the lessons from that and can control his emotions.”

BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller: “Maybe last year Murray didn’t believe he could beat Djokovic, but now he’s more confident in his abilities and Djokovic has been a bit off-key at times, making 100 errors in his match against Gilles Simon.”

Murray v Djokovic – The stats you need to know

  • Murray will be competing in his ninth Grand Slam final, and is looking for his third major title after wins at US Open (2012) and Wimbledon (2013)
  • Djokovic is unbeaten in all five of his Australian Open final appearances, and has beaten Murray in three of them.
  • Djokovic has 10 Grand Slams to his name – five Australian, three at Wimbledon and two US titles.
  • It will be the 31st meeting between the two players. Murray has been defeated in 21 matches against the Serb.
  • Murray is looking to become the first man in the Open era to win a Grand Slam title after losing four finals at any one tournament.

BBC coverage

There will be live coverage of Djokovic v Murray on Radio 5 live from 08:15 GMT on Sunday and live text commentary on the BBC Sport website from 08:00 GMT.

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