Wednesday, 5 March 2008

Murray through to Dubai Quarter-Finals

Murray Sets Up Davydenko Quarter-final at Barclays Dubai Tennis Championships

Following on from Andy Murray's impressive first round victory against world number one Roger Federer, the Scot continued his run in the Dubai Tournament with a victory over Fernando Verdasco. www.dubaitennischampionships.com reported the story...

Dubai, UAE, March 5th, 2008: Andy Murray didn’t face a break point as he beat Roger Federer in the first round of the Barclays Dubai Tennis Championships, but that did not necessarily mean that he would have an easy ride against Spanish left-hander Fernando Verdasco. And he didn’t, needing two hours 24-minutes to edge through to the quarter-finals. His 6-3 3-6 7-6 win set up a clash with Russian fifth seed Nikolay Davydenko, who beat Czech Jan Hernych 6-1 6-4.

The unseeded Scot looked a little slow in the early part of the match, and he faced the first break point at 2-2. He held off that threat, broke for 4-2 when his opponent double-faulted, but still needed to survive two more break points before clinching the set.

Verdasco played aggressively and came to the net early in the second set, and his tactic paid off as he built a 3-0 lead. And, although Murray broke back in the seventh game, Verdasco immediately reclaimed the advantage with another break.

Fortunes in the final set also fluctuated, with Murray saving two break points before breaking to lead 4-2. That still wasn’t enough to end Verdasco’s challenge, as the Spaniard immediately broke back and then held another break point to lead 6-5.

But he netted a volley, and Murray was the dominant force in the tiebreak, sweeping to a 6-2 lead before closing out the match on his fourth match point.

“It wasn’t the best match I’ve played, but it was pretty rough conditions out there,” said Murray. “It was really windy and I didn’t hit the ball clear at all. I think it’s the first leftie I’ve played all year and it takes a little while to get used to their spins and the way the serve’s moving. So I definitely struggled today, but I’m really happy with the way that I fought to win a match like that.”

The final point involved a very long rally, which saw Murray bide his time and wait for an error from his opponent.

“It was a pretty ugly point, actually,” said Murray. “I was just making sure I kept the ball in play, because I think he’s the sort of guy if you can make a lot of balls against him, keep him in the back of the court, he can get a bit impatient, and luckily he missed one at the end.”

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