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Set over. And so, it seemed, was the match, especially when Murray broke serve twice to open a seemingly insurmountable 4-0 lead.
But Djokovic has been in seven of the last nine Grand Slam finals -- and won four of them -- in part because he's got a knack for pulling out matches when things are at their bleakest.
He made the previous two U.S. Open finals by saving a pair of match points, both against Roger Federer. Earlier this year, in the French Open quarterfinals against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Djokovic saved four match points and won that match, en route to another final.
So, when Djokovic broke once, then again, to push the second set to 5-5, it didn't come as much of a surprise.
He lost that set. But he cruised through the next two, getting more aggressive by the minute, pushing Murray from corner to corner, not allowing him to dictate with his strange spins honed as a kid in the blustering winds of Scotland. It looked like Djokovic's match to win.
Murray regained the momentum quickly, however, hitting a forehand winner at 30-all in the first game of the fifth set, then nicking a net cord to win break point. Djokovic couldn't believe it. He stood with his hands on his hips staring at his players box and smiling a wry smile while Murray chomped on a white towel and headed over to his chair. As the set wore on, Djokovic started moving slower and slower. Trailing 5-2, the trainer came out to work on his aching right leg.
To no avail. It turned out to be too big a hill to climb for the No. 2 seed. And so, this marks the first time since 2003 that four different men have won the Grand Slam titles.
"I really tried mentally to be out there and physically to always push myself over the limits," Djokovic said. "If I had won that first set and had some chances, maybe the match would go a different way. But there is no reason to go back and say `What if? What if?' He's a Grand Slam winner and he deserves to be there."
The match lasted four minutes longer than the one these two played back in January in the Australian Open semifinals -- a five-set win for Djokovic that he followed up with another, even longer victory in the final against Rafael Nadal.
Though it was a loss, Lendl looked at it as a turning point for Murray, who had fallen to Djokovic in one Grand Slam final and Roger Federer in the other three, including Wimbledon earlier this year.
"Because that was just a war like tonight and that has given him the belief he can do that, he can hang with these guys," Lendl said. "It showed him what it takes to win, so nothing caught him by surprise today."
Back in Britain, the celebration was on. "Yankee Doodle Andy!" shouted one of the headlines. Murray now has a permanent spot in the hearts of fans in a country that invented Grand Slam tennis -- awarding the first of the sport's top titles, back at Wimbledon in 1877.
Lendl, who saw the floodgates for his own career open after he finally broke through, insists there was no magic behind Murray's first major victory. Only a lot of hard work, with more to come.
"You can help somebody in a very short period of time," he said. "However, it takes longer for more things to set in. You cannot do it all in one week, you cannot do that in one month, and hopefully, we're not anywhere near where Andy could get."
[Associated
Press;
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