Inspired
Murray leads Britain to Davis Cup title
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[November 30, 2015]
By Martyn Herman
GHENT, Belgium (Reuters) - The moment Andy
Murray has pursued with such fanatical zeal finally arrived,
unforgettably, on Sunday when an outrageous lob arced over Belgium's
David Goffin to seal Britain's first Davis Cup title for 79 years.
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Fittingly for a player who has almost single-handedly guided his
country to the title this year, the indefatigable Murray ended
Goffin's inspired resistance with a moment of sheer brilliance few
could conjure to complete a 6-3 7-5 6-3 victory.
It gave Britain a winning 3-1 lead and started a party that hundreds
of visiting fans decked out in union flags and Scottish saltires
will keep going long into the night in medieval Ghent.
Murray, who put in a triple-shift over the weekend and looked
exhausted at the end of a tense three-hour contest, collapsed on to
the claycourt before being swamped by his team mates, including
brother Jamie, and captain Leon Smith.
Sportingly he clambered to his feet to console Goffin who had
gallantly clung on to the hope of keeping alive Belgium's chances of
winning the title for the first time.
Murray then saluted the 'Barmy Army', who roared his every winner
over a weekend that rubber-stamped his place in the chronicles of
British sporting greatness, if any had doubted it after he ended a
77-year wait for a men's champion at Wimbledon in 2013, a year after
winning the Olympics and U.S. Open.
"I probably haven't been as emotional as that after a match that
I've won," Murray told reporters later as dance music still
reverberated around the vast warehouse-like arena on the edge of the
city.
"It's incredible that we managed to win this competition. I didn't
know that would ever be possible. It's great."
World number two Murray, whose return to the team in 2013
accelerated Britain's rapid rise from the depths that begun when
Smith took charge in 2010, has won 11 live rubbers in this year's
run, matching Ivan Ljubicic's total for Croatia in 2005.
He has won all eight singles he played while teaming up three times
with brother Jamie for crucial doubles wins, one of which came on
Saturday to put Britain 2-1 ahead.
"Really impressive from @andy_murray. One of the best Davis Cup
years in history," former U.S. Open champion and world number one
Andy Roddick said on Twitter.
The small Scottish town of Dunblane, where the Murray brothers grew
up, could justifiably claim its name should be inscribed on the
trophy.
Fellow Scot Smith, who took over when Britain were on the verge of
relegation to the Davis Cup's fourth division, paid tribute to the
whole team but described Murray's mammoth contribution to the
country's first title since 1936 as "one of the best achievements of
all time."
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"It's incredible for all of us to watch how he's managed to win that
many rubbers, that many wins," he said.
"Just now what's important is what's been achieved. It's
monumental."
Murray is the first player since American Pete Sampras in 1995 to
win three live rubbers in a final.
There was a sense of inevitability about the outcome on Sunday with
Belgium trailing 2-1 and needing to win both reverse singles. But
Goffin, roared on by a soccer-style crowd inside the claustrophobic
arena, forced Murray to play his best tennis.
Goffin squandered a break point at 2-2 in the opening set and Murray
then pounced, scorching a backhand winner off a weak second serve to
take a lead he never relinquished.
There was no chance of Goffin fading though. He played some
sensational tennis to stay with Murray in the second set but a tired
forehand into the net in 11th game gave Murray a break and the Scot
struck a stupendous forehand winner to seal the set.
Murray wobbled briefly when he dropped serve early in the third set
but he responded to move 5-3 ahead before providing the most
spectacular of climaxes to a memorable year.
(Editing by Toby Davis)
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