Tennis: Murray dominates in Rio, outsider Puig arrives on big stage
Send a link to a friend
[August 22, 2016]
By Drazen Jorgic
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Andy Murray
etched his name in history books by winning an unprecedented second
singles title at the Rio Games and the Briton now has his sights on
the ultimate prize: overhauling Novak Djokovic to become the world
no. 1.
The shock winner of the women's tournament, 22-year-old Monica Puig
of Puerto Rico, holds equally lofty ambitions and she was not
mincing her words in Rio: "I'm letting the world know that I’ve
arrived."
While Puig's gutsy underdog displays captivated fans at Rio,
Murray's triumph over Argentina's injury-prone Juan Martin del Potro
owed much to brilliant consistency as the Wimbledon winner continued
with the hottest streak of his life.
After ending Del Potro's fairytale comeback from injury in the
final, Murray showed he has the qualities to displace the 12-time
Grand Slam winner Djokovic, who was left in tears after his first
round defeat by del Potro.
"(Djokovic's) consistency - I mean what I’ve been doing the last
four months, he’s been doing for the whole year. So I need to find a
way to keep that going," Murray said after beating del Potro.
The return of 2009 U.S. Open winner del Potro, who had sunk to 141
in the world rankings due to wrist injuries, coincided with the
re-emergence of Spain's former singles champion Rafa Nadal after two
months off with injury.
The Spaniard's career has been rocked by injuries but he rolled back
the years to win a mixed doubles gold despite admitting he was not
100 percent fit, suggesting he still poses a threat to the world's
best.
Puig's final victory over Germany's world number two Angelique
Kerber and her emergence into the limelight increases the pool of
players bidding to dethrone Serena Williams from the top of women's
tennis.
[to top of second column] |
Gold medalist Andy Murray (GBR) of Britain reacts after receiving
his medal. REUTERS/Marcos Brindicci
"This medal gives me a lot of confidence about what I can do," Puig
said.
The London Games singles champion Williams, 34, suffered a surprise
third-round exit while her sister Venus, 36, was knocked out in the
opening match.
The duo, who are three time Olympic doubles champions, also crashed
out in the first round trying to defend their doubles crown. The
sisters had won 14 women's doubles grand slam titles, to go along
with a combined tally of 29 major singles crowns.
Their loss most likely brought the curtain down on the greatest
women's tennis pairing in Olympics history.
(Reporting by Drazen Jorgic; Editing by Andrew Hay)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|