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			Murray ready to work overtime in Barcelona to stay at top 
			
		 
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			 [April 25, 2017] 
			(Reuters) - World number one 
			Andy Murray returns to the Barcelona clay courts that launched his 
			career this week as he puts in some overtime ahead of the French 
			Open. 
			 
			Murray, who played and lost his first professional match as a 
			17-year-old at the tournament in 2005, against Jan Hernych, took a 
			late entry into the Barcelona Open after an early defeat to Spain's 
			Albert Ramos-Vinolas in Monte Carlo last week. 
			 
			While giving him some crucial match time on a surface he has grown 
			to love, it also offers the 29-year-old the chance to consolidate 
			his position at the top of the ATP rankings. 
			 
			Murray accumulated a barrel-load of ranking points during last 
			season's claycourt swing, winning the Rome Masters and reaching the 
			French Open final, where he lost to Novak Djokovic. 
			 
			With those points to defend and the effects of an elbow injury still 
			lingering, Murray knows the pressure is on to keep the number one 
			ranking he secured in November. 
			 
			"I hope to stay there for a long time, but it's hard," Murray, who 
			spent two years at the Sanchez-Casal Academy in Barcelona as a 
			junior, told the ATP's website. 
			
			
			  
			
			"It took me 12 years to get there, and the physical and mental 
			effort it took to do it last year was enormous. It's not easy to 
			stay there, but I hope I can. 
			 
			"It's always hard to maintain your ranking at the top of the game. A 
			lot of the young ones are starting to play better and better, so 
			it's going to be tough." 
			 
			Surprisingly, Murray's first ATP title on the red dirt did not 
			arrive until 2015 in Munich. He quickly followed that by beating 
			king of clay Rafael Nadal in the Madrid final. 
			 
			Last year was even better, and he won 18 of his 21 matches during 
			the European claycourt season. 
			 
			The transition from the hardcourts to the clay can still be tricky 
			though, even for a player now so at home on the surface. 
			 
			
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			Andy Murray of Britain plays a shot to Albert Ramos-Vinolas of 
			Spain. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard 
            
			  
            "The best way to adapt to new surfaces [is] playing 
			naturally against the best players in the world," he said. 
			 
			Stepping back out on the Barcelona clay for the first time since 
			2012 is also something of a trip down memory lane for Murray. 
			 
			"I have great memories, not only from training and living here, but 
			also because I played my first professional match on one of these 
			courts and I remember it well," he said. 
			 
			"The last time I came here I hadn't won a claycourt tournament, nor 
			been in big finals, nor beaten some of the best players on this 
			surface. But in the past few years I've had great wins against Rafa 
			(Nadal) and Novak (Djokovic)." 
			 
			The top seed will face Australian Bernard Tomic on Wednesday. 
			 
			(Writing by Martyn Herman; Editing by Hugh Lawson) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All 
			rights reserved.] 
			Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights 
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			or redistributed. 
			
			
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