Knight in rusty armor Murray battles through
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[January 16, 2017]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Andy Murray took
to Melbourne Park's center court as top seed at a grand slam for the
first time in his career on Monday but the recently knighted
Briton's victory over Illya Marchenko was far from a regal display.
A heavy-footed and rusty Murray had to dig himself out of a number
of holes before securing a 7-5 7-6(5) 6-2 win over the 95th-ranked
Ukrainian, having spent far longer under a hot sun than he would
have liked at Rod Laver Arena.
"I don't think it was the best match, to be honest," Murray told
reporters after the two hours and 47 minute slog.
Murray has typically started the year's first grand slam like a
well-oiled machine but for the first two sets the only free movement
came from the Scot's vocal chords as he berated himself constantly
for limp baseline play and wayward serving.
"Shocking!" Murray howled at the terraces a number of times as he
blew a 5-2 lead in the first set.
The 29-year-old was so agitated that he became confused by his drink
bottles during a change of ends, unable to differentiate between a
600ml container and a much larger one.
"I know how much I have to drink when it's a certain temperature. I
couldn't find how big it was, so I didn't know how much I was having
to drink," he said with a sheepish smile as he studied his drink
bottle in the post-match news conference.
"I still didn't see (the volume) on the court, but I can actually
see it now. It's one liter."
Murray landed less than half his first serves in the match and was
broken three times by Marchenko, who was buoyed by the Scot's
troubles and swung hard for the lines.
But Murray yelled his way out of the rough patches and gradually
shed his tentative ways to rally with aggression.
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Britain's Andy Murray serves during his Men's singles first round
match against Ukraine's Illya Marchenko. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
After edging the second set tiebreak, Murray roared to 5-1 in the
third before progressing to a match against Russian qualifier Andrey
Rublev who beat Taiwan's Lu Yen-Hsun.
He was not announced as "Sir Andy Murray" when he entered the court
to a warm ovation but the Scot, bidding for his first Australian
title after losing five finals, had no problem with that.
"Everyone around tennis, everyone that I know has been exactly the
same," he said.
"I don't feel like it's been a distraction. It's something I've had
to speak about, obviously quite a lot. But I've had enough time to
get my head around it."
(Editing by Greg Stutchbury and Ed Osmond)
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