Murray reaches Wimbledon quarters for 10th straight year
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[July 11, 2017]
By Toby Davis
LONDON (Reuters) - Andy Murray
continued his Wimbledon tour of awkward and unpredictable opponents
and booked his spot in the quarter-finals with a 7-6(1) 6-4 6-4
victory over showman Benoit Paire on Monday.
The Frenchman provided Murray with the latest test of his title
credentials as well as of his injured hip, but the champion reached
the last eight for the 10th straight year with some comfort.
Like Murray's previous opponents -- Alexander Bublik, Dustin Brown
and Fabio Fognini -- Paire was not out of a conventional tennis
mold.
His backhand was stronger than his forehand and capable of
inflicting damage and there were moments in the match when Murray's
chances of a third title looked questionable, especially when his
serve was broken twice in the first set.
Yet while Paire was able to dish out occasional blows, hitting 50
winners and 44 unforced errors, it was Murray's weapons that were
more frequently on target and carried the greater destructive power.
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Perhaps the most pleasing aspect of the victory for Murray, however,
would have been his movement, which seems to have improved
significantly, even if he continues to hobble awkwardly between
points.
Paire had begun the encounter by trying to test Murray's willingness
to chase down numerous dropshots, but seeing the Scot rise time and
again to the challenge, he had his own view about Murray's hip
problems.
"Between the points, he can do what he wants, but during the point
he can run like a rabbit," Paire told reporters.
Murray was certainly slicker around the court than he
had been against Fognini, when the Italian snatched a set and almost
pushed the match into a decider.
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Great Britain’s Andy Murray celebrates after winning the fourth
round match against France’s Benoit Paire REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth
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"I'm moving well, I didn't feel like I moved that well against
Fabio. But the first two matches and today, I felt like I moved
really good. I certainly feel like I've been tested in that
department a lot because the guys I've played against have done a
lot of forward movements," Murray said.
All in all, Murray had too much guile for Paire and wrapped up his
26th successive win against French opposition in two hours and 21
minutes, even if there were moments when he did not have everything
his own way.
Paire broke Murray twice in successive games in the first set which
ended up going to a tiebreak that the top seed won comfortably.
The next two sets were hardly routine for Murray, but there was
little doubt that he would prevail to set up a tie with 24th seed
Sam Querrey, who beat Kevin Anderson.
"I've done a good job so far here," Murray said. "I mean, today was
by far the best I hit the ball, the cleanest I hit the ball. I was
happy about that."
(Reporting by Toby Davis, editing by Ed Osmond and Pritha Sarkar) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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