Long road back to singles
competition, says Murray
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[July 12, 2019]
(Reuters) - Former world number
one Andy Murray has said it could take up to a year for him to
regain the strength in his hip needed for a return to singles
action.
The 32-year-old claimed the doubles title with Feliciano Lopez at
Queen's Club on his return to competitive tennis late last month
after undergoing career-saving hip resurfacing surgery in January.
The Scot lost in the second round of the men's doubles at Wimbledon
with Pierre-Hugues Herbert and in the third round of mixed doubles
with Serena Williams, but said there was still a long way to go
before a return to singles competition.
"During a hip resurfacing operation ... a lot of muscles are severed
and stitched back up so it takes a lot of time and needs hard
physical work to recover properly," Murray wrote in his column for
the BBC.
"That strength is not going to come back in just three or four
months, it could take nine or 12 months.
"I need to get those muscles back to a certain level before I can go
on a singles court and try to play best of five sets, otherwise I
could do damage if the strength isn't there."
The three-times Grand Slam winner said he would focus on physical
conditioning to improve the strength in his hip over the next four
to six weeks.
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Britain's Andy Murray in action during his second round mixed
doubles match against France's Fabrice Martin and Raquel Atawo of
the U.S. REUTERS/Carl Recine
"I'm happy to be pain free and want to get my hip as good as it can
be. Once it is strong again I can get back to competing," Murray
added.
(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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