Murray, a former world number one, was given a
wild card into the French Open but dropped out in the opening
round on Sunday with a 6-1 6-3 6-2 loss to Stan Wawrinka -- his
joint-worst loss at a Grand Slam.
"I keep getting a little disappointed, is it his right to be out
there doing that? I did it and I shouldn't have, it was the
biggest mistake I did in my career," Wilander told Eurosport.
"I think Murray needs to stop thinking of himself and start
thinking about who he was. Does he have a right to be out there
taking wild cards from the young players?"
Murray, who returned to singles action last year after multiple
hip surgeries, won the Antwerp title in October -- a result that
raised hopes he could again challenge at the top.
However, the three-time Grand Slam winner looked a pale shadow
of himself on Sunday and admitted after the match that he would
have a good hard think about his game.
"It's tough to quit, for sure. By giving us all hope by playing,
it's just not right," Wilander said. "I love the fact that he is
back and trying. Hopefully he'll figure out why he's doing it."
(Reporting by Arvind Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Tomasz
Janowski)
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