Murray tantalizingly poised, Broady stuns Ruud as Wimbledon heats up
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[July 07, 2023]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) -Andy Murray left a baying Centre Court crowd on
tenterhooks as he moved within a set of beating Stefanos Tsitsipas
in a late-night Wimbledon thriller to conclude a day in which
less-heralded Briton Liam Broady scored a huge shock on Thursday.
The 36-year-old twice former champion, who plays with a partly metal
hip joint, rolled back the years to lead 6-7(3) 7-6(2) 6-4 when play
was stopped with the 11pm curfew looming.
Few players can engineer drama like the Scot and he had a
soccer-style crowd screaming their lungs off as he went toe-to-toe
with the fifth-seeded Greek in a match of stunning quality.
After a soggy opening three days of the championships which meant 17
first round matches were still to be completed on day four, the
tournament caught fire as the rain finally departed.
Swiss veteran Stan Wawrinka, who like Murray has three Grand Slam
titles to his name, earlier produced vintage form to knock out 29th
seed Tomas Martin Etcheverry 6-3 4-6 6-4 6-2 and set up a
third-round clash with reigning champion Novak Djokovic.
Women's title holder Elena Rybakina battled past France's Alize
Cornet 6-2 7-6(2) to reach round three while Ukraine's Elina
Svitolina continued her dream return to the Tour after becoming a
mum to edge out 28th seed Elise Mertens.
But the day's unlikely lad was British wildcard Liam Broady who
produced the biggest shock so far in the men's draw, putting out
Norway's fourth seed Casper Ruud in five sets.
Left-handed journeyman Broady, ranked 142nd in the world, lit up the
afternoon with a 6-4 3-6 4-6 6-3 6-0 defeat of Ruud in front of a
delirious Centre Court crowd.
Ruud had reached three of the last five Grand Slam finals including
at Roland Garros last month whereas Broady's 10-year professional
career had never seen him crack the top 100.
After four closely-fought, if erratic sets, Ruud, who spent the
three weeks since reaching the French Open final relaxing away from
tennis, looked like he had mentally packed his bags again as Broady
ripped through the decider for a memorable win.
"It's a pretty terrifying, exhilarating experience, coming out on
Centre Court at Wimbledon. It's been my dream since I was five years
old," Broady said in an on-court interview.
Wawrinka will face Djokovic for the first time on grass on Friday
having beaten him to win the 2015 French Open and 2016 U.S. Open,
although he has lost 20 of 26 meetings with the Serb who is bidding
for a fifth Wimbledon title in a row.
"There's zero opportunity to win Wimbledon for me, I think. I'm
happy to have won today again. It was a great match. It's an honour
to play Novak here," Wawrinka said.
"I was missing that in my career to play him in the Grand Slam in
Wimbledon. Hopefully, I can make a competitive match, but if you
will look at recent results I don't stand a chance."
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Tennis - Wimbledon - All England Lawn
Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - July 6, 2023 Britain's
Liam Broady celebrates winning his second round match against
Norway's Casper Ruud REUTERS/Hannah Mckay
ABSORBING DUEL
Logic suggested Murray would be a heavy under-dog against Tsitsipas
too having struggled to reach his former heights since career-saving
hip resurfacing surgery in 2019.
But after losing a tight opener against the elegant Tsitsipas he
produced tennis few thought he was still capable of to level the
match and then win the third set.
The crowd had their heads in their hands, however, as on Murray's
second set point at 5-4 in the third he fell to the ground clutching
his groin, apparently in agony.
He got back to his feet, however, and clinched the set and an
absorbing duel will continue on Centre Court on Friday, although how
mobile he will be is nobody knows.
Serbia's Laslo Djere awaits the winner.
Tuesday's near wash-out and Wednesday's showers meant former world
number two Alexander Zverev hit his first ball in anger on day four,
but made up for lost time with a 6-4 7-6(4) 7-6(5) win over Dutch
qualifier Gijs Brouwer.
Rybakina looked for all the world a defending champion as she swiped
winners for fun in a 26-minute first set against Cornet but her game
cooled off rapidly and she was relieved to survive an 82-minute
second set.
She will next face Britain's Katie Boulter who ensured the home
nation retains an interest in the women's draw with a three-set
victory over Viktoriya Tomova.
Fifth seed Frenchwoman Caroline Garcia also reached round three as
she edged past 2021 U.S. Open runner-up Leylah Fernandez thanks to a
third-set tiebreak.
Swiss 14th seed Belinda Bencic also needed a third-set tiebreak to
fend off American Danielle Collins but fourth seed Jessica Pegula of
the United States proved far too good for Spain's Cristina Bucsa.
Former semi-finalist won a topsy-turvy clash against Mertens 6-1 1-6
6-1 and will next face resurgent American Sofia Kenin after the
former major champion eased past China's Wang Xinyu.
Former men's runner-up Matteo Berrettini was among those who moved
belatedly into the second round as he sealed a 6-7(5) 6-3 7-6(7) 6-3
win over fellow Italian Lorenzo Sonego in a first-round match that
spanned three days.
(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru, editing by Ed Osmond
and Ken Ferris)
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