NEW YORK — Andy Murray, who had wept in
disappointment when he lost to Roger Federer in the finals of Wimbledonin July,
even though he had finally won his first set in a Grand Slam final, wept again
Monday night.
It was different this time.
Murray, a slightly sarcastic, totally
emotional 25-year-old Scotsman who had played in four previous major tournament
finals, won his first Monday night at Arthur Ashe Stadium. Murray withstood the
furious will of second-seeded and defending champion Novak Djokovic to win the
U.S. Open title, 7-6 (10), 7-5, 2-6, 3-6, 6-2 in the rain-delayed final Monday
night. Murray became the first British man since Fred Perry won Wimbledon in
1936 to take one of the four biggest titles -- the Australian Open, French
Open, Wimbledon or U.S. Open.
Djokovic saved one match point but on the
second he sent a forehand long. Murray went to his knees and covered his mouth
and then the tears came, well-deserved after a match that lasted nearly five
hours.
With the Olympic gold medal he recently won
as his biggest tournament prize, Murray can now rightly be referred to as one
of the "big four." For several years Murray was always a distant
fourth to Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Djokovic, who have all been ranked
No. 1 in the world. But those men were winning major titles. Murray was just
losing to them in the semifinals or finals.
In uncomfortably windy conditions that sent
garbage twirling through the air and made whistling noises as it passed through
the microphone of chair umpire Jake Garner, Murray was steady for two sets,
then resteadied himself in the fifth set. There were several rallies of more
than 30 shots and one of 54. Murray literally knocked Djokovic to his knees
with one serve and Djokovic drove Murray to loudly uttering words that would
normally be bleeped by censors.
And when Murray was about to serve for the
match, leading 5-2 in the fifth set after 4 hours and 47 minutes of play,
Djokovic earned boos for calling for a trainer to deal with cramps in his legs.
As Djokovic was massaged, Murray hopped around and threw tennis balls off the
back wall.
With another Scottish star, actor Sean
Connery, on hand, Murray couldn't have asked for a better start. With wind
gusts approaching 20 mph, he broke Djokovic immediately and emphatically, at
love, in the first game.
But that was short-lived prosperity for
Murray. He fell behind 0-40 on his serve, saved two of the three break points
but on the third Murray put a backhand squarely into the net. An edgy Djokovic
had to save four break points in the third game and sometimes his four limbs
seemed to be working against each other instead of in unison as he tried to
track wind-blown balls. But it was finally Murray who plunked a couple of
forehands into the net and let Djokovic settle into a 2-1 lead.
The wind was amplified by the chair
umpire's microphone that is supposed to be used to help pick up the sound of a
ball hitting the net. Instead it made it sound as if a hurricane was moving
through Arthur Ashe Stadium.
In his second service game, with the wind
behind him, Djokovic had no better sense of what to do. He got down 15-40 and
then served a double fault. The Serbian swatted at the ground. He might have
meant to hit the surface but the wind made even that difficult.
Murray finally consolidated a service break
in the sixth game that featured a point with 54 shots that Djokovic won. But
Djokovic knocked a backhand long and Murray had a 4-2 lead. After smashing a
racket, with his temper fully engaged, Djokovic fought hard in the seventh game
to hold serve and trailed, 4-3.
Djkovic evened the first set in the next
game and soon it was on to the tiebreak.
The tension grew as Murray burned through
set points, four of them. But finally, on the fifth, he pounded a deep and fast
service winner past the lunging Djokovic to win the first set, 7-6 (10). The
set lasted 1 hour 24 minutes, the tiebreak 24 minutes. There were points that
went 54 shots, 33 shots and 30 shots as the two men tried to find the right
spot to place the tennis ball between wind gusts.
This was only Murray's second set win in
five Grand Slam final appearances. He had taken a set against Federer at
Wimbledon this year.
Djokovic went down quickly 2-0 in the
second set. He had two bloody knees from a first-set fall and he gave his
racket an angry look. It's not that he hasn't come from behind. He did it
against Federer here. But the conditions, with the wind meddling with his game
of precision, was making him cranky. Meanwhile, Murray had spoken of playing outside
with incredible wind when he was growing up in Scotland.
By the time Djokovic had fallen behind 4-0
in the second set, he was sarcastically smiling, as if to say it wasn't his
fault the wind was blowing, the ball was twirling and Murray was unflappable.
But maybe Djokovic's devil-may-care attitude started to work. He got one
service break back at 15 to cut the lead to 4-1 and another to get even in the
set. Like the first set, this one headed into a tiebreak around the time Murray
began grabbing at his right leg. Djokovic, meanwhile, seemed as if he'd barely
worked up a sweat.
But even if Murray looked sore and achy and
tired, he pounced quickly in the 12th game of the second set. He hit a
cross-court passing shot and won a 30-shot rally. When Djokovic blew an
overhead, Murray took advantage by breaking the Serb's serve to win the second
set, 7-5. Murray had never won two sets in a Grand Slam final.
Murray finished of a hold to start the
third set with an ace after saving two break points and Murray pumped his
fists.
But it was Djokovic who seized an early
break in the third set. In the third game he blasted a service return and
Murray was helpless to do more than make a backhand error as Djokovic took a
2-1 lead. Murray didn't help his cause in that game by serving a double fault.
In the second game, Djokovic held serve with a wily volley and he almost
dropped to his knees to do a celebratory fist pump.
Djokovic ended the set with an emphatic
overhead to win 6-2 and move on to the fourth. Djokovic and Murray had played
five sets and nearly five hours in an Australian Open semifinal earlier this
year and this match began to take on that marathon feel.
Right off the bat in the fourth set,
Djokovic brought the crowd to his side by moving forward and winning points
with a soft drop shot and an agressive volley. Those clever points brought
Djokovic a quick break to start the fourth set and a 1-0 lead.
It was a break that held up to the end of
the set that Djokovic won 6-3 to force a fifth and deciding set. The match had
passed four hours and Murray slammed his head on the changeover, realizing the
great advantage he had let go of.
Murray seemed to rediscover his energy and
cleverness after taking a break following the fourth set. Murray got a service
break in the first game of the fifth set and got the crowd standing when he
held serve after a long rally for a 2-0 lead. Murray then broke Djokovic again
to earn a definitive lead.
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