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link post  Posted: 22.03.09 14:52. Post subject: СМИ о скоттише


ПК, интервью, статьи, новости, высказывания

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хруня
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link post  Posted: 24.03.09 19:28. Post subject: Рискну запостить пер..


Рискну запостить перевод заметки, ссылку на которую давал Этернал


 quote:
Энди Мюррей сыграет в Queen’s Сlub

Четвертая ракетка мира британец Энди Мюррей примет участие в турнире Aegon Championships, который пройдет с 8 по 14 июня на кортах Королевского клуба, и ранее известном как Stella Artois Championships. На этом турнире британец одержал свою первую победу в туре в 2005 году и постарается выиграть первый титул в Британии и первый титул на травяном покрытии.

«Это удобное покрытие для меня и, конечно, для меня очень важна победа в турнире на родине. Этот турнир – идеальная подготовка и хорошая проверка перед «Уимблдоном», и, думаю, в этом году у меня есть все шансы выступить успешно.

У меня только хорошие воспоминания об этом турнире: я с детства смотрел этот турнир по ТВ, видел игру Тима Хенмана с Питом Сампрасом, здесь я выиграл свой первый матч в туре, здесь прекрасные болельщики, и мне нравится играть на траве. Нам приходится большую часть сезона проводить на харде и грунте, и хорошо, что есть возможность поиграть и на другом покрытии», – цитирует теннисиста официальный сайт турнира.


http://www.sports.ru/tennis/7382065.html


Меня вот интересует, почему Энди так уверенно говорит об победе на турнире, который еще впереди?
Или он говорит о давнишней победе?

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link post  Posted: 24.03.09 19:49. Post subject: хруня пишет: Меня в..


хруня пишет:

 quote:
Меня вот интересует, почему Энди так уверенно говорит об победе на турнире, который еще впереди?


хруня
не говорит он уверенно о своей победе, а
хруня пишет:

 quote:
для меня очень важна победа в турнире на родине


это ж другой коленкор и оттенок. Кому не важна победа на родине (?), но мне лично таааак кажется


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link post  Posted: 24.03.09 19:51. Post subject: Fanka Понятно, но б..


Fanka
Понятно, но было бы более логично услышать такие слова уже после победы

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link post  Posted: 24.03.09 23:57. Post subject: хруня да, ты права,..


хруня
да, ты права, логично после игры
но я другим - послушным, логичным, скромным, слащавым, супервежливым - скотта не представляю
он задира и выскочка, с "немытым" языком и огромным самомнением. Вот такого нам его придется терпеть А что делать?

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link post  Posted: 24.03.09 23:59. Post subject: Fanka Одним словом,..


Fanka
Одним словом, вредина

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 09:11. Post subject: Энди Мюррей: «Могу с..



 quote:
Энди Мюррей: «Могу стать первой ракеткой мира»

Четвертая ракетка мира британский теннисист Энди Мюррей рассказал о том, что не собирается усиливать подачу и о планах на сезон.

«Лучше я буду продолжать подавать, как сейчас, и выигрывать 86% геймов на своей подаче, чем дарить сопернику очки, делая двойные ошибки. Если такой процент выигрыша на своей подаче сохранится на протяжении всего сезона, думаю, я, в конце концов, стану первой ракеткой мира», – цитирует теннисиста Times online.


http://www.sports.ru/tennis/7390907.html

Синдром Джокера

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 11:05. Post subject: Roadblocks abound fo..


Roadblocks abound for Murray at Masters Series Miami
3/24/09 5:42 PM | Ricky Dimon

Andy Murray has been the undisputed second best player in the world this season, but the Sony Ericsson Open draw did not treat him as such. Both David Nalbandian and Fernando Verdasco are in Murray's quarter

Andy Murray has already appeared in three ATP finals this year--and won two--but if he has aspirations of making it to a fourth, he will have to navigate a brutal quarter of the Sony Ericsson Open draw

Murray will open his bid to succeed Nikolay Davydenko as Masters Series Miami champion against either Juan Monaco or Marc Gicquel. The Scot could meet No. 28 seed Mardy Fish after that. Murray should be able to take care of those opponents, but Fish can be dangerous on hard courts (last season he was the runner-up in Indian Wells and reached the U.S. Open quarterfinals, and he won a title in Delray Beach earlier this year).

Round four is where things could get especially taxing for Murray. Potential opponents include Richard Gasquet and David Nalbandian (о-хо-хо). Although the Frenchman has been slumping, Gasquet is 2-1 head-to-head against Murray and would be 3-0 if he had been able to serve out last summer's memorable Wimbledon encounter in the third set. Nalbandian is also far from his best form at the moment, but the Argentine is 2-0 against Murray and he held five match points against eventual champion Rafael Nadal last week in Indian Wells.

If Murray makes it safely through to the Miami quarterfinals, he will most likely meet either Radek Stepanek or Fernando Verdasco. Along with Murray, Stepanek and Verdasco are two of the hottest players in men's tennis right now. Stepanek has already captured two titles this season; in Brisbane and San Jose. Verdasco captivated the tennis world with a remarkable run to the Australian Open semis and a memorable five-set epic semifinal against Nadal. The Spaniard missed some time with a foot problem, but returned in Indian Wells and reached the quarterfinals before falling to Federer.

The world No. 4 should be able to advance out of this quarter if he plays like he has been throughout the end of 2008 and the beginning of 2009, but the recipe for an upset is in place. If the hard courts of Miami are playing relatively fast, Nalbandian could knock him out; if they are playing relatively slow, watch out for Verdasco.

http://www.tennistalk.com/en/news/20090324/Roadblocks_abound_for_Murray_at_Masters_Series_Miami


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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 11:27. Post subject: Talk already turning..


Talk already turning to Murray on grass
3/24/09

Andy Murray is keen to win his first title in Britain as organisers at Queen's Club gear up for the home appearance in June of the world No. 4 to start the Wimbledon grass-court run-up.

Murray will surely be the star attraction in west London starting June 8 at the venue where he claimed the second and third victories of his career at the ATP level in 2005. And even with the Miami Masters having not yet begun, the talk in Britain is all about Murray's Wimbledon chances.

"Grass is a good surface for me and obviously it would mean (хруня, я знала, чувствовала, он на самом деле употребил сослагательное наклонение ) a lot to me to win a tournament at home," said the Scot. "All the guys that have played well at Queen's tend to have gone on to do well at Wimbledon so it's a good marker to see where your game is at.

"The tournament has got an unbelievable history and all the guys use it as pretty much the perfect preparation for Wimbledon. I think this year I've got a good chance of doing well." (опять же о шансах разговор )

http://www.tennistalk.com/en/news/20090324/Talk_already_turning_to_Murray_on_grass

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 11:28. Post subject: Держал бы язык за зу..


Держал бы язык за зубами, ей-Богу, а то его пресса задавит

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 11:35. Post subject: поганка жжот ыыыыыыы..


поганка жжот ыыыыыыыыыыы, ой я не могу круче тучи. Скоттинка еще грунт не настал, тебя там быстро обломают
Жаль про Уим ничего не сказал, я хочу послушать историю о том как он всех порвет на траве

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 13:51. Post subject: Uncle Toni on Murray..


Uncle Toni on Murray
by MurraysDropshot 23 March 2009

A translation of a phone interview (before IW final)between Uncle Toni and a journalist from El Pais newspaper, published this morning (sourced from another tennis messageboard):

"Well,I really hope that Murray doesn't have anything else in his game to improve upon. because if he's going to get better than this then he will be unstoppable. "
........." He runs to everything; he has a lot of talent; he serves well, he has a good right FH and he has a VERY good BH...I wouldn't know where to suggest improvement.....He's a complete player!"
Toni Nadal who has always shown an exquisite admiration and respect for Roger Federer allows himself to wonder about the present form of the Swiss player out loud and in public for the first time."In the match against Murray I saw a slower version of Roger and an unwillingness to work. This is not the same player as only a couple of years ago. He has lowered his standard of play. "

"As of today,Murray and Rafael are the two best players on the circuit. As far as I can tell, they are. Murray has lost only one match this year.. (make that 2 now)
... He is probably the fittest player of the moment right now (но тут дядя загнул, конечно, на фоне Рафы скотт бледен в этом плане) I really believed that it was Djokovic who was going to be the next rival but he has lowered his game a bit....I'm not sure why.. but this is such a psychological sport..."

Uncle Toni continues: " Murray has a great talent and he is a very dangerous player. A rivalry, you ask, between him and Rafael like the one with Federer?.. Unfortunately (for Rafael he means, not for "tennis")).... there are quite a few really good players out there who can make a lot of trouble. There are Djokovic, N abaldian,Delpotro.... Murray and Rafael might one day have a two way rivalry but even though he's very, very good, it will be difficult for Andy to leave on tennis the mark that Federer has made."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/606/A48985140

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 14:01. Post subject: From The TimesMarch ..


From The TimesMarch 25, 2009
Andy Murray's master plan to be No 1

He said it in a very matter-of-fact way, but the effect of the words was profound. Andy Murray was discussing his serve, that most potent of weapons, the one with which Pete Sampras carried all before him, without which Goran Ivanisevic would not have won Wimbledon, and that Rafael Nadal has recently enhanced to the extent that it is a wonder he could win six grand-slam tournaments and be considered a so-so server.

Consider this carefully. Murray has won 86 per cent of his service games this year but, with a first-service percentage of 60, he remains fourth of the top four in that regard. He is the fourth-best on the ATP World Tour in terms of winning the point when he returns an opponent's first serve - the very best when returning a second serve and in the total of return games won.

The building blocks are in place, with the Sony Ericsson Open, which starts today in Miami, another step in the Scot's march to the top. “I would rather continue serving like I have been and winning that 86 per cent of my service games rather than give guys more opportunities by serving double faults,” the British No l said yesterday. “If I win 86 per cent of my service games throughout the year, I think I finish No 1 in the world.”

This was no throwaway remark. Murray believes it and so do a lot of folk. On present form, he is second only to Nadal, with Roger Federer straining and Novak Djokovic waning. One prominent commentator was moved to say over the weekend at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, California, that he considered Murray was now a better player than Federer.

Back to the serve. “When I play against the top players, it's not been much of an issue for me because I vary my second serve a lot more,” Murray said. “When I played Federer in Madrid and Shanghai last year and in Abu Dhabi and Doha this year, I changed it up a lot. I served some kick serves, body serves and some into his forehand. I don't think any of the top guys really play that aggressive on second-serve returns, so it's important for me to get the variation right.

“I feel I can attack Federer's second serve, I can attack Nadal's second serve and I can attack Djokovic's second serve. That part of my game is not an issue. The most important thing is the amount of points you win on it [the second serve]. My percentage this year has been much, much higher, especially on these hard courts. You can serve a 70mph serve with a ridiculous amount of kick and it can be much better than serving a slightly flatter one right in the slot.

“I have added more variety, too. Before, it [the second serve] was just predictable. I used to hit a lot of kick serves and that was it, so the guys could stand over and try and take it early, but now I'll switch into the forehand, some into the body and I'll go for a bit of kick, especially to the ad court, to try and take them out of position. If I'm breaking serve 40 per cent of the time and getting broken 14 per cent, then I'm going to win pretty much every match I play.”

It is the staggeringly mature manner in which he can discuss such an intricate part of his game and how much he feels he is measuring up to the best that marks out Murray. “I just need to make sure that I keep going, that I don't get ahead of myself,” he said. “Because there's only two mandatory tournaments that go towards my ranking instead of three last year, I can definitely move up.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/tennis/article5970223.ece


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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 14:13. Post subject: From Times Online Ma..


From Times Online March 23, 2009

The Net Post: Andy Murray is a role model for women's tennis
The Times Tennis Correspondent hears that the fairer sex could do worse than incorporate some elements of the British No1's game into their own

Andy Murray as a role model for women's tennis! The suggestion was made to the Net Post by Ray Moore, the president of PM Sports Management, and an instrumental figure in turning the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells from a dusty dream over 35 years ago into one of the sparkliest gems in the tennis tiara. Breakfast with Charlie Pasarell, the tournament chairman and Ray is a last-day tradition in the desert, a chance to pick the brains of and listen to words of wisdom from two men with a century of devotion to the sport as players, politicians and passionate advocates.

Their drive in extolling the virtues of tennis in this panoramic neck of the woods has embellished the position of a championship that mixes the highest calibre of competition with the finest views that tennis can provide (bar perhaps, the Mediterranean Sea on a clear day in Monte Carlo) but does not feel the need to shout from the rooftops how good it is. And it is good. This year alone, it will bring some $250 million into the coffers of the Coachella Valley, the single most important event staged around these parts.

The two men are animated whenever they discuss tennis but it was when asked about what he felt about the 21-year-old Scot that Moore opened up memorably. His grouse was the sameness of so much of the women's game, now that Justine Henin has retired, Amelie Mauresmo wins fitfully (though she did triumph in the Open de Gaz in Paris last month), Martina Hingis has long gone and Martina Navratilova's style went out with the Ark. Moore, and many others, despair of the robotic similarity of so much of the higher echelon of the women's game and of those pressing behind. It is production line tennis.

Moore waxes lyrical about Murray. "When you see him, it's fabulous. He plays short and then he plays long. The one thing I don't like about the women's game today, is that they are like clones.They go left, right, left, right, bang, bang, bang. I don't see any of the women playing a short shot, playing a dropshot, playing a loop. I see Murray out of position, and he plays sort of a high topspin, like the Moon Ball Twins (Harold Solomon and Eddie Dibbs) who used these high things to get back into position. He's not slapping it when he's out of position. I really think the women could learn a lot from him if they took part of those elements there and incorporated them into their games.

"I'm so impressed with Murray because he plays in a very unusual way from the rest of the guys on the tour. He changes the pace from shot to shot, he'll play a roll backhand and then he'll play a slice, then he'll play it long, they he'll hit it, and then he'll come in. He's one of those true, natural talents. And the thing that's you really have to take note on, is he's unbelievably quick. That's what allows him to do these things that he does. And great hands. How about the winner he hit off (Roger) Federer's smash? It wasn't like he was 10 feet behind the baseline. He moved in 10 feet, Federer nailed the smash, and he half volleyed it for the winner. How many people can do that?" Eloquent praise indeed for the British No.1.

Murray has thrived in the desert and the tournament continues to thrive for itself, something quite rare in these parlous financial times, when sponsoring sport is not on the high priority list for chief executive officers seeking to balance the company books. Were Moore and Pasarell not a mite concerned that getting in bed with a bank, in this case BNP Paribas, might dit uneasily with public perception? Nonsense, Moore replied. "We are proud to have BNP Paribas here. Before Charlie and I went to a third meeting with them in Paris, they had been here twice before. They came here on a really beautiful summer day.

"Finally we did go to Paris, and the day we made our presentation was September 15, the day Lehman Brothers went under. When we walked into the room, the BNP Paribas people said that if we hadn't flown this far they wouldn't have met with us because this was the worst day in banking history since 1929. That's how we started the final meeting. But tennis is the only sport they sponsor. They've had every single sport knocking on their door, but they've stayed with tennis, because firstly, they love the sport; secondly, the demographics work for them. They wanted to be our partner."

Moore would have been delighted had BNP Paribas signed a three year deal with a three year option. They came back and said to him they would sign for ten years, five down and five on approval. The deal was signed there and then. And what a boon it has been.

Eaton snubbed for wild card spot

Three weeks after he was the Chosen One as far as Great Britain's Davis Cup team against Ukraine was concerned - he won two play off matches to get into the team, won a live singles set against on his debut, gained his country's solitary point in a 4-1 and can hardly have been said to have let the side down - it is a kick in the you-know-wheres for Chris Eaton to be deemed unworthy of a wild card into the main draw of the Aegon Jersey challenger this week while Dan Cox, Dan Evans, Colin Fleming and Josh Milton were. Eaton was reduced to having to qualify. What more did he have to do to earn a spot in what is a British based tournament heavily influenced by the people who were so keen him to have him represent his country such a short time ago? Once again, the LTA's choices do not make a great deal of sense.

Bud wiser than most when it comes to tennis

There are tennis writers, and there are tennis writers and there is Bud Collins. No-one in the history of the sport has devoted more words to paper, be it in newsprint, magazine or book form than the doyen of the courts, who is still going strong and still bedecked in colours that you and me would think twice about wearing, after more years covering tennis than he cares to remember. It is hard to believe he will become an octoganerian the week before Wimbledon.

Bud and Anita, his devoted wife, were back in Indian Wells this week, their daily 12.30 chin wags on stage drew a litany of excellent guests, Denis Ralston, Abe Segal, and Ray Moore to the fore and they even invited the Net Post to be a part of their discussions, but we sadly had to decline because the date and time co-incided with Andy Murray knocking tennis balls around.

But the Collins' are nothing if not indefatigable. Recently, they visited Chiang Mai in Thailand to dedicate the Bud Collins Tennis Courts at the Prince's Royal College, a school founded by Bud's missionary grandparents in 1887. A guest was Noppawan Lertcheewakarn, the No.1 junior in the world who you may recall was beaten in the Wimbledon girls' final last year by Laura Robson of Britain.

Unfortunately, there have been problems with soil stability and internal politics so the dedication had to be delayed until February next year, when the first Bud Collins Northern Thailand junior championships will be staged. We have no doubt the great man will be there to give the event his personal blessing.

Safin: 'Rafa's much more talented than he looks'

Here is Marat Safin's unique take on on Rafael Nadal, as expressed when the Net Post wondered what he thought of the Wimbledon champion and his place in the sport. "He's very enthusiastic, and he's just into the game and he's 100 per cent concentrated. He has a lot of just motivation to get better and better. Of course he's much more talented than he looks (interesting!), because also a lot of people thought he doesn't have such great hands, but apparently he has unbelievable touch.

He sees the ball quite well, unbelievable athlete. So just it's easier to adapt yourself to other surfaces, and he adapts very well. Also he improved his serve and decided to go to the net. Just he breaks everybody mentally. Before the match, everybody knows that they don't have any chance. He learns how to play on other surfaces, and I think it just was amazing. Nobody thought actually he managed to play great on grass, but he made it. It's really surprising, but it also makes my appreciation grow that he managed to do that in such a short period of time." That is 24 carat Marat.

Injury-prone Davydenko

Nikolay Davydenko, the Russian who has played only four matches this year, continues to be in the wars and will miss the defence of his Sony Ericsson Open title in Key Biscayne, the tournament that starts later this week. Davydenko has a foot infection and does not know when he will be fit to resume. Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina is fast closing in on his No.5 world ranking.

A smacker from Sharapova - jealous?
The Net Post received a kiss on both cheeks from Maria Sharapova last week after we had not seen each other for six months. I just thought I'd mention that.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/tennis/article5957363.ece?token=null&offset=12&page=2

я всю статью разместила, мне показалась интересной



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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 14:15. Post subject: Марри и Федя облизан..


Марри и Федя облизаны Дядей по самое нимагу
Лучше бы скотт этого интервью не видел ыыыы


 quote:
He is probably the fittest player of the moment right now


Щас сдохнуу

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 14:27. Post subject: Can Fed handle Murra..


Can Fed handle Murray's bag of tricks?
Friday, March 20, 2009

Posted by Peter Bodo, TENNIS.com

So far, the early tournaments of 2009 suggest this year will be one of continued transition rather than the status quo, or even radical change, in men's tennis. Basically, the results suggest that everything other than the clay-court titles (for which Rafael Nadal has had something like a "right of first refusal" for a few years now) is up for grabs.

The results in Melbourne confirmed this, and the run-up to the weekend in the desert at the BNP Paribas Open has as well. Nadal is the clear No. 1, but below him, it's a game of musical chairs likely to get more spirited and fast-paced as the next few months unfurl toward Roland Garros.

Thus, you can look at the upcoming Indian Wells semifinal between Roger Federer and Andy Murray as a bellwether match that will suggest just how alertly Federer must glance over his shoulder (at the likes of Murray, Novak Djokovic, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and maybe the redesigned Andy Roddick) even as he's in a dead sprint, trying to catch Nadal.

Murray, you may have noticed, is 5-2 against Federer. Anyone else notice just the wee bit of frost in the comment Federer made after his last match at Indian Wells, as he looked ahead to this semifinal matchup?

"I'm aware that he has beaten me more than I've beaten him, but on big occasions, I think I came through," Federer said. "I have to build on that and make sure I play a tough and good match against him. Anything else is not going to do the job against him."

I wouldn't exactly call that bulletin-board material, but we know the buried message: If I can get myself into a Grand Slam-final frame of mind, you can throw that head-to-head record right out the window.

The only problem with Federer's reasoning is that he's got a pretty narrow definition of "big occasions." For among Murray's wins, three have occurred at the level just below that of majors: two in Masters Series events (Cincinnati and Madrid) and one at last Masters Cup -- the official year-end tour championships and, notionally, the fifth-most important tournament of the year.

So it seems that Murray is more than capable of bringing his A-game to bear on Federer at an A-event, and the relatively slow cement courts at Indian Wells will enable Murray to dig as deep as he wants into his counterpunching, bait-and-switch, table-turning bag of tricks. The guy is remarkably good at luring Federer -- and everyone else -- into what often ends up looking like a much more artfully and programmatically laid trap than you can actually achieve in a liquid game whose closest thing to a set play is the serve-and-volley.

Still, when you look at Federer's enormous skills, his experience and competitive talents, you have to wonder why he has so much trouble with Murray. My theory is that Murray kind of confuses and annoys him by encroaching on turf that everyone else -- most especially Nadal -- concedes to Federer. For one of the distinguishing -- and welcome -- features of Murray's game is that it seems a mite … magical. It's "artistic" and unpredictable. Murray may not move or swing the stick as fluently and effortlessly as Federer, but he often gets to the same place, flummoxing opponents with versatility and skill.

If Murray pulls out the win, there will be that much more evidence that the game is indeed in transition, long past that phase when it was all about Federer, with a side order of Nadal. Maybe even past the phase when it was all about the rivalry of the top two players.

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/blog/index?entryID=4000970&name=bodo_peter

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 14:58. Post subject: From The Sunday Time..


From The Sunday Times
March 22, 2009

Novak Djokovic feels Andy Murray closing in on him
Serb’s hold on the No3 spot slipped after Andy Roddick plucked the Australian Open and Indian Wells titles from him

Barry Flatman

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/tennis/article5950225.ece

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 15:02. Post subject: Федя рассыпался в ко..


Федя рассыпался в комплиментах

Tennis-Defeated Federer applauds Murray's court craft
Sun Mar 22, 2009

By Mark Lamport-Stokes

INDIAN WELLS, California, March 21 (Reuters) - Triple champion Roger Federer paid tribute to Andy Murray's match strategy and on-court speed after being outplayed 6-3 4-6 6-1 in Saturday's semi-final of the ATP event at Indian Wells.

"He's a great counter puncher and reads the game really well," the Swiss world number two told reporters after slipping to his sixth defeat by the Briton in eight career meetings.

"He's got great feel and he's very confident at the moment. He knows he doesn't need to play close to the lines because he knows he can cover the court really well.

"I think that calms him down mentally. I think that's why he's playing so well."

Federer gave Murray more than a helping hand by piling up 32 unforced errors in an uncharacteristically erratic display at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden.

"Way too many errors today," said Federer, whose last victory against Murray came in the final of the U.S. Open in September. "The first set, I tried to keep playing and I couldn't.

"I struggled with the rhythm today and that was the same thing in the third set. He played unbelievable in the end, and I made many mistakes

http://uk.reuters.com/article/tennisNews/idUKN2153661020090322?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChannel=0

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 15:15. Post subject: Andy Murray's mu..


Andy Murray's mum Judy plans to open elite tennis academy
Mar 22 2009 By Fiona Young

ANDY MURRAY'S mum has moved a step closer to opening an elite tennis academy.

Judy Murray wants the school in Bridge of Allan, Stirlingshire, to be like former world No.1 Justine Henin's in Belgium.

Ex-national tennis coach Judy plans four indoor hard courts, four clay courts and four outdoor hard courts plus minitennis courts.

Speaking before Andy thumped Roger Federer in America last night, Judy said: "Henin's has the look of a house and the feel of a friendly, family atmosphere about it.

"In terms of trying to develop something in Scotland I think that's the sort of thing that would work.

"A stand-alone academy would be almost impossible to make itself pay."

Judy added: "To think that Andy was in the final of the US Open last year and we don't have one single US Open-type hard court is amazing."

Top prospect Emma Divine, 14, from Edinburgh, is the only Brit at Club Justine near Brussels, placing a huge financial burden on her family.

http://www.sundaymail.co.uk/news/scottish-news/2009/03/22/andy-murray-s-mum-judy-plans-to-open-elite-tennis-academy-78057-21218116/

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 15:44. Post subject: У кого-нить есть сол..


У кого-нить есть солёные огурцы? Слишком много комплиментов, просто ту мач

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link post  Posted: 25.03.09 15:46. Post subject: Murray plans to be k..


Murray plans to be king at Queen’s this year - как можно выдержать такие заголовки
статейка глупая с набором банальностей, даже не хочется размещать...

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