Murray breezes past Russell

By Phil Messenger on March 16, 2010, 10:45 PM
Andy Murray advanced to the fourth round of the BNP Paribas Open today after defeating the American Michael Russell 6-3, 7-5.

Russell served first and rather ominously was broken to love. As Murray fired down three aces in his first service game, the signs were pointing to a potential thrashing. Thankfully for the world number 68 this was not to be as he overcame his nerves and, if not exactly pressurising Murray, at least found a presence on the court.

Despite earning three break points, Russell was unable to break back and at 5-3 crumbled to hand Murray the set.

The second set started in a similar vein to the first. Murray raced to a 3-0 lead before Russell got on the score board to make it 3-1. In increasingly blustery conditions Murray's own serve now deserted him, with the Scot bizarrely hitting three consecutive double faults into the Ad court. A rolled in second serve first up avoided the fourth and Murray eventually held.

Another tame service game at *5-4 saw Russell break back, but Murray immediately regrouped and broke the American to take the set, and match, 7-5.

This was far from a vintage performance but Murray will be happy enough to get through a potentially tricky match in less than two hours.
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On we go. Early rounds in a tournament as big as this are about getting through, not turning on the style too early.
Next round will be a test - Blake or Almagro.
March 16, 2010, 10:54 PM
By Joe

Wasnt pretty, but was OK. I didnt like the way Russell was dominating rallies in the end of 2nd set, Andy got complacent and passive.

Good luck in R4!!
March 17, 2010, 12:09 AM
By Rachie

First set degenerated into the boring baseline slog I expected it might be, with both players seeming content to let the other make the unforced errors.  The second livened up when Russell found some inspiration and Murray got a wake-up call, although at 5-5 a third set seemed to be an alarming possibility.

Basically Andy's serve and blustery conditions do not go well together, and perhaps playing in the hottest part of the day affected both players, not to mention the rather thin, mainly geriatric crowd - and Andy thrives on big, noisy crowds!  Hopefully conditions will be better for his next match.   
March 17, 2010, 12:46 AM
By Aileen

Reckon this is a fair assessment of yet another disappointing display from Andy - http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/andymurray/7460302/Andy-Murray-cruises-past-Michael-Russell-at-BNP-Paribas-Masters.html
March 17, 2010, 03:16 AM
By Yorkshire lad

Pity Fed's out I was hoping he and Andy might just have another chance of a match that isn't in a final.  Bit surprised to hear that he failed to convert his 3 match points in the final tie-break.  Not like Fed of old.

Not too sure whether I can comfortably watch the Almagro match ... it could be painful.  But fingers crossed - Andy has surprised us before.

March 17, 2010, 04:28 AM
By Aileen

Breezes is a bit of an exaggeration, but a win's a win nonetheless! Smile

Well done to Baggy for socking it to the Fed-meister. An Andy/Baggy semi would be tasty yes
March 17, 2010, 12:02 PM
By HelloStranger

Breezes is a bit of an exaggeration


It was a pun on the weather conditions :p
March 17, 2010, 12:15 PM
By boogers

never been so bored watching andy murray as i have in his last two matches, i can see him just grinding almagro down too, drawing out the errors. Soderling could be interesting though.
March 17, 2010, 01:30 PM
By herpesfromatoiletseat

It was a pun on the weather conditions :p


Yeah - I finally got that after reading the whole report... doh
March 17, 2010, 01:46 PM
By HelloStranger

never been so bored watching andy murray as i have in his last two matches, i can see him just grinding almagro down too, drawing out the errors. Soderling could be interesting though.

I didn't think Almagro could be ground down ..... I was thinking it might be the other way round, but hope you are right.
March 17, 2010, 02:12 PM
By Daisy

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