Andy Murray edges Verdasco in thriller
By Phil Messenger on November 26, 2009, 06:26 PM

The permutations are complex, but Murray knew a straight sets victory would guarantee him progress to the knock-out stages. Defeat however, would give Verdasco a chance of qualifying and almost certainly end the Scot's campaign. After fighting through in three sets, things are slightly clearer but by no means certain.
Murray cantered out of the traps in the first set, immediately grabbing three break points on Verdascos serve. The Spaniard steeled himself however, and managed to hold through some fine serving and fearless ground strokes. After a service performance against Federer that was described as “pants” by Murray himself, the crowd awaited the Scots first service game with trepidation. After hitting two aces and a double fault on his way to holding, matters were no clearer.
In this fashion the pair traded service holds. Murray was exerting considerable pressure on Verdasco, playing aggressive tennis and hitting some top quality returns. His own service games were a mixed bag of huge first serves, feather weight second serves with a tasty side dish of double faults.
The crucial break came when Verdasco was serving at 4-4. Some scrambled defence from Murray forced Verdasco to play one more shot than he was comfortable with, thrashing an easy volley into the net. Serving for the set, Murray opened with two double faults to fall 0-30 behind. That deficit was erased with two massive aces and a ferocious forehand winner that left Verdasco gesticulating at the heavens. Several deuces came and went before Murray finally found the first serve he was looking for and clinched the set.
At the start of the second set, Murray immediately grabbed two break points courtesy of some wild hitting from Verdasco. Unfortunately the break was not to be and the chance went begging. As in the first set, both players exchanged service holds. The quality of play was noticeably lower, though Murray was still holding relatively easily compared to Verdasco. The Scot saw several break point chances come and go, but was unable to find the breakthrough.
Up until today, Murray had played 7 tiebreaks with Verdasco, winning them all. Verdasco was also on a losing streak of 7 tiebreaks in total, so hopes were high that Murray would prevail and wrap up the match. This was not to be however, as some woeful serving allowed Verdasco to dominate and take the breaker 7-4.
The third set was almost a carbon copy repeat of the second, albeit with a significantly higher level of play. More break points and half chances for Murray came and went but, as before, he was unable to convert and the set went to a tiebreak. Thankfully this was a 180 degree reversal from the last tiebreak and Murray took advantage of some wild swinging and village level volleying from Verdasco to clinch the first mini-break and canter through to take it 7-3.
Murray's fate still hangs in the balance as the outcome of tonight's Federer v Del Potro match-up will decide who stays alive and who falls. Any win for Federer will be enough to send Murray through, so his fans will be in the unusual position of cheering for the World #1.
BBC Sport - Tennis - Murray reflects on magnificent year
No stats?
how many PBs missed Andy?
how many PBs missed Andy?
November 26, 2009, 07:13 PM
By Queen N
By Queen N
I'd like to know the winner count.
November 26, 2009, 07:31 PM
By Clydey
By Clydey
Couldn't believe that the match was still on when I got up this morning 
Saw it from 3-3 in the final set - tense, tense moments.
Happy that Andy prevailed in the end

Saw it from 3-3 in the final set - tense, tense moments.
Happy that Andy prevailed in the end
November 26, 2009, 07:38 PM
By Bevc
By Bevc
No stats?
how many PBs missed Andy?
Andy only won 1 out of 13 BPs.
how many PBs missed Andy?
November 26, 2009, 07:40 PM
By Allan
By Allan
Andy only won 1 out of 13 BPs.
That's why didn't lose his serve, I guess
November 26, 2009, 07:54 PM
By Queen N
By Queen N
Bloody well done Andy......listened in now than then on the radio while at work...exhausting listening some times.......could not listen to the final tie break(would have ruined my drive home if you lost).....had a glass of red before i logged on here to steady my nerves......looked at the headline with semi closed eyes and .............Yeeeeeeeeees........i just knew you would win.
November 26, 2009, 07:55 PM
By robbie
By robbie
Fairplay andy.... even if u lose we all in the household think your the best!! You´ve done wonders for my diet through stress. Knock em dead in the semi´s. first time in my life i´ll be shouting for feds!!!!!!
November 26, 2009, 08:47 PM
By Mollym its me
By Mollym its me
Well written, boogers. Super tennis once again, but heavy on the nervous system!
November 26, 2009, 09:15 PM
By janscribe
By janscribe
Murray wants umpires to crack down on go-slow players .
Andy Murray hopes that officials will call time on slow play after the Scot was edged out of a semifinal place at this weekend's World Tour Finals on a statistical quirk.
The world No. 4 had to watch as Roger Federer lost in three sets in a late-night match to Juan Martin Del Potro, with the Swiss and the Argentine going through to the last four on the tennis equivalent of goal difference - winning game percentage.
But Murray has other issues with the new-look event, moved from Shanghai after a successful four-year run in Asia.
He'd like umpires to crack down on time-wasting, which he feels he may have experienced in his last group match, a win over Spain's Fernando Verdasco. He said that his opponent was taking his sweet time to return after changeovers.
"For me, if it's 25 seconds that you get between the points, I think some of the tournaments it's 20 seconds, and if you're over a couple of times, there has to be a warning," he said.
"When the umpire calls time, you should be out of your chair. That's it. That's the reason why they have those time limits.
"If the umpire calls time and your opponent is allowed to sit there for an extra 15 seconds, then I just don't think you should be allowed to do that."
During his tense night by the television for the Federer-Del Potro match, Murray kept up a stream of Twitter tweets. He was not alone in failing to grasp the finer points of the convoluted system which saw Federer and Del Potro through.
John Lindhal @ TennisTalk .
Andy Murray hopes that officials will call time on slow play after the Scot was edged out of a semifinal place at this weekend's World Tour Finals on a statistical quirk.
The world No. 4 had to watch as Roger Federer lost in three sets in a late-night match to Juan Martin Del Potro, with the Swiss and the Argentine going through to the last four on the tennis equivalent of goal difference - winning game percentage.
But Murray has other issues with the new-look event, moved from Shanghai after a successful four-year run in Asia.
He'd like umpires to crack down on time-wasting, which he feels he may have experienced in his last group match, a win over Spain's Fernando Verdasco. He said that his opponent was taking his sweet time to return after changeovers.
"For me, if it's 25 seconds that you get between the points, I think some of the tournaments it's 20 seconds, and if you're over a couple of times, there has to be a warning," he said.
"When the umpire calls time, you should be out of your chair. That's it. That's the reason why they have those time limits.
"If the umpire calls time and your opponent is allowed to sit there for an extra 15 seconds, then I just don't think you should be allowed to do that."
During his tense night by the television for the Federer-Del Potro match, Murray kept up a stream of Twitter tweets. He was not alone in failing to grasp the finer points of the convoluted system which saw Federer and Del Potro through.
John Lindhal @ TennisTalk .
November 28, 2009, 09:07 AM
By MurrayRocks
By MurrayRocks

By Johnny Handsome