Sports

How Andy Murray saved five match points – and his tennis career – at 2024 Paris Olympics

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PARIS, FRANCE – JULY 28: Andy Murray of Team Great Britain (R) and partner Dan Evans of Team Great Britain celebrate after winning match point against Kei Nishikori and Taro Daniel of Team Japan in the Men’s Doubles first round match on day two of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Roland Garros on July 28, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

By Andrew Fifield and James Hansen

Jul 28, 2024

Even by Andy Murray’s standards, this was something else.

 

The Briton has made a career out of salvaging apparently hopeless causes — but even as his professional tennis career draws to a close, he is not about to lose the habit of a lifetime at the Paris Olympics.

 

Sure enough, Murray produced another miraculous comeback alongside Dan Evans in the men’s doubles to save five match points against Japan’s Kei Nishikori and Taro Daniel, ultimately winning the match tiebreak 11-9 and advancing into the second round.

 

For Murray, who has already confirmed that the Games will be his final tournament after finally conceding defeat in his battles with injuries, it was the latest reminder of his enduring excellence and stubbornness. This farewell may last a little longer than many had expected.

 

So how did he and Evans do it?

 

Match point 1: GB* 4-9 Japan

With Nishikori and Daniel securing five match points to close out the match, all seems lost for Murray and Evans on Court Suzanne-Lenglen. But Murray proves that there is at least some life left in him as he thunders down an ace that Daniel cannot get near. This is, in itself, ridiculous: hampered by his ongoing recovery from back surgery, Murray’s serve had been slow and attackable for much of the match.

 

 

 

Match point 2: GB* 5-9 Japan

Murray is still up and, after a let on his first serve, his next effort is met sweetly by Nishikori with a double-handed backhand. It screams past Murray to his left, and the Scot is beaten, but the ball lands out by a matter of inches.

 

 

 

Match point 3: GB 6-9 Japan*

Japan now have two points on serve to get themselves over the line, but the pressure seems to be affecting them.

 

Nishikori, a vastly experienced 34-year-old who reached the 2014 U.S. Open final and was once ranked No 4 in the world, tightens up. After a let on his first serve, his next attempt curves out down the middle before his second serve goes long. A gift for Murray and Evans, who can sense a comeback.

 

 

 

Match point 4: GB 7-9 Japan*

With anxious faces looking on from their coaches’ box, Nishikori goes for the risk-free approach with his next serve, taking off the pace to land it safely in. Evans tries to loop a high backhand into the back of the court but Daniel reaches it at the net, delivering the ball back to Evans on the baseline. A cross-court forehand from Evans has Nishikori stretching and he can only dump the ball into the net.

 

 

 

Match point 5: GB 8-9 Japan*

This point is all about Evans. He fires in a strong serve, but Daniel loops it over Murray’s head, with the onrushing Evans (who would have been expecting a cross-court return) having to scramble across to cover the space behind his partner.

 

 

 

He opts to strike it on the drive volley — a risky tactic while moving forward and with the match still poised on a knife-edge. It becomes riskier still when he aims down the line, with Daniel the deeper of the Japanese pair (and so having more time to recover the shot).

 

 

 

But he connects sweetly and finds the tramline to restore parity.

 

 

 

GB* 9-9 Japan

By now, the crowd, both sets of players and the millions watching on television know how this one will end.

 

Evans is up to serve again and fires one towards Nishikori’s backhand, his stronger side. The 34-year-old’s return arcs over Murray at the net and for a second, it has Evans scrambling to try to cover it, but it drops out by a foot.

 

 

 

GB 10-9 Japan*

It falls to Murray, fittingly, to apply the coup de grace.

 

The Japanese pair set up with Daniel standing on the T to serve, but Nishikori stands in the middle of the service box, rather than towards the middle for an I-formation or ‘Australian formation’. This broadcasts to Murray that Nishikori will likely move across to cover a return, creating a large space to Murray’s left as he looks.

 

He does exactly that, and Murray hits a deep forehand return into the space vacated by Nishikori.

 

 

 

Daniel slides across the clay to try to deliver it back but to no avail — his effort drops into the net.

 

 

 

While Japan are crestfallen, Murray and Evans can celebrate the most improbable of comeback victories. And they are not finished just yet, with France’s Ugo Humbert and Arthur Fils or Belgium’s Sander Gille and Joran Vliegen up next.

 

(Top photo: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

 

National

Boxing

Bundesliga

Champions League

Championship

College Football

College Sports

Copa America

Copa del Rey

Culture

Europa League

European Championship

FA Cup

Fantasy Baseball

Fantasy Basketball

Fantasy Football

Fantasy Hockey

Fantasy Premier League

Formula 1

Gaming

Golf

International Football

La Liga

League Cup

League One

League Two

LNH

Memorabilia & Collectibles

Men’s College Basketball

Men’s World Cup

Mixed Martial Arts

MLB

MLS

Motorsports

NASCAR

NBA

NFL

NHL

NWSL

Olympics

Opinion

Premier League

Scottish Premiership

Serie A

Soccer

Sports Betting

Sports Business

Tennis

UK Women’s Football

WNBA

Women’s College Basketball

Women’s Euros

Women’s Hockey

Women’s World Cup

The Athletic Ink

Podcasts

Headlines

US

Arizona

Atlanta

Baltimore

Bay Area

Boston

Buffalo

Carolina

Chicago

Cincinnati

Cleveland

Columbus

Dallas

Denver

Detroit

Houston

Indiana

Jacksonville

Kansas City

Las Vegas

Los Angeles

Memphis

Miami

Minnesota

Nashville

New Orleans

New York

Oklahoma

Oregon

Orlando

Philadelphia

Pittsburgh

Sacramento

San Antonio

San Diego

Seattle

St. Louis

Tampa Bay

Utah

Washington DC

Wisconsin

Canada

Calgary

Edmonton

Montreal

Montréal (français)

Ottawa

Toronto

Vancouver

Winnipeg

Partners

Odds by BetMGM

Tickets by Viagogo

Subscribe

Start Subscription

Group Subscriptions

HQ

About Us

Careers

Code of Conduct

Edi

torial Guidelines

Business Inquiries

Press Inquiries

Support

FAQ

Forgot Password?

Redeem Gift

Contact Us

Terms of Service

Newsletters

The Pulse

The Bounce

The Windup

Prime Tire

Full Time

Until Saturday

Scoop City

The Athletic FC

©2024 The Athletic Media Company, A New York Times Company

Privacy Policy

Your Ad Choices

Support

Sitemap

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

 

Download on the App Store

 

Get it on Google Play

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button