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    Wimbledon 2013

    Deserves its own thread

    I am feeling inspired having just watched the BBC documentary on Murray. Thought he came out of it really well. Interesting to get some personality from people weve seen watching him in the stands for years now (his missus, mum etc.). Also some touching scenes from the Murrays speaking about the past and tragic history of Dunblane...

    Great insight into the key rivalries and the mutual respect show. Hes been playing Rafa and Novak since he was 12, and they seem like great mates. A side of Nadal we have never witnessed (playfull) was equally revealing!

    Its going to be a tough tournament, but Murray looks in the form of his life.

    Hopefully in two weeks time we are talking about him as a Wimbkedon champion. I think he can do it, he just needs the roof open around smi finals/ finals weekend.

    Andy Murray.



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    #2
    Tears, triumphs and tantrums

    24 June 2013*Updated 00:10By Tom Fordyce - Chief sports writer, BBC Sport at Wimbledon

    Andy Murray has shown us more of himself in the past year - his tears after defeat at Wimbledon, his unfettered joy in Olympic redemption a few weeks later, the eternal liberation of that US Open triumph - than we had seen in all the six seasons that came before.On Sunday, he let the world in a little more, courtesy of an hour-long BBC documentary entitled: 'Andy Murray: The Man Behind the Racquet'.

    For someone whose natural reserve and occasional reticence has sometimes been mistranslated as moodiness and taciturnity, it provided an insight into his character that may yet win over any of the unconverted among the home support this Wimbledon fortnight.With the exception of an admission of shop-lifting as a young man - admittedly only penny sweets from the local newsagents - this was not a tale of rock and roll excess.

    Instead, what we got was a glimpse of the great truth of 21st century elite sport: while their performances may be thrilling, the superstars responsible often find their lives dominated by the wearisome sacrifices that precede them.John McEnroe, one of the last true iconoclasts of the tennis world, wondered at the discipline of the 26-year-old Scot, who might have won more than the solitary Grand Slam in his possession had it not been for Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic."He might be just a shy guy and doesn't want to bring a lot of attention to himself off the court, or maybe he feels like he's got to put everything he's got into trying to deal with Federer and Nadal," said the once-combustible American, a seven-time Grand Slam winner.For Murray, both explanations appear to be equally valid.

    We saw him out walking his dogs with girlfriend Kim Sears and eating sweets while his body was immersed in an ice-bath. There was no carousing, no dramatic footage of nights out or extraneous hobbies and interests. Neither should or could there be.Murray might be ranked world number two, but below him - and fighting fit - are arguably the two greatest players of all time, Federer and Nadal. Above him is only Djokovic, fully deserving of his lofty position and far more successful in Grand Slam showdowns.

    Together, the four have created a new golden era of men's tennis.In battling with each other and striving for supremacy, the fripperies and faults that would have made a similar documentary on McEnroe, Bjorn Borg and Jimmy Connors more of a rollercoaster ride have been stripped away by physical necessity.

    There was testimony - from both his hero Andre Agassi and best friend Ross Hutchins - of how funny Murray can be away from tennis.There were glimpses, too, of the introversion that keeps those outside his circle from always seeing him that way, not least when he returned to his home town of Dunblane for a celebratory parade and was clearly worried not many people would turn up.Sometimes the top of the tennis tree appeared to be the sort of place very few of us would enjoy."When I first came on the scene, I could laugh and joke around," recalled Murray. "Everyone's saying it's great, it's a breath of fresh air. Then as soon as you make that first mistake and say one thing everyone picks up on, whether it's a joke or not, you start to become a lot more guarded."How many of us could survive such a constant eavesdropping, let alone enjoy it?Tim Henman, for so long the British flagbearer before Murray came on the scene, spoke of tennis as being a lonely place.If Murray has chosen to survive it by at times withdrawing his true self from public examination, can we really complain?

    Perhaps the most moving segment dealt withMurray's memories of the Dunblane massacre,when gunman Thomas Hamilton shot and killed 16 of his schoolmates at the small town's primary school.

    Murray has never before talked publicly about how it affected him. When he tried for Sue Barker and the BBC documentary team, the tears came more easily than the words.For many years, he evidently tried to block it all out. Only a few years ago did he start reading back to find out what really happened. Giving the town something to celebrate, something entirely positive to rally around, is something that clearly provides him both pride and comfort.From that same Scottish childhood came other, less troubling insights into a man whose relentless competitiveness was obvious from the very start.

    There was the admission that his first nickname was*Bamm-Bamm(external)*- "because I used to get so angry I'd just be bashing things around" - and from his father, Will, the memory of an epic strop after he once failed to pick the winning numbers for the National Lottery."He could be nice as nine-pence, enjoying himself, having good fun, and then you'd introduce a bit of competition into it and he would change," said Will."Whether it was Monopoly or Snakes and Ladders," recalled his grandmother Shirley Erskine, "he had to win, had to be the best."In those recollections, we saw the seeds of his emotional response to defeat by Federer on Centre Court a year ago. "After that match, I cried for so long, even after we got home," Murray admitted.

    And when you saw the total domination of tennis in both his childhood and maturity, only the callous could fail to empathise."I find it slightly sad it took him crying during his acceptance speech for people to say he has got a heart, he is a sensitive soul," said Henman.

    For those without Henman's inside knowledge, those whose only experience of Murray was what he let show on court, it was surely the moment when respect and admiration became something more."You want to see somebody care," said Agassi, who was not afraid to let his own emotions spill out on the court, especially after his one and only Wimbledon triumph in 1992.Murray's father agreed. "It was good for him and it was good for people to see," he said. "It was a defining moment for him."There will be those who argue that such insights or displays should have no bearing on how we feel about our sportsmen and women. Shouldn't it just be about their pure abilities in their chosen field? Aren't their achievements in themselves enough to hold our support and affection?To which we might respond that sport, like any drama, affects us because the players are human rather than robots.And in understanding their genesis and character, we become most deeply involved in their sporting endeavours."I dreamt*after Wimbledon*that I had won Wimbledon," revealed Murray at one point, still hurting. "After*the US Open,*I dreamt that I'd lost."A detail both touching and endearing, like many in this documentary.

    Related to this story

    Murray recalls Dunblane shootingsMurray set for Wimbledon questMurray working on keeping his cool

    Featured in this story

    Andy Murray website(external)Wimbledon(external)BBC tennis on iPlayer5 live at Wimbledon5 live tennis on Twitter(external)Wimbledon weatherOrder of play
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    Comment


      #3
      In case anyone missed it...

      Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

      Comment


        #4
        I still think he's a tosser (for no good reason). The more people grow to like him, the more annoying it all becomes.
        Trey Nyoni: countdown to stardom- 2 years 1year 0.5 years

        Comment


          #5
          He's ****in sound
          Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

          Comment


            #6
            You bandwagon jumper you. I've already taken the contrary position and am ahead of the zeitgeist. When he loses and acts like a dick I'll be on to liking him while you're all hatey and ****. Always one step ahead.
            Trey Nyoni: countdown to stardom- 2 years 1year 0.5 years

            Comment


              #7
              Hang on, maybe you're two steps ahead, already thinking about the impeding public turn and adopted the counter position in preparation which just coincides with the current favourable sentiment.
              Trey Nyoni: countdown to stardom- 2 years 1year 0.5 years

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Kenneth View Post
                I still think he's a tosser (for no good reason). The more people grow to like him, the more annoying it all becomes.
                Not cool Kenneth. NOT COOL.

                Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
                He's ****in sound
                I ****ing love him, the more I learn the more I admire. One of my all time sporting icons. I have no shame in saying that

                Originally posted by Kenneth View Post
                Hang on, maybe you're two steps ahead, already thinking about the impeding public turn and adopted the counter position in preparation which just coincides with the current favourable sentiment.


                The more the haters hate, the stronger he becomes
                Modifying post.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Just watching it now - really enjoying it.
                  Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Wimbledon is less than an hour old and Baltacha is out already.

                    She is *****e*.
                    Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
                      Wimbledon is less than an hour old and Baltacha is out already.

                      She is *****e*.




                      Was going to say she needs to retire, but was shocked to see she's only 29!

                      JURGEN KLOPP - LIVERPOOL MANAGER

                      YNWA

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Just not cut out for playing at this level.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          She doesn't look remotely fit, had a bit of a paunch on her.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Thought the same.
                            Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                            Comment


                              #15
                              WTF is going on with Rogers Nike swoosh? It appears to be climbing higher and higher up his shoulder as though making a bid for freedom from the Federer shirt, and is currently hiding out under the collar.

                              Modifying post.

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