Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Murray must overcome mental scars: Djokovic

- Reuters sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

Former world number one Novak Djokovic says overcoming the mental challenge will be Andy Murray’s biggest obstacle when he returns to tennis after a long-term hip injury.

Murray, who has been sidelined for almost a year since losing in the quarter-finals at Wimbledon last July, will face Australia’s Nick Kyrgios in the first round at the Queen’s Club tournament on Tuesday.

“... I think the biggest challenge will always be mental,” Djokovic, who is trying to recapture top form after undergoing elbow surgery earlier this year, told British media.

“How to get it out of your head, understand that it’s behind you, that you’re fine now, that you’re healthy and you can focus on your game rather than thinking 50 percent of the time about whether or not something can happen.”

The 12-time Grand Slam champion also said grass might not be the ideal surface for Murray to make his return.

“I don’t know the state of his hips,” said Djokovic.

“But the one thing that could be a bit dangerous is slipping on the grass. That’s something that is very unpredicta­ble and grass is always this kind of surface where one wrong footing can make something go wrong, especially in the hips.”

KONTA SNUBS UMPIRE AS BARTY WINS FINAL

LONDON:

Johanna Konta failed to shake the umpire’s hand on Sunday after a bad-tempered end to the Nottingham Open final, with Ashleigh Barty winning 6-3, 3-6, 6-4.

After the first two sets were shared, Konta recovered from 4-1 down in the decider to level at 4-4 but got angry with umpire Paula Vieira Souza for not overruling a Barty shot that looked long as the top-seeded Australian held for 5-4. Neither the line judge nor Souza called it out.

“It’s an absolute joke,” fourthseed­ed Konta told Souza. “You’re making decisions that affect our lives. Do you fully understand that?”

The British No. 1 won only one more point as Barty clinched victory with a backhand pass.

Konta then walked straight past Souza and off the court.

Several minutes passed before she returned for the trophy ceremony, although Konta would not say whether she was complainin­g about what had happened.

Konta lost to Donna Vekic in the 2017 final before defeating the Croat this year in the semifinals.

NOTTINGHAM: I don’t know the state of Andy Murray’s hips. But the one thing that could be a bit dangerous is slipping on the grass.

NOVAK DJOKOVIC, former World No. 1

 ?? REUTERS ?? Murray hasn’t played in a year.
REUTERS Murray hasn’t played in a year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India