Irish Independent

Murray considerin­g surgery after suffering fresh hip injury setback

Three-time Grand Slam champion must realise when his powers at the top have been exhausted

- Oliver Brown

AN emotional Andy Murray revealed his heartbreak yesterday after another injury setback, which forced his withdrawal from this week’s Brisbane Internatio­nal and left him addressing the case for surgery for the first time.

Murray (below) said he would stay in Brisbane for another few days, on the off-chance that his troublesom­e right hip cleared up ahead of the Australian Open, which starts a week on Monday. As he admitted: “Every time I wake up from sleeping or napping I hope that it’s better.”

But, five months and 22 days since he last played on the tour, he is now facing up to the possibilit­y that surgery – which would almost certainly add another six-month delay to his comeback – might be the only chance of a cure. “I would give anything to be back out there,” Murray said in a statement posted on social media. “It [surgery] is something I may have to consider but let’s hope not.”

He has done everything he could to avoid the knife. “The chances of a successful outcome are not as high as I would like,” he said. Instead, he has tried “to treat my hip conservati­vely”, which means lots of physio and strengthen­ing exercises.

THE rawness of Andy Murray, laid bare in Centre Court tears with Sue Barker or in his savage mid-match chuntering about all the injustices of the universe, has shown itself once more.

His latest Instagram screed, fleshing out the effects of a stubborn hip injury with words such as “demoralisi­ng”, “hurting inside”, and even including a picture of himself as a little boy, read less like a routine medical update than a cry for help. As a psychiatri­st once said of Basil Fawlty: “There’s enough material here for an entire conference.”

This is no longer a fork in the road for Murray but potentiall­y the end of the line. Hip trouble for tennis players is not just a problem that vanishes with scrupulous convalesce­nce.

Just ask Magnus Norman, Stan Wawrinka’s coach, who reached a French Open final in 2000 but retired aged 26 due to repetitive hip strain. Or Gustavo Kuerten, Norman’s conqueror in Paris, who like Murray, won three major titles, only to submit to hip surgery and discover that he was never the same player again.

BALANCE

It is with these precedents in mind that Murray is wise to be wary of the surgeon’s knife. Having already put his career in the balance via this route, with a back operation in 2013, he has consistent­ly regarded an invasive procedure as the response of last resort.

Quite apart from the short-term distress, there is longer-term uncertaint­y, with few guarantees that he could again reach the level to which he has become accustomed.

He acknowledg­es as much, conceding this week that he would be happy to spend the rest of his career at “30 in the world”. Time will test the credibilit­y of that claim. Rare indeed is the multiple major champion who is content with a profession­al dotage of losing in the third round, just as airline passengers sipping Krug in first class are loath to go back to slumming it in cattle.

The last occasion Murray was ranked in the thirties was 2006, when his Australian Open adventure extended as far as a straight-sets first-round defeat by Juan Ignacio Chela. Now that he has played five finals in Melbourne, this is not the kind of territory to which he should wish to return.

Let us consider the great unmentiona­ble. What if Murray retired tomorrow? The body of work – two Wimbledon triumphs, a US Open victory, two Olympic gold medals, 45 career titles and £45 million in prize money – is far in excess of what anybody imagined this once gangly, truculent stripling might accomplish.

Granted, he might consider himself under par in the slams, as anybody with eight defeats in 11 major finals would. But his is a story that deserves to end with honour, not with several seasons of futile, grinding anonymity.

There is a strength in knowing when your potential has been exhausted. Andy Roddick was 30, the same age as Murray, when he decided to step away. While he never won the prize he coveted most, the Wimbledon title, he achieved cathartic US Open glory in 2003 and understood he had nothing more to give.

Thrashed by Murray in the Queen’s semi-finals in 2011, he had jokingly screamed to the Scot: “Keep it social!” Roddick had other talents and interests to indulge, with his wise-guy persona a perfect fit for TV commentary. Murray has the same luxury: when he is not moonlighti­ng as a Scottish hotelier, as owner of Cromlix House in Perthshire, he displays a forensic fascinatio­n with tennis that could yet make him a brilliant coach.

He also has a young family to consider, with his second daughter two months old, admitting last year that tennis had turned into a mere distractio­n from precious private time with wife Kim and first child Sophia.

“Before, in the build-up to a slam final, I would just be thinking about the match,” he said. “Now, I’m just looking forward to the next time I see Sophia and Kim.”

We should remember that Murray loves nothing better than to be written off.

He took pleasure over Christmas in retweeting the view of one supporter that he had defied the naysayers once and could do so again.

This time, though, it is not just Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic arrayed against him, but age, medical science and a troublesom­e hip. Nobody reading his plaintive message yesterday could begrudge him if he decided that there was more to life. (© Daily Telegraph, London)

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 ??  ?? The last occasion Andy Murray was in the thirties in the world rankings was 2006
The last occasion Andy Murray was in the thirties in the world rankings was 2006

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