The Sun (Malaysia)

Murray key as Britain eye first final in 37 years

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BRITAIN’S rise from embarrassi­ng Davis Cup lightweigh­ts to title contenders has been nothing short of spectacula­r and they will begin slight favourites to reach a first final in 37 years against Australia today.

A glance at the respective depth of the two sides contesting the semifinal would appear to question that wisdom, but with talisman Andy Murray in their ranks and an expected vociferous crowd in Glasgow, the momentum is with the hosts.

While Britain claimed the last of their nine titles in 1936, Belgium have never won the team competitio­n and will also approach their home semifinal against Argentina in Brussels with opportunit­y knocking loudly on the door.

Australia’s cause has not been helped by volatile talent Nick Kyrgios being left out after a spate of disciplina­ry problems, yet they still boast a line-up consisting of world No. 23 Bernard Tomic, Thanasi Kokkinakis, bigserving Sam Groth and former world No. 1 Lleyton Hewitt who is bidding for a golden finale to a career that will end in January.

Britain, though, have Murray – two of them in fact with Andy’s less-celebrated brother Jamie fresh from reaching the US Open doubles final with Australian John Peers.

“If we’re being honest, if we’ve got Andy in our team then we’ve got a great chance to beat anyone,” Jamie told the ITF’s website in the build-up to the tie.

Hewitt, 34, will be a formidable foe, whichever role he plays and his desire will no doubt rub off on his teammates.

“We won’t be leaving anything in the locker room, that’s for certain,” he said as 28times champions Australia seek a first final since 2003.

Belgium will rely heavily on mercurial world No. 15 David Goffin against an Argentina side featuring Leonardo Mayer as their top singles player in the continued absence of former US Open champion Juan Martin del Potro. – Reuters

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