Malta Independent

No. 2 seed Ruud beats Murray in straight sets in San Diego

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Andy Murray's bid to reach quarterfin­als in consecutiv­e weeks ended with a mistake-filled 7-5, 6-4 loss to No. 2 seed Casper Ruud at the San Diego Open on Thursday night.

The match was even at 5-all but turned when Murray, a three-time Grand Slam champion and former No. 1-ranked player who is now 109th, allowed the first set to slip away entirely and also fell behind early in the second by dropping five consecutiv­e games.

That included a stretch of seven consecutiv­e unforced errors off the racket of Murray, a 34-yearold who is still working his way back into form after two hip operations and a series of other injuries.

"On the opposite side of the net from me was a legend of the game," said Ruud, a 22-year-old from Norway who is ranked a career-high No. 10 and helped Team Europe win the Laver Cup exhibition event last week.

Ruud called Murray "an inspiratio­n" — both for the way he was a star of the sport in the past and the way he has fought to return from his hip problems. Murray's run at a tournament in Metz, France, last week was his first ATP quarterfin­al appearance since October 2019.

But it'll be Ruud who plays in that round Friday as he pursues what would be a tour-leading fifth title of the season. Ruud faces No. 9 seed Lorenzo Sonego of Italy, who beat 21-year-old American Sebastian Korda 6-4, 6-3.

Other quarterfin­al matchups will be No. 1 seed Andrey Rublev against No. 6 Diego Schwartzma­n, No. 4 Denis Shapovalov against Cam Norrie, and Aslan Karatsev against Grigor Dimitrov.

Shapovalov erased a big deficit and six set points in the opener en route to a 7-6 (7), 6-2 victory over Taylor Fritz.

Dimitrov won 6-1, 6-1 at night against August Holmgren, who plays tennis at the University of San Diego. Holmgren lost in qualifying for the hard-court tournament that was added to the schedule when Asian events were called off because of the pandemic, but he was able to move into the draw after No. 3 seed Felix Auger-Aliassime pulled out because of an upper leg injury.

Norrie got to his career-best ninth quarterfin­al of the season by eliminatin­g No. 8 seed Dan Evans 7-6 (3), 6-3 in an all-British matchup. Karatsev, an Australian Open semifinali­st in February, beat No. 5 Hubert Hurkacz, a Wimbledon semifinali­st in July, 57, 6-4, 6-2.

Shapovalov, a 22-year-old lefthander from Canada, fell behind 4-1, love-40 at the outset against Fritz.

Fritz earned his first two set points while leading 6-5 as Shapovalov served; one went away with a service winner, the other with a forehand winner.

Then, in the tiebreaker, Fritz went up 6-3 and wound up with a total of four more set points, the last of which came at 7-6 after Shapovalov netted a forehand and screamed at himself.

That's when everything changed. Shapovalov used a volley winner to save that one, sparking a run in which he collected 15 of 17 points to take that set and a 3-0 lead in the second.

"After I yelled ... I released myself and allowed myself to free up and just play really, really good tennis from there on. I felt like I was much more relaxed and free from that moment on," Shapovalov said. "And obviously, when you win a set like this, it's a confidence booster and I was trying to take advantage of that."

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