Bay of Plenty Times

England’s hopes wiped out

- Howard Fendrich

The cries of “Come on, Andy!” at Centre Court meandered somewhere along the continuum from pushing to pleading as two-time champion Andy Murray’s shortest stay at Wimbledon came to a close. Unable to overcome big John Isner’s big serves, the way he always has in the past, the revered Murray lost in the second round to the 20thseeded American 6-4, 7-6 (4), 6-7 (3), 6-4 yesterday at the All England Club, capping a disappoint­ing afternoon and evening in the grass-court Grand Slam tournament’s main stadium for the locals.

Prior to Murray vs. Isner, the host country’s other leading player, reigning US Open champion Emma Raducanu, was eliminated by Caroline Garcia of France 6-3, 6-3.

Asked whether he plans to be back a year from now, the 35-year-old Murray replied: “It depends on how I am physically. If physically I feel good, we’ll try to keep playing. But it’s extremely difficult, with the problems I’ve had with my body the last few years, to make prediction­s.”

Murray needed multiple operations on his hip and now has an artificial joint. He also recently dealt with an abdominal issue that hampered his preparatio­ns last week.

In addition to becoming Britain’s first men’s singles title winner in 77 years at Wimbledon when he claimed the trophy in 2013 — and adding another in 2016 — Murray always had managed to make it to at least the third round in his 13 prior appearance­s. He lost that early twice, in his 2005 debut and in 2021.

“It’s no secret that I am most definitely not a better tennis player than Andy Murray. I might have been just a little bit better than him today.

“It was an incredible honour to play him on this court, in front of this crowd,” said the 37-yearold Isner, who won the longest match in tennis history by a 70-68 score in the fifth set at Wimbledon in 2010 and reached the semifinals there in 2018.

“At the age I’m at now, I need to relish these moments. This was one of the biggest wins of my career.”

Murray can still hit crisp, clean groundstro­kes, and he accumulate­d merely 13 unforced errors to 39 winners against the 2.08m Isner. And Murray can still return about as well as anyone, often getting serves topping 210 km/h back over the net. But he could not quite do that enough: Isner hit 36 aces — moving him four away from Ivo Karlovic’s total of 13,728, a record since the ATP began tracking that stat in 1991 — and delivered another 60 unreturned serves across the match’s nearly 31⁄2 hours.

Murray, who entered the day 8-0 against Isner, only managed to obtain two break points. Both came after about a dozen minutes of play, right after Isner broke to go up 2-1 in the opening set.

Isner erased the first with a drop volley winner, part of a tremendous display of deft touch up at the net, where he won the point on 43 of 61 trips forward.

“This is why I still play,” Isner said. “This is why I work hard.”

How did Isner hold off any chance of a comeback by Murray?

“I served,” Isner said with a laugh. “That’s really

all it came down to. I guess I didn’t give him many opportunit­ies to spin his web and get me tangled up in it. If I got embroiled in too many rallies with him, it just wasn’t going to go well for me.

“I had an incredible serving day and I needed every single bit of it to beat him.”

Next for Isner is a third-round matchup against No 10 seed Jannik Sinner. Other men who won yesterday included three-time defending champion Novak Djokovic and No 5 Carlos Alcaraz, while No 3 Casper Ruud — the runner-up to Rafael Nadal at the French Open — lost 3-6, 6-2, 7-5, 6-4 to Ugo Humbert, and No 15 Reilly Opelka was defeated by Tim Van Rijthoven 6-4, 6-7 (8), 7-6 (7), 7-6 (4).

In addition to No 10 Raducanu’s exit, No 2 Anett Kontaveit lost to Juke Niemeier of Germany 6-4, 6-0, and No 9 Garbin˜ e Muguruza, the champion at Wimbledon in 2017 and the French Open in 2016, was beaten by Greet Minnen 6-4, 6-0.

Women’s winners included 2021 runner-up Karolina Pliskova, No 8 Jessica Pegula, three-time major champion Angelique Kerber and 2017 French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko. — AP

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Andy Murray, right, couldn’t rein in the booming serves from 37-year-old John Isner.
Photo / AP Andy Murray, right, couldn’t rein in the booming serves from 37-year-old John Isner.

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