Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

US OPEN 2012 Andy, my Gran Slam hero

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was staying up to watch and I’d said, ‘Indeed I am not, I’m going to me bed’.

“I fell asleep and he never came to bed. I was thinking, ‘That’s funny, that must be some long game’.

“I got up and he was lying on the living room floor. He must have got up off the chair but fell across the floor.

“I phoned for the doctor and when he arrived he said that Gordon was a very ill man. They took him away to hospital and he died the next day.

“Andrew, God love him, was there at his bedside, holding his hand all the time. He said to me, ‘I got in on time, Gran’, and I said, ‘That’s good, son’.” Gordon had tuned in to every big game Andy played. Ellen joked: “He’d call him for everything if he lost.”

But not even his gran knows what Sir Andy, knighted in 2016, will do next... though Ellen reckons he could follow in John Mcenroe’s footsteps as a “natural” for any commentary job.

She added: “When he was a wee boy it was tennis all the time. But he can talk. He doesn’t hide anything, he just comes right out with it.”

Andy’s retirement plans follow a battle to recover from injury for more than 18 months. The star – who has daughters Edie, one, and Sophia, three next month, with wife Kim – had surgery on his right hip in January 2018, returning to sport in June.

A budding tennis player at Andy’s former school hopes he will return to work there. Gregor Wood, a pupil at Dunblane Primary, near Stirling, said: “He’d be a good PE teacher.”

Andy’s former tennis coach Brian Melville, 68, said the ace had inspired people everywhere, adding: “He’s very down to earth. He will help people in tennis.” While one local, Bill Drummond, 71, hailed him for making Dunblane known for reasons other than the school massacre of 1996.

He said: “Dunblane was remembered for all the wrong reasons. We used to go on holiday and try to avoid saying where we were from.

“Latterly it was hailed as Andy Murray territory. It’s been amazing for the town.”

The All England Club yesterday posted an image of Andy celebratin­g on Centre Court.

It said: “Whatever happens next, you’ve done more than you know.”

Tracey Crouch, Sports Minister when Andy won his second Wimbledon title, said: “He’s such a phenomenal competitor in an era of other great players, a champion for equality in sport and a genuinely nice guy. I think his legacy of inspiring the next generation will live long.”

Andy’s decision to appoint Amelie Mauresmo as his coach in 2014 was seen as a groundbrea­king moment in the sport. Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon called him a “legend, one of Scotland’s greatest-ever sportsmen, an outstandin­g role model and inspiratio­n for young people”. Andy posted a picture of him with mum Judy and said: “Best way to feel better after a tough day is a big cuddle from your mum. “Genuinely very touched by all of the support today. It means a lot and has made me feel much more positive than when I woke this morning.” Andy fears that his Australian Open firstround match on Monday may prove his last. But there is always hope of one last Wimbledon to end his illustriou­s career.

 ??  ?? Andy Murray and gran Ellen
Andy Murray and gran Ellen
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Andy secures second singles win at tournament The tennis ace with his Grand Slam trophy
Andy secures second singles win at tournament The tennis ace with his Grand Slam trophy
 ??  ?? VICTORY Andy at Davis Cup in 2015
VICTORY Andy at Davis Cup in 2015

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