The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Murray blows away cobwebs with easy win in Dubai

Scot eases past Jaziri in Dubai opener as he returns to action after fiveweek break

- ELEANOR CROOKS

Andy Murray brushed off the rust with a straight-sets win over Malek Jaziri in the opening round of the Dubai Duty Free Championsh­ips yesterday.

The world No 1 was playing a singles match for the first time since his shock loss to Mischa Zverev in the fourth round of the Australian Open five weeks ago.

He revealed ahead of the tournament that he was laid low by a bout of shingles following his return from Australia but looked in decent form here.

Murray made a slow start and struggled to find his first serve but he got better as the match went on and emerged a comfortabl­e 6-4 6-1 winner.

The 29-year-old looked jaded in Melbourne having had little time to recover and reset after his phenomenal end to 2016.

An early-season rest was very welcome, therefore, and good timing with no threat to his number one ranking on the horizon.

The first set was anything but comfortabl­e for Murray, with 51stranked Jaziri playing with freedom and taking advantage of his opponent’s difficulti­es on serve.

The Tunisian, in the best form of his career at 33, broke for 2-1 on a very fortuitous net cord but Murray hit straight back and broke serve again to win the opening set.

Although the Scot’s first-serve percentage languished at 40, he was in total control in the second set and wrapped up victory inside an hour and 20 minutes.

Jaziri bizarrely called for the trainer at 0-40 in the fourth game, resuming after a brief conversati­on, but did not win another game.

In the second round, Murray will face Spain’s Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, who won their last meeting in Indian Wells in 2012.

Dan Evans continued his fine form in 2017 with victory over Dustin Brown in the opening round.

The British No 2 took a break after helping Great Britain to victory over Canada in the Davis Cup three weeks ago, which came on the back of a first ATP Tour final in Sydney and a run to the fourth round of the Australian Open.

But Evans, who is at a career-high ranking of 43, showed no signs of rust as he brushed aside unorthodox Jamaican-German Brown 6-2 6-3 in 51 minutes.

The 26-year-old was dominant on serve, dropping just five points, as he set up a second-round clash with fourth seed Gael Monfils.

Defending champion Stan Wawrinka slumped to a shock opening round defeat, beaten 7-6 (4) 6-3 by 77th ranked Damir Dzumhur.

The No 2 seed got off to a perfect start, breaking serve in the second game and leading 3-0, but Dzumhur then settled and offered more resistance, levelled at 4-4 and then claimed the tiebreak.

Dzumhur then broke to lead 3-1 in the second set and again for 5-1, served three double-faults and was broken as he served for the match, but safely served out the match at his second opportunit­y.

Wawrinka is still not fully recovered from a knee injury and told the ATP Tour website: “I think I started well but it was tough match.

“In practice I’ve been OK the last few days, but today I was missing a little bit something. I think he started also to play a bit better, to put a little bit more first serve, to put a little bit more pressure.

“Physically I was a little bit slow sometimes, so I couldn’t hit that hard from the baseline to push him back.”

There were also wins for qualifier Evgeny Donskoy, who earned a second round clash with Roger Federer by beating two-time Dubai runner-up Mikhail Youzhny 6-4 6-4, and Fernando Verdasco who defeated Andreas Seppi 6-2 7-5 after Seppi had stepped in for the ailing Florian Mayer

 ??  ??
 ?? Images. Picture: Getty ?? Andy Murray in action against Malek Jaziri in what was his first singles match since his shock early exit at the Australian Open in January.
Images. Picture: Getty Andy Murray in action against Malek Jaziri in what was his first singles match since his shock early exit at the Australian Open in January.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom