The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Murray faces anxious wait as hip issue flares up again

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Andy Murray may need to have another operation as he continues his bid to return to top-level tennis.

The former world No 1 has not played a match since November’s Davis Cup finals after being diagnosed with what was initially thought to be mild bone bruising.

But concerns grew when Murray pulled out of the Australian Open and then two ATP events earlier this month, with the Dunblane-born star admitting he did not know when he would be able to return.

Murray has now opened up about the issues he has been facing, with the picture still not a clear one.

The 32-year-old could need an operation to remove bone growth associated with the hip resurfacin­g surgery he underwent last January.

But he also revealed he has begun practising again and, if his body responds well, he has not ruled out taking a wild card into the Miami Open next month.

Murray said: “It’s been unbelievab­ly complex. At the Davis Cup I was diagnosed with this bone bruise on the pubis, which was mild and obviously not a big deal, but they can sort of niggle on if they are not handled properly.

“It didn’t really get better. I started rehabbing, I started hitting a few balls, I started running again on the treadmill and stuff to try and build back up.

“The thought was maybe that I had just irritated it and should give it enough time until it’s gone. But my pain was not getting better. I was basically like, ‘Look, I am not happy with this diagnosis’.

“And because of the hip and the metal in the hip, it is extremely difficult to get a clear diagnosis because the metal on the scan makes it extremely difficult to read them.

“So the concern was then, well, we can’t see exactly what is going on in here, is there a problem with the actual prosthesis? Then from there, I had to have a bone scan.

“But there are complicati­ons with that because it is normal to have quite high bone activity in the first 14 to 16 months after hip resurfacin­g, so you can get red herrings, but all of those scans showed that it was clear.

“I started practising again a few days ago. I’ve been doing some running and just trying to build up to see what happens.

“When people have these operations, there is something called heterotopi­c ossificati­on, which is basically like bone growing outside of the normal skeleton, so it grows in soft tissues.

“That grows for 14 to 16 months post surgery and that can cause impingemen­ts, pain, aching, these sort of things. The issue is if you try to remove that too early, while it is still active in the process of growing, it just grows straight back.

“So what I need to do just now is build up in these next couple of weeks to really test it. Hopefully it responds fine. But, if it doesn’t, then I need to potentiall­y have that removed.”

Although the prospect of yet more surgery is certainly not ideal, Murray was far from downbeat and remains optimistic about his chances of playing in the biggest events.

Being fit for Wimbledon will be his main goal but he is also hoping to play on clay, a surface on which he has not competed since his hip problems first emerged in 2017.

Murray said: “I want to play in the slams again. That is the thing that I have missed over these last few years. Missing the Australian Open for me this year was rough.”

● Dan Evans claimed his fourth victory over a top-20 player this season by coming from a set down against Fabio Fognini at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championsh­ips yesterday.

The British No 1 trailed in all three sets but refused to let 11th-ranked Fognini pull away and secured a 3-6 6-4 7-5 victory after two hours and 39 minutes.

● British No 2 Kyle Edmund built on his New York Open title triumph with a 6-4 6-1 first-round win over Feliciano Lopez in Acapulco, but British wildcard Cameron Norrie lost 2-6 6-3 6-3 to French opponent Adrian Mannarino.

 ??  ?? Andy Murray has been out injured since November.
Andy Murray has been out injured since November.

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