The Scotsman

Murray is top seed in Australian Open

● Scot heads the rankings in Melbourne and is scheduled to meet Djokovic in final

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Murray, who became world No 1 in November after winning four tournament­s in a row, will today be placed in the opposite half of the draw to Novak Djokovic, who is seeded second.

Djokovic is likely to be Murray’s chief rival again in Melbourne, where he is a six-time champion and has beaten the Scot four times in the final.

After sitting out the second half of last season with back and knee problems, Roger Federer is seeded 17th, meaning the Swiss could be drawn to meet either Murray or Djokovic as early as the third round.

Federer has won four Australian Open titles but the 35-year-old has not played a competitiv­e tournament since Wimbledon last year.

Rafael Nadal represents another potential early foe. The Spaniard is seeded ninth and could therefore meet any of the top four seeds in the last 16.

Canada’s Milos Raonic, who lost to Murray in last summer’s Wimbledon final, is seeded third while reigning US Open champion Stan Wawrinka is four.

Among the other British entries, Kyle Edmund has surprised even winter training partner Murray with his progress up the rankings. The 22-year-old Yorkshirem­an broke into the top 50 last season, beating four top20 players and reaching the fourth round of the US Open. Edmund, ranked 45, possesses one of the biggest forehands in the game and his mature, calm temperamen­t is another major plus.

Dan Evans, the former bad boy of British tennis is a reformed character, finally matching talent with dedication and reaping the rewards.

Evans climbed from 183 in the rankings at the start of 2016 to a high of 53 in September, reaching the third round at both Wimbledon and the US Open, where he held match point against eventual champion Stan Wawrinka.

Angelique Kerber is top of the women’s draw and bidding to defend her Australian Open crown, after upsetting Serena Williams in the final last year.

Williams, who also surrendere­d the world No 1 spot after Kerber won the US Open in September, is seeded second.

While Kerber is looking for her third grand slam success, Williams is chasing her 23rd, which would overtake Steffi Graf’s Open-era record 22 major triumphs.

British No 1 Johanna Konta, seeded ninth, made a superb run to the Australian Open semi-finals last year before eventually falling to Kerber.

She then built on that run through a spectacula­r season. She won her first WTA Tour title, climbed into the top ten and very nearly qualified for the WTA Finals, featuring the best eight players in the world. Konta has picked up where she left off at the start of 2017 and goes into the Australian Open as a genuine contender

Main draw matches at the first grand slam of the year start on Monday.

 ??  ?? 2 Sir Andy Murray, who is seeded at No 1 for the first time in a grand slam event, could face Rafael Nadal early in the tournament.
2 Sir Andy Murray, who is seeded at No 1 for the first time in a grand slam event, could face Rafael Nadal early in the tournament.

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