The Sunday Post (Inverness)

I used to worry about the criticism of strangers but now... who cares?

Judy Murray looks back – and forward – as she prepares to celebrate a milestone birthday

- By Clare Johnston mail@sundaypost.com

It was nothing really, a stranger’s unguarded comments, idle chatter among guests at a wedding reception about a woman they knew only from the television screen, from seeing her in the stands, full of passionate exhortatio­n in support of her sons.

But Judy Murray, the subject of the small talk, was also at the wedding and, only inches away, heard every word: “I was standing with my back to a woman who I realised was talking about me, though she had no idea I was behind her.

“She was saying, ‘I can’t stand her, she never smiles, she looks so miserable. She’s pushed these kids and I bet they can’t stand her’.

“So I just turned my shoulder and bumped into her and she was mortified. I just thought, ‘ You’ve never met me and you don’t know me at all’.”

For too long the abashed guest was far from alone in being willing to judge the mother of tennis champions Andy and Jamie. Routinely described as too driven, too competitiv­e – adjectives rarely used to criticise men, of course – as her sons rose up the world rankings, Judy’s public image seemed set.

Today, in an interview ahead of her 60th birthday next month, Judy reflects on how, as her critics came to better know her sons and recognise their achievemen­ts, theyy also came to a better understann­ding of their mum, a womann whose straight-shooting styyle, passion for coaching and sennse of fun have made her, like herh boys, an inspiratio­nal Scot. Looking back, thee tennis coach and Sundayy Post columnist says, the criticism is forrgotten while the suupport from ordinnary Scots remmains a delight:d “Most people are lovely. A few years ago in Maryhill inn Glasgow, I was early for a session I was doing with a primary school. I used to be sales rep for a confectiio­nery company so I knoow the cafes and was aboout to cross the road to get a coffeec when I noticed a man onn the other side looking at me.

“When I crossed heh said: ‘Are you that womann from the tennis? What you dooing here?’ When I told him he replied, ‘ That’s fantastic, henn. Imagine

me meeting you in Maryhill’. It was just a really nice moment and there’s a lot more of them than the other kind.”

However, social media for Judy remains a potentiall­y toxic environmen­t, a dumping ground for needless abuse. She said: “When I got my OBE two years ago there were so many comments, nearly all of them from men, saying, ‘ What’s she ever done?’ People who knew nothing about me. “It would have bothered me enormously when I was young but now I don’t care. It can be harder reading criticism of the boys but you learn how to deal with that too.”

The cracks that had begun appearing in the dour, driven public image shattered completely in 2014 when Judy was invited to appear on the BBC’S Strictly Come Dancing when her gung-ho spirit made her a huge favourite with fans.

“It changed my life,” she said. “People saw me in a different light. I could never have imagined the things I’ve done since – presenting a Bafta, being on Catchprase, The Chase. It’s amazing, great fun. I read somewhere that women find their confidence at 52, and I reckon it was the same for me.”

Sadly, her home town is known for more than her sons’ success and the tragedy in 1996 when 16 children and their teacher lost their lives, remains Judy’s darkest hour.

She said: “Everything softens with time but you never forget. Afterwards, it was just complete and utter shock and disbelief. I had friends who lost children. Everyone in the town knew someone affected.

“No one will ever forget what happened but the town has recovered and I like to think the boys may have helped a little because Dunblane is associated with happy things too.

“For me, afterwards, I never took anything for granted. I went after what I wanted and threw myself into work.”

And, approachin­g 60, Judy can look back on her own impressive career. A tennis profession­al, gathering 64 national titles, before becoming Scotland’s National Coach in 1995 and the first woman to gain the Lawn Tennis Associatio­n’s Performanc­e Coach Award that same year. She would set up a developmen­t programme that

Presenting Baftas, doing The Chase... life’s amazing fun

Picture produced one Federation Cup and four Davis Cup players, including her sons, who both became world No 1s – Andy in singles, Jamie in doubles.

She said: “People say I’m living my dreams through my kids but it’s not that at all. It was actually my disappoint­ment about the lack of opportunit­ies when I was playing as a teenager that made me want to change things for them.

“Back then there was no infrastruc­ture, no indoor courts, no full-time coaches, no year-round training.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Judy Murray relaxes at Gleneagles Hotel
Judy Murray relaxes at Gleneagles Hotel
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom