The Herald

Salmond urges Cameron to honour Wimbledon hero with knighthood

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ANDY Murray has been proposed for a knighthood in David Cameron’s resignatio­n honours.

The Dunblane tennis star won his second Wimbledon title last month, after first lifting the trophy in 2013.

The World Number 2 also won the US Open in 2012, an Olympic gold medal at the London 2012 Games, and steered Great Britain to victory in the Davis Cup last year.

Now, former first minister Alex Salmond has urged Downing Street to reward the 29-year-old by making him a knight.

Speaking to a tabloid newspaper, Mr Salmond said the tennis player would be the “most popular Scottish knight since Sir William Wallace”.

Mr Salmond is an avid fan of Andy Murray, having cheered him on from the sidelines at Wimbledon. The MP caused controvers­y when he unfurled a saltire flag at Murray’s 2013 Wimbledon win, while some of the Centre Court crowd booed Mr Cameron at this year’s final.

Highlighti­ng the fact Murray was not given a knighthood in 2013, Mr Salmond said: “I would say Andy Murray would be the most popular Scottish knight since Sir William Wallace. Winning Wimbledon should make it a slam dunk.

“David Cameron gets a resignatio­n honours list so it’s a chance to right a wrong from his time as Prime Minister. If Cameron has got over the saltire incident from 2013 and then getting booed by the All England Club this year, I think the decent thing would be to put Andy on his resignatio­n honours list.”

The last Prime Minister to issue a resignatio­n honours list was John Major, with Tony Blair and Gordon Brown choosing not to.

Mr Cameron’s list is expected to be published in the coming weeks.

 ??  ?? CHAMPION: Andy Murray with his Wimbledon trophy.
CHAMPION: Andy Murray with his Wimbledon trophy.

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