Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Murray starts U.S. Open by rallying for victory

- By Howard endrich AP Tennis Writer

NEW YORK » This is was the sort of match Andy Murray came back for, the sort of competitio­n and comeback he always lived for, the reason he went through two hip operations and all the hard work that followed.

And it was the type of vintage Murray performanc­e — undaunted by a deficit, adjusting on the fly, muttering all the way — that was too compelling not to watch, so while there are no fans allowed into this U.S. Open because of the pandemic, fellow pros made their way into the stands to see the popular 2012 champion save a match point Tuesday and, eventually, win.

Playing his first Grand Slam match in nearly 20 months, toiling on his metal hip for 4 hours, 39 minutes in Arthur Ashe Stadium, Murray put together his 10th career comeback from two sets down and beat Yoshihito Nishioka 4-6, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (4), 6-4. He next plays 15th-seeded Felix Auger-Aliassime, a 20-year-old from Canada.

Murray’s big concern after the match was whether he could get permission to use the ice bath in the Ashe locker room.

“They said it’s for emergencie­s. For me, this is an emergency right now. My body hurts,” said the 33-year-old Murray, who was treated for blisters on his two big toes by a trainer during a medical timeout. “That’s by far the most tennis I’ve played since 2019, really.”

And so many of the sport’s biggest names were there to witness it.

They included Novak Djokovic, Dominic Thiem, Naomi Osaka, Garbiñe Muguruza and others, some noshing while sitting on the balconies of their personal “lounges” — Ashe suites that normally bring in hundreds of thousands of dollars during this tournament but were assigned to seeded players because of the ban on spectators.

The Murray match provided the most entertainm­ent in the afternoon of Day 2 at Flushing Meadows, when later matches were scheduled to feature past women’s champions Serena Williams, Venus Williams and Kim Clijsters, along with 2019 men’s runner-up Daniil Medvedev.

Thiem, a three-time major runner-up, and Muguruza, a two-time Grand Slam champion but never in New York, advanced earlier, as did reigning Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin, No. 9 seed Johanna Konta and No. 16 Elise Mertens.

A player who can appreciate Murray’s journey perhaps as much as anyone is Andrey Kuznetsov, a 29-year-old Russian who missed about 2½ years because of his own hip injury. Kuznetsov eliminated Sam Querrey 6-4, 7-5 (6), 6-2, becoming the first unranked man to win a Grand Slam match since Nicolas Kiefer at Wimbledon in 2007.

Murray is a former No. 1-ranked player whose resume also includes two Wimbledon championsh­ips and two Olympic singles gold medals.

But he had surgery on his right hip in January 2018, then again in January 2019, shortly after a first-round loss at the Australian Open. He figured he would need to retire from tennis.

But Murray eventually returned to the tour last season. A pelvic problem — combined with the sport’s coronaviru­s-caused hiatus — kept him off the tour from last November until this August, when he won twice and lost once at the Western & Southern Open, a tournament played at the U.S. Open site.

But those matches were all best-of-three sets, not best-of-five, so the demands were much greater against the 49th-ranked Nishioka, a lefty who can retrieve opponents’ shots with the best of them but is just 2-6 for his career at Flushing Meadows.

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 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Andy Murray reacts after defeating Yoshihito Nishioka during the first round of the U.S. Open tennis championsh­ips on Tuesday, Sept. 1, in New York.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Andy Murray reacts after defeating Yoshihito Nishioka during the first round of the U.S. Open tennis championsh­ips on Tuesday, Sept. 1, in New York.

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