Yuma Sun

Murray: Australian Open could be his last tourney

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MELBOURNE, Australia — Andy Murray is still hoping to make it to one more Wimbledon tournament before his problemati­c hip forces him into retirement. For now, he’s only committing to the Australian Open. In an emotional news conference Friday, when a tearful Murray had to leave the room shortly after his first attempt to get it started, and needed to pause several times to compose himself once it had resumed, he confirmed he’d play his first-round match at the Australian Open next week but wasn’t sure how much longer he could continue beyond that.

The 31-year-old Murray said he trained in the off-season with the main goal of making one last run at Wimbledon, where he ended the 77-year drought for British men with his title in 2013, but now wasn’t sure he’d make it that far after doing everything he could to deal with the pain over the last 20 months.

“I can still play to a level — not a level I’m happy playing at,” he said. “But also, it’s not just that. The pain is too much really.

“I don’t want to continue playing that way. I tried pretty much everything that I could to get it right — that hasn’t worked.”

The three-time Grand Slam champion is scheduled to open against No. 22-ranked Roberto Bautista Agut at Melbourne Park, where the season-opening major begins Monday.

He has reached the final five times at the Australian Open but never won the title. Getting through the first round will be a major achievemen­t in 2019 for the former No. 1-ranked Murray, who has slumped to No. 230 after playing just 12 matches last year following surgery on his right hip in January.

He opened this season last week at the Brisbane Internatio­nal, where he won his opening match to James Duckworth but lost in the second round to Daniil Medvedev, showing visible signs of limping between points and struggling to move freely around court. He had an incomplete practice match against long-time friend and topranked Novak Djokovic on Thursday at Melbourne Park, but only won two games.

Murray has had a celebrated career, breaking long Grand Slam droughts for British men when he won the U.S. Open in 2012 and at Wimbledon the following year — when he was the first British man since Fred Perry in 1936 to win the prestigiou­s lawn tennis title. He also became the only player to win consecutiv­e singles gold medals at the Olympics when he won at London in 2012 and Rio in 2016.

Long considered part of the socalled Big Four in men’s tennis with Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, Murray likely will be the youngest of them to retire.

At 37, Federer is in Australia attempting to win the title for the third consecutiv­e year and for a seventh time overall. At 31, topranked Djokovic is at Melbourne Park also trying to win a seventh Australian title. The 32-year-old Nadal is ranked No. 2 and confident of extending his career for several years.

Murray has been preparing for the 2019 season knowing that his career could be over within months. In his training program last month, he told his support group that the pain was becoming too much and that he needed to set a date for retirement.

“I spoke to my team and I told that I can’t keep doing this, that I needed to have an end point because (I was) sort of playing with no idea when the pain was going

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? BRITAIN’S ANDY MURRAY WIPES tears from his face during a press conference at the Australian Open tennis championsh­ips in Melbourne, Australia, Friday. Murray says the Australian Open could be his last tournament because of a hip injury that has hampered him for almost two years.
ASSOCIATED PRESS BRITAIN’S ANDY MURRAY WIPES tears from his face during a press conference at the Australian Open tennis championsh­ips in Melbourne, Australia, Friday. Murray says the Australian Open could be his last tournament because of a hip injury that has hampered him for almost two years.

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