Murray a Wimbledon doubt after injury forces him to retire at Queen’s

Andy Murray (R) was forced to retire against Jordan Thompson at Queen's after a medical ti
AFP

Andy Murray could only manage five games before injury forced him to retire from his second-round match at Queen’s on Wednesday, casting a shadow over a possible farewell appearance for the British tennis great at Wimbledon.

Following his very first serve of the match, against Australia’s Jordan Thompson, the 37-year-old Murray’s hip and right leg seemed to give way.

He served out the game, virtually on one leg, and after dropping the first two games he held for 1-2

Murray had a medical time-out at the changeover where his right hip, which he had replaced in 2019, and right knee were given vigorous treatment.

Murray, twice a Wimbledon champion and five times a Queen’s winner came out to play the fourth game but was unable to chase down anything out of reach and rolled in first serves at under 100 mph (160 kph).

The Scot, who looked in pain at times during his first-round win over Alexei Popyrin in this grass-court warm-up for Wimbledon on Tuesday, eventually retired at 4-1 down with the official explanation a back injury.

Fitness problems have been an issue for Murray in what is set to be the former world number one’s final year on tour and could now scupper hopes of a possible last appearance at Wimbledon, which starts in under a fortnight.

Back in 2017, when he was defending the last of his five Queen’s titles, Murray was defeated by lucky loser Thompson as the hip injury which would eventually require drastic surgery first started to have an effect.

The 30-year-old Thompson, speaking after Wednesday’s brief encounter with the three-time Grand Slam winner, said: “I could see he had a problem in the warm-up and then his first serve.

“I thought, ‘hit the ball in and make him run’. I actually learned that from him, when he was playing, and if a guy was hurt or cramping or something, he’d always use a drop shot or just try and take it up the line.”

He added: “I learned a lot of things watching him play, so it’s an honour to share the court with him, but it’s just sad that it ended like that.”

Authored by Afp via Breitbart June 19th 2024