Australian Open 2016: Andy Murray says past defeats to Novak Djokovic count for nothing

Murray has stretched Djokovic before and can take belief from others who have turned the tide

Tom Allnutt
Melbourne Park
Friday 29 January 2016 23:40 GMT
Comments
Andy Murray of Britain in action against  Milos Raonic of Canada during their semi final match at the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne
Andy Murray of Britain in action against Milos Raonic of Canada during their semi final match at the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne

Andy Murray insists past defeats will mean nothing when he takes on Novak Djokovic for the fourth time in the Australian Open final on Sunday.

Murray sealed another shot at the title after coming from behind to win an epic five-set battle with Canada’s Milos Raonic 4-6, 7-5, 6-7, 6-4, 6-2 here. The victory puts Murray through to his fifth Melbourne final and a fourth against Djokovic, to whom he has previously lost in 2011, 2013 and last year.

The world No 1 has dominated the match-up overall too, leading the pair’s head-to-head matches 21-9 and winning 10 of their last 11 meetings. It means the British No 1 is the clear underdog ahead of the match but he has stretched Djokovic before and can take belief from others who have turned the tide.

Stan Wawrinka knocked the Serb out in the 2014 quarter-finals after a run of 14 straight defeats and went on to win his maiden Grand Slam on Rod Laver Arena by beating Rafael Nadal for the first time in 13 matches.

“The previous disappointments, it’s one tennis match, it doesn’t matter what’s happened in the past really,” Murray said. “It’s about what happens on Sunday. People like to read into what’s happened in the past, but Stan beat Rafa in the final here. I don’t think he’d ever won against him in 13 attempts. When he beat Novak here, the same thing as well. There’s no reason it’s not possible for me to win.”

To pull it off Murray is likely to need all his physical reserves but the Scot’s marathon battle with Raonic, which took four hours and three minutes, may have lasting effects.

Murray also has one day less to recover than his opponent, who played his semi-final on Thursday, and the top seed spent 104 minutes fewer beating Roger Federer in four sets.

“I think obviously if you play a quick match on the Friday, it doesn’t really make a huge difference,” Murray said. “Obviously if you play the five sets it isn’t ideal but Novak also won here the time we played five hours and then he played a six-hour final. So it’s doable.”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in