His considerable lead, and a chance at history, slipping away, Andy Murray dug deep for stamina and mental strength, outlasting Novak Djokovic in a thrilling five-set, nearly five-hour US Open final on Monday.
It had been 76 years since a British man won a Grand Slam singles championship and, at least for Murray, it was well worth the wait.
Ending a nation’s long drought and snapping his own four-final skid in majors, Murray finally pulled through with everything at stake on a Grand Slam stage, shrugging off defending champion Djokovic’s comeback bid to win 7-6 (12/10), 7-5, 2-6, 3-6, 6-2.
Photo: AFP
“Relief is probably the best word I would use to describe how I’m feeling just now,” Murray said. “You do think: ‘Is it ever going to happen?’”
Murray already had showed he could perform on a big stage by winning the gold medal in front of a home crowd at the London Olympics last month, but this was different. This was a Grand Slam tournament, the standard universally used to measure tennis greatness, and the 287th since Britain’s Fred Perry won the 1936 US Championships, as the event was known back then.
“He deserved to win this Grand Slam more than anybody,” Djokovic said of Murray, who will rise to No. 3 in the world rankings behind No. 1 Roger Federer and No. 2 Djokovic.
Photo: AFP
Murray versus Djokovic was a test of will as much as skill, lasting 4 hours, 54 minutes, tying the record for the longest US Open final. The first-set tiebreaker’s 22 points set a tournament mark. They repeatedly produced fantastic, tales-in-themselves points, lasting 10, 20, 30, even 55 — yes, 55 — strokes, counting the serve.
The crowd gave a standing ovation to salute one majestic, 30-stroke point in the fourth set that ended with Murray’s forehand winner as Djokovic fell to the court, slamming on his left side.
“Novak is so, so strong. He fights until the end in every single match,” Murray said. “I don’t know how I managed to come through in the end.”
Photo: AFP
As the finish approached, Djokovic — who had won eight consecutive five-set matches, including in the semi-finals (against Murray) and final (against Rafael Nadal) at the Australian Open in January — was the one looking fragile, trying to catch breathers and doing deep knee bends at the baseline to stretch his aching groin muscles. After getting broken to trail 5-2 in the fifth, Djokovic had his legs massaged by a trainer.
“Well, any loss is a bad loss. There is no question about it,” Djokovic said. “I’m disappointed to lose the match, but in the back of my mind I knew that I gave it all. I really, really tried to fight my way back.”
No one had blown a two-set lead in the US Open final since 1949 and Murray was determined not to claim that distinction.
When Djokovic sent a forehand long on the final point, Murray crouched and covered his mouth with both hands, as though even he could not believe the moment had actually arrived. The 25-year-old Scot took off his sneakers, grimacing with each step as he gingerly stepped across the court. Djokovic came around to offer congratulations and a warm embrace, while Chariots of Fire blared over the Arthur Ashe Stadium loudspeakers.
Murray was one of only two men in the professional era, which began in 1968, to have lost his first four Grand Slam finals — against Djokovic in last year’s Australian Open and against Federer at the 2008 US Open, the 2010 Australian Open and this year’s Wimbledon.
The other player who began 0-4?
Ivan Lendl, who just so happens to be Murray’s coach.
Murray’s forehand is one of the improvements he has made under the tutelage of Lendl, who sat still for much of the match, eyeglasses perched atop his white baseball hat and crossed arms resting on his red sweater — in sum, betraying about as much emotion as he ever did during his playing days.
During the post-match ceremony, Murray joked about Lendl’s reaction: “I think that was almost a smile.”
The lack of a Grand Slam title for Murray, and for his country, has been the subject of much conversation and consternation in Britain, where the first of what would become tennis’ top titles was awarded at Wimbledon in 1877.
Djokovic, in contrast, was bidding for his sixth major trophy, fifth in the past two seasons. He had won 27 Grand Slam hard-court matches in a row.
Murray and Djokovic were born a week apart in May 1987, and they’ve known and competed against each other since they were about 11. Before Saturday’s semi-finals in New York, they shared a computer and sat together to watch online as Murray’s Scotland and Djokovic’s Serbia played to a 0-0 draw in a qualifying match for soccer’s World Cup.
It was windy at the start on Monday, gusting above 40kph, and Murray dealt with it much better. Djokovic admitted after his semi-final that he was bothered by heavy wind while falling behind 5-2 in the first set on Saturday; that was when play was suspended until the next day, the reason the tournament finished on a Monday instead of Sunday for the fifth consecutive year.
Murray faced similar conditions in the semi-finals — when a changeover chair skidded onto the court as he served one point — and he joked after that victory that growing up in wind-whipped Scotland helped.
With the air carrying balls and making them dip or dart this way and that, nearly every shot became a bit of an adventure. Both players repeatedly needed to adjust mid-swing, contorting their bodies simply to make contact. Both let service tosses fall to the ground because the ball would move out of hitting range. As the wind wrapped around the chair umpire’s microphone, it made a loud, distracting sound that resembled thunder.
“We both did a lot of running. It was unfortunate really to not be able to come up with big shots at the right time. It forced me to go for winners or mistakes,” Djokovic said. “Unfortunately, I did a lot of mistakes.”
He totaled 65 unforced errors to Murray’s 56 — they combined for 49 more unforced errors than winners. That said, there probably should have a statistic to count wind-forced errors.
They traded nearly mirror-image breaks in the first two games and that made sense, given how good both are at returning serve. Two of the best in the game right now, maybe ever. Djokovic crouches low, his back nearly parallel to the ground, before an opponent serves. Murray shuffles his weight from leg to leg and hops forward at the last second to cut off angles.
Both worked hard, the physical nature taking a toll. Djokovic’s right knee was bloodied after he scraped it during a few tumbles to the court when he lost his footing and he switched shoes late in the third set. Murray clutched his left thigh while deciding not to chase a lob.
There were 10 points of at least 10 strokes each in the first-set tiebreaker, which lasted 25 minutes. Djokovic saved each of Murray’s initial five set points, the last with a 198kph ace to make it 10-10, but Djokovic’s backhand flew long at the end of a 21-shot exchange to cede set point No. 6 and this time Murray converted, hitting a 188kph serve that Djokovic could not put in the court.
Murray turned toward his guest box and bellowed: “Come on.”
That loss to Federer in this year’s Wimbledon final left Murray in tears, his voice cracking as he told the supportive Centre Court crowd: “I’m getting closer.”
He appeared to be really, really close on Monday after seizing that epic first set and then racing to a 4-0 lead in the second, but Djokovic is nothing if not tenacious and he would not go quietly. Raising his level of play as Murray took a step or two backward, Djokovic broke for 4-1 and then again when Murray served for a two-set lead at 5-3. That was when Murray made three unforced errors, truly showing some jitters, as though the prospect of such prosperity was a tad overwhelming.
When Djokovic held to 5-5, it seemed as though the second set might head to a tiebreaker, too, but with Djokovic serving while trailing 6-5, he was the one who faltered.
On a 31-stroke point, Djokovic missed a forehand to make it 15-30. Then Murray’s defensive skills came into play, as he got one overhead back and forced Djokovic to hit a second, which sailed wide. Chest heaving, Djokovic put his hands on his hips, having a hard time understanding what was happening. Two points later, Djokovic pushed an inside-out forehand wide, giving Murray the set.
Even Lendl rose to his feet.
Djokovic, though, knows how to fashion a comeback. He has won three times after facing a two-set hole, most recently in the fourth round of the French Open this year, and most notably in a US Open semi-final against Federer last year.
“If I had lost this one from two sets up, that would have been a tough one to take,” Murray said.
After stretching for a backhand volley winner to hold at 1-1 in the third, Djokovic let out a guttural yell and pumped his fists.
Across the net, Murray frowned and shook his head. In the very next game, as Murray kept up a monologue of self-admonishment, Djokovic kept up his better-late-than-never charge. He broke for a 2-1 lead, turning on a 202kph serve with a terrific return. Soon enough, they were headed to a fourth set.
Djokovic held onto the momentum there. He secured a break point by tapping the ball over the net with the lightest caress, then took four steps, raised his right fist and yelled. There was more punching of the air and screaming seconds later after a volley winner put Djokovic ahead 1-0.
The sun was setting, the match was approaching three-and-a-half hours, and it was apparent that Murray was now tentative and in some trouble.
“At some point, it’s going to come down to who wants it more or how badly do you want it,” Lendl said. “I don’t want to say Novak didn’t want it, but it’s: ‘How bad do you want it? What price are you going to pay and how can you execute under extreme pressure?’”
Federer, Djokovic and Nadal — who missed the US Open with a left-knee injury — had won 29 of the previous 30 major tournaments (the exception: Juan Martin del Potro in New York in 2009).
Now Murray joins the Grand Slam club.
“I think everybody’s in kind of shock that this happened,” Murray said.
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