Murray Disposes of Berdych to Reach Aussie Open Finals

January 29, 2015 | By Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Andy_Murray_15
Photo credit: Kenneth B. Goldberg

Andy Murray has reached the Australian Open final for the fourth-time in his career, coming back from a set down to beat seventh-seeded Czech Tomas Berdych 6-7(6), 6-0, 6-3, 7-5 in the night match Thursday.

In a very testy match that saw words exchanged between Berdych and Murray after the first set, Murray was able to keep composure throughout the match.

After Berdych escaped in the first set in a tiebreaker, Murray gave himself a stern talking to on the bench, which obviously woke him up. He stormed out of the gates in the second set and forced Berdych into a bagel, taking the frame 6-0.

The turning point of the match came in the third-set with Berdych serving down 2-3. He led 40-0 on serve and looked to be on his way to evening things at 3-3, but two double-faults brought the game to deuce, and two forehand winners from Murray gave him the break point and a 4-2 third-set advantage.

He would serve out the remainder of that set, and a break point in the fourth-set at 5-5 allowed him to serve out the fourth-set and the match, wrapping up the victory in almost three and a half hours.

“At the start I felt like I was on the back foot a little bit,” said Murray. “Towards the end of the first set I started to come into it more, be more aggressive. Then second set I just picked up from how I was playing at the end of the first. I felt like I could have won the first set. Obviously had some chances there. I was extremely aggressive in the second set. [I] managed to run away with it.”

 Murray had more winners than unforced errors, 40 to 39, and took advantage of 56 errors off of Berdych’s racquet. Berdych’s six double-faults came at inopportune times and gave Murray break point opportunities, and Murray converted six of them.

“I’m really not happy and not really in a good mood,” said a distraught Berdych after the match. “I’m very disappointed to lose this match. I mean, it was a big match. I just need to come back stronger and get myself better for it. I mean, what was the difference? I had one bad set for the second set, and that’s it. I was just trying to get my chances, trying to fight for it, but as I said, it was not enough and I’m very disappointed with it.”

The second-set bagel Berdych threw up was the first set he had lost all-tournament long, and clearly he struggled to find a way to rebound from a set loss.

As for Murray, he moves into the eighth Grand Slam final of his career. He is seeking his third major title, and will take on the winner of the match between defending Aussie Open champion Stan Wawrinka and world number one Novak Djokovic, who defeated Murray in the 2011 and 2013 Australian Open finals.


Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
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