2013 Tennis Thread

Bartoli wins maiden Slam against tearful Lisicki

Marion Bartoli crushed a tearful Sabine Lisicki 6-1 6-4 to win the Wimbledon title, her first Grand Slam.
In a battle of the underdogs Bartoli, ranked 15th, kept her composure as world number 24 Lisicki fell to pieces on Centre Court, the occasion clearly too much for the German, who wept during the second set.
It was an unusual finish to a bizarre women’s tournament at Wimbledon, with the likes of defending champion Serena Williams and third seed Maria Sharapova dumped out, while Victoria Azarenka was among a rash of players injured by the slippery grass in the early stages.
The fall of the giants saw Bartoli, 29, and Lisicki, 23, come through to contest a final with both women searching for their maiden Major titles. It was a scrappy affair, low on quality and ultimately determined by Bartoli’s ability to keep relatively calm as Lisicki imploded from her first service ball.
Indeed, Bartoli’s signature double-handed backhands and forehands were close to their best, while Lisicki’s power, accuracy and trusted serve all deserted her on a sunny afternoon in South West London.
There was a late fightback from Lisicki, but it was too late as she was already two breaks down, meaning Bartoli was able to serve out the match at the second time of asking.
"I never imagined in my wildest dreams that I would win Wimbledon, but even so maybe with a backhand winner - not an ace!" Bartoli, a beaten finalist in 2007, joked on court.
"I have been practising my serves for so long," she added before tearfully thanking her ******, who was previously her long-standing coach but now a mere spectator in the stands.
Lisicki acknowledged that she had failed to manage the pressure of her first Grand Slam final.
"I think I was just overwhelmed by this whole situation, but credit to Marion she has been in this situation before and handled it so well," Lisicki said afterwards.
"She has been around for so long and deserves it, and I hope I will get the chance again," she added, having regained her composure before bursting into tears again.
A strange first set saw both women show nerves from the outset as the first two games saw breaks of serve.
The unorthodox Bartoli’s deliveries are not one of her strengths, but back-to-back double faults gave the German an early advantage; Lisicki traditionally is an excellent server, so it was odd that she would follow by double-faulting to a break of her own.
While the more experienced Bartoli steadied her ship, Lisicki continued to struggle, making repeated errors from all over the court as she flopped with her groundstrokes, volleys, returns and even serves.
The set was over in a flash, Lisicki running off court for an early toilet break after losing it 6-1 in half an hour.
Perhaps she was able to regain her composure in the loos, because the 23-year-old was much better at the start of the second stanza, holding with ease before giving Bartoli a stern test on serve.
But, in a 10-minute game, the Frenchwoman managed to save six break points to hold, seemingly knocking the stuffing out of Lisicki, who was broken immediately afterwards.
It would be unfair to solely apportion it to Lisicki’s now fragile mental state – the opening point in that game was a fabulous rally won by a glorious Bartoli pass off the line – but the Frenchwoman was clearly more adept at handling the pressure than her younger adversary.
Bartoli is also notoriously laid-back which, coupled with her reportedly genius-level intelligence, more than compensates for a lack of physical prowess and technical accomplishment.
Lisicki, meanwhile, was a shadow of the player who beat Williams, Sam Stosur and Agnieszka Radwanska, double-faulting at will although occasionally pulling out some of her ****** winners.
Facing down another break point in the second, the German had to wipe away tears as she threatened to fully implode. She saved that one, but fell to another with one of what were frequent shanks off the side of her racquet, followed by an unforced error off the forehand.
It was embarrassing to watch but, after facing down and saving three match points at 5-1, Lisicki suddenly clicked into gear, holding and following with a superb break of serve.
But Bartoli still had another chance to serve for the championship, doing so with aplomb as Lisicki failed to get a point, the final touch a flashing ace.
It is likely to be the crowning glory of Bartoli’s career – she had hitherto only won seven WTA Tour titles – but for Lisicki there is time and hope for another Slam chance.
 
Familiar final amongst fortnight of seismic shocks

During a fortnight of seismic shocks, scattered seeds and bandaged knees there remained a sense of inevitability that Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray would walk out on Centre Court to contest the Wimbledon final on Sunday.
For the third time in the last four the two men born within a week of each other and whose careers have followed the same trajectory will go toe-to-toe for major silverware.
Their rivalry is fast over-taking the one between Swiss great Roger Federer and Spanish warrior Rafa Nadal, whose early defeats in the tournament are already fading memories.
World number one Djokovic leads their series 11-7 but they have never met at the Wimbledon championships and, despite the Serb's one title here in 2011, Murray is arguably the better grasscourt player, if only by a tiny margin.
He beat Djokovic on Centre Court in the Olympic semi-finals last year, going on to claim gold against Federer.
That breakthrough released the ***** inside the 26-year-old Scot and a few months later he claimed his first grand slam title by edging Djokovic in an gripping U.S. Open final.
Murray lost to Djokovic in this year's Australian Open final but now he has the Serb in his sights on his home turf as, for the second year in succession, he stands within one victory of ending Britain's 77-year wait for a Wimbledon's men's champion.
Last year's defeat in the final by Federer proved a watershed moment for Murray.
He said himself this week that 12 months ago he was happy to be in the final. Now, he expects to win it.
"I might **** up on Sunday and be unbelievably nervous, more nervous than I ever have been before," Murray said after reaching his seventh grand slam title by dousing the fire of Polish upstart Jerzy Janowicz in Friday's semi-finals.
"But I wouldn't expect to be."
Murray is on a 17-match winning streak on grass, taking in last year's Olympic gold rush and his victory at Queen's Club but Djokovic presents the most formidable of obstacles.
One of the greatest retrievers the game has ever seen, the six-times grand slam champion reached the last four in cruise control but needed every gear on the cog to subdue the magnificent Juan Martin del Potro in the longest semi-final ever played at the All England Club.
The intensity of that match was such that Murray's legions of fans, the 15,000 in centre Court, the thousands queuing to watch on the hill (surely soon to be named Murray Mount) and the millions sat in front of their TVs will be searching for a ***** in the Djokovic armour.
They will probably be disappointed as Djokovic has proved time and again that he can play two titanic matches back to back, notably when he beat Murray in a lung-bursting five-set semi-final in Melbourne in 2012, then beat Nadal two days later in the longest grand slam final ever.
"I'm not the first time in this situation," Djokovic, who has reached his 11th grand slam final, told reporters.
"I was in worse situations actually before, like in Australian Open 2012, or some occasions where I managed to recover, managed to win the title in the final, managed to feel fresh and play another six hours.
"I'm ready and I'm looking forward to that."
Djokovic knows the vast majority of the crowd will be roaring on Murray but is relishing playing in an atmosphere he said would be "loud" if it goes to a deciding set.
"He's a local hero. He has a big chance to win Wimbledon after a long time for this nation. People will be supporting him," Djokovic said.
"It's not the first time that I've been in a similar situations when I played against local players.
"I know what I need to do. I'm ready for it."
The two friends, whose relationships has become more professional now that they are contesting the sport's top prizes, are so well-matched there are no short cuts to victory.
Both are rock solid from the baseline, possess stinging returns of serve, move with supreme athleticism and have a bottomless reservoir of self-belief.
With temperatures expected to climb into the high 80 degrees Fahrenheit on Sunday and neither player prepared to cede an inch of turf, the final will be one of hard graft and perspiration but ultimately decided by moments of inspiration.

Order of play: Sunday July 7

CENTRE COURT (1400 BST)

Men's singles final


1-Novak Djokovic (Serbia) v 2-Andy Murray (Britain)

Mixed doubles final

1-Bruno Soares (Brazil)/ Lisa Raymond (U.S.) v 8-Daniel Nestor (Canada)/ Kristina Mladenovic (France)
 
Bryan brothers win men's doubles final

Americans Bob and Mike Bryan beat Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo 3-6 6-3 6-4 6-4 to win the Wimbledon men's doubles title on Saturday and become the first pair to hold all four Grand Slam titles at the same time since tennis went professional.
The top-seeded twin brothers lost the first five games of the match but fought back strongly to outclass the Croatian/Brazilian duo and extend their Grand Slam record number of titles to 15.
The 35-year-old Bryans, who also won the Olympic gold medal last year, got the measure of their 12th-seeded opponents through the telepathic understanding which has brought them 91 career doubles titles.
They made the decisive break in the ninth game of the fourth set and Bob Bryan served out for victory which he sealed with an ace, prompting a trademark chest-pump by the brothers.
 
'Murray Mania II', the sequel, hits Wimbledon

'Murray Mania' escalates ahead of Sunday's final.
"Murray Mania II" was gripping Britain ahead of Andy Murray's second shot at becoming the first British man to win Wimbledon since 1936 with major victories in rugby and cycling events on Saturday raising hopes for Sunday's final.
Fred Perry was the last Briton to win the coveted men's trophy 77 years ago, in a year when Edward VIII abdicated to marry Wallis Simpson, the Spitfire made its first flight and Adolf Hitler opened the 11th Olympics in Berlin.
Scotland's Murray will battle the world's top player, Serb Novak Djokovic, in his second Wimbledon final after losing last year's to Roger Federer.
Demand for tickets to the men's final has rocketed since 26-year-old Murray beat Poland's Jerzy Janowicz in Friday's semi-finals with ticket website viagogo saying tickets are now up for sale at a record £71,000 for a pair.
Quirky antics by Murray fans were reported in local media with a butcher in Aberdeen, Scotland, creating a sausage laced with ********* and strawberries and a nail salon offering a Murray Manicure with nets and balls on nails.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said he hoped Murray would add the Wimbledon title to the British and Irish Lions' win over Australia on Saturday in which they roared to a 41-16 victory in the third test in Sydney, ending 16 years of failure.
"A superb result for the British and Irish Lions," Cameron wrote on Twitter. "Hoping Andy Murray can make it the perfect sporting weekend."
Also on Saturday British cyclist Chris Froome demolished his rivals to claim the overall leader's yellow jersey in the eighth stage of the Tour de France.
Cameron is expected to be among the spectators in the royal box on Centre Court on Sunday when up to 28,000 tennis fans flock to the grounds in south London for the match of the year.
The chairman of the All England Club, Philip Brook, issues invitations for the royal box, mixing up royals, diplomats, *********** and former players, but one notable absence will be the Duchess of Cambridge, the former Kate Middleton, who is due to give birth to the future heir to the British throne any day.
Outside the court, tennis fans will gather in an area of the grounds known as "Henman Hill" or more recently "Murray Mound" where people with ground but not court tickets can watch the tennis live on a giant TV screen while tucking into picnics.
Diehard tennis fans were camping overnight - and some have camped for the entire tournament - to ensure they are at the front of the line to buy tickets to the ground and the chance to join a queue to buy any unused tickets put up for resale.
The undisputed queen of the queue, Sue Callaghan, 60, from Surrey, who has camped at every Wimbledon tournament for 40 years, said she would not ***** of missing Murray.
"I love coming to Wimbledon every year and so hope that this is Murray's year. He deserves it," Callaghan told Reuters on a blistering hot summer's day outside her union jack motif tent.
"I shed a tear last year when he lost. We are the real fans out here," added Mark David Martin, 47, a carpenter from the Outer Hebrides, who has also camped out for two weeks.
As hopes ride high on Murray, 26-year-old Djokovic acknowledged that the crowd will not be his on Sunday as he seeks his second Wimbledon title after winning in 2011.
"(Murray's) a local hero. He has a big chance to win Wimbledon after a long time for this nation. People will be supporting him," Djokovic told a news conference on Saturday.
"It's not the first time that I've been in a similar situation when I played against local players. I know what I need to do."
 
******'s methods pay off as Bartoli does it her way

People thought Walter Bartoli was a little odd when he ripped up the conventional coaching manual and began moulding the hybrid player who on Saturday won the Wimbledon singles title.
That player was his ******** Marion whose punchy double-handed forehands and backhands, quirky moves and almost maniacal focus took her through the Wimbledon draw without losing a set.
Her 6-1 6-4 victory over Germany's Sabine Lisicki completed a remarkable journey for the 28-year-old and finally vindicated her ******'s faith in doing things his way.
"I'm no tennis player so maybe my ideas were completely new, that's why a long time ago I was disturbing everybody," Walter, who introduced his ******** to tennis aged six after studying the style of Monica Seles, told reporters on a sun-splashed balcony alongside Centre Court.
"The tennis players thought this guy is crazy, these ideas are completely stupid but I kept believing in myself and Marion and me found our way to do things."
Bartoli has been consistently in the top 20 of the WTA rankings for six years but after a difficult season in which she had not gone past the quarter-finals at any tournament she was well down the list of potential Wimbledon winners.
She even stopped being coached by ***, working instead with former Wimbledon champion Amelie Mauresmo, but she sought him out for a warm embrace after firing down an ace to claim the title.
After some worrying time when she says she hit "rock bottom" everything finally fell into place - the ultimate reward for daring to be a little different.
"That's always been a part of my personality to be different," she told a new conference. "I think being just like the other one is kind of boring.
"At the end of the day, when the spectators were looking at 10 matches they will remember this girl that was doing something different, playing inside the court or whatever."
"It was the perfect day. It was sunny. It was beautiful. Centre Court Wimbledon, it was packed," added Bartoli, the first French player to win a slam since Mauresmo in 2006.
"I won in two sets. I didn't drop a set for the whole championship. Even in my perfect ***** I couldn't have dreamed a perfect moment like that. That is beyond perfection."
Bartoli's style is based on taking the ball extremely early and being aggressive on every ball.
Those early days when she learnt her strokes on an indoor court with no space behind the baselines are still evident because the Frenchwoman always moves forward.
So is the intense focus that became an ingrained habit thanks to Walter's novel use of different coloured tennis balls, "some very speedy, some very low" he explains of one of the various unconventional coaching methods he introduced.
Sometimes she stands two metres inside the baseline to receive serve - a skill that requires incredible hand-eye coordination and Walter made use of video to study the way balls bounce.
The perpetual motion mannerisms, the imaginary swings behind the baseline, the running on the spot, the fist-pumps, are also key to the Bartoli blueprint.
"I told her to be a good player you have to have a routine and stick with it," said Walter, a doctor by profession. "The thing is for her not to be passive on the court. With her (double-fisted style) it's very difficult to come back in a rally, that's why she wins lots of quick rallies."
There have been "pain and tears" during her journey and heartache too when she missed the Olympics because of her decision not to play Fed Cup in protest at her ****** not being allowed to work with the team.
All that was forgotten on Saturday, even if Walter never imagined his ******** could one day be a Grand Slam champion.
"For sure I was thinking that she was a talented player and can have some fun on the tennis court and that's all," he said.
"She asked to be a champion and I helped her to be one. She used to say *** I want to improve my serve, have more speed, and I'd find each time a new exercise."
 
Lisicki still smiling after final meltdown

Sabine Lisicki's smile had returned as she admitted nerves got the better of her as she lost 6-1 6-4 to Marion Bartoli in a one-sided Wimbledon final on Saturday.
The German clearly found her first Wimbledon final a difficult experience and she looked to be heading for an embarrassing 6-1 6-1 defeat before winning three games in a row to bring some respectability to the scoreline.
She sobbed on court during her second set meltdown but recovered her composure in time to face the world's media.
"I felt fine this morning but it's an occasion that you don't get every day," she told a news conference. "So it's something completely new for me.
"The walk on court is different. You walk on with the flowers. You walk on together. Everything is a little bit different. The feeling, the atmosphere is different."
Lisicki beat defending champion Serena Williams and last year's runner-up Agnieszka Radwanska on the way to the final and, on her favourite surface, was favourite to beat the 15th-seeded Bartoli.
But she was never able to produce consistently the booming serves and thumping forehands which took her to the final and made a string of costly unforced errors.
"I will learn and take away so much from it," Lisicki, seeded 23rd, said after her first Wimbledon final, having reached the semi-final in 2011.
"I've done that in the past. Experience has always helped me so much.
"When I was in the quarters here the first time, when I was in the semis for the first time, and now in the final for the first time. I've always gained my experience here, which is good.
"I hope that next time it will help me to do that one step further."
Lisicki, 23, agreed that the 28-year-old Bartoli, who did not drop a set in the tournament, had more energy left for the final after an easier run.
"Having so many hard matches is draining in the end of the day. I think Marion was fresher today. I think that made a big difference too," she said.
Lisicki was taking plenty of positives from her performances at Wimbledon.
"It's still been a great tournament," she said. "It's been an amazing two weeks.
"I've played my best tennis here. I had to take out the champion and runner-up from last year, so I think that's pretty big. This tournament definitely made me a better player."
 
Hsieh becomes Taiwan's first Grand Slam title winner

Hsieh Su-wei became the first Taiwanese player to win a grand slam title when she and Peng Shuai beat Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua 7-6(1) 6-1 in the Wimbledon women's doubles final on Saturday.
Hsieh and China's Peng, the eighth seeds, took the first set in a tie-break and romped through the second against their 12th-seeded Australian opponents to claim their first Grand Slam crown.
Peng is the third Chinese to win a Grand Slam doubles title.
It was the third time Dellacqua finished runner-up in a women's doubles final at a Grand Slam. However, she did win the 2011 French Open mixed doubles title with American Scott Lipsky.
 
Murray tames Djokovic to end 77 years of British hurt

Andy Murray ended Britain's 77-year wait for a men's Wimbledon champion after 6-4 7-5 6-4 win over world number one Novak Djokovic.
Scotland’s world number two unsettled Serbia’s 2011 champion Djokovic from an epic opening game, coming back from breaks down in the second and third sets, before fending off a brave fightback while serving for the match as he claimed his finest career victory.
Murray won last year’s US Open to end what was also a 77-year wait for a British male Grand Slam champion, and is now the first Briton of either gender to win Wimbledon since Virginia Wade in 1977.
"It feels slightly different to last year," Murray said in reference to his tearful defeat in the 2012 final. "I don't know how I managed to get through that last game - losing three match points was unbelievable. It was hard to watch but imagine playing it!
"Novak has come back so many times from similar positions and he almost did it again."
The beaten world number one was typically sportsmanlike at the trophy presentation.
"Congratulations to Andy, who absolutely deserved this win - you played incredible tennis," Djokovic said. "I know how much it means to all of you guys, the whole country, well done.
"I'm aware of the pressure he gets, although I cannot imagine the extent not being in his shoes.
"It was an absolute pleasure and an honour to be part of this final."
Murray was exceptional at times but, by contrast, Djokovic had one of his worst games on Centre Court.
On the hottest day of the year in Britain, with the mercury soaring toward 30 degrees Celsius, the world's two best players produced some scorching sinew-stretching action from the start and the first three games alone lasted 20 minutes.
The opening salvo of the Centre Court clash lasted 20 strokes as Murray went up 0-40 on the Serb's serve but Djokovic produced staunch defence to stave off his opponent's ******.
The duo did trade breaks in the third and fourth games, with each Murray winner being greeted by a chorus of 15,000 roars.
Second seed Murray got another chance to break to love in the seventh game and this time he pounced as the 2011 champion surrendered his serve by slapping a backhand into the net.
A set that initially looked like lasting forever ended exactly on the hour mark as Djokovic whipped a service return wide to give Murray, runner-up to Roger Federer last year, the one-set cushion.
The battle between the two players who were born seven days apart in 1987 intensified in the second set as they went toe-to-toe from the baseline with 25-shot rallies being par for the course.
Djokovic, who survived a four hour 43 minute semi-final epic against Juan Martin Del Potro two days ago, showed his super-human ability to recover quickly as he ran down everything Murray could throw at him.
The Serb rattled Murray by going for the lines and broke for a 3-1 lead when Olympic champion Murray flicked a forehand into the net.
Even when Djokovic slipped and skidded flat on to his stomach while trying to chase down a Murray winner, the six-times Grand Slam champion appeared unfazed as he quickly got back on to his feet to extend his lead to 4-1.
But Murray, who famously trains in the intense Miami heat even on Christmas Day, showed off his iron-man conditioning as he stormed back to level at 4-4, a Djokovic double fault on break point down handing him the break back in the seventh game.
While the cheering crowd, which included British Prime Minister David Cameron, got behind a pumped up Murray, Djokovic simply exploded in anger in the 11th game.
Convinced that Murray had gone long mid-rally at 15-15, he screamed at umpire Mohamed Lahyani "Why? What's going on?" as he gesticulated wildly to show what he thought the linesman had failed to see.
Murray ignored the uproar to break the fuming Serb and soon had the fans roaring when he wrapped up the 69-minute second set with a 125mph thunderbolt ace.
The third set initially seemed a formality for Murray, who broke Djokovic early and almost sealed a double-break.
But two sloppy drop shots allowed the Serb to break back, with a rejuvenated Djokovic holding before winning the subsequent Murray service game as the Briton seemed to lose momentum.
Murray, however, has incredible mental and physical reserves and cancelled out that break with some intense hustling at the net, bringing it back with serve, which he held with a wonderful diving forehand off the baseline.
That was followed by a magnificent break for Murray, which boasted two astounding last-gasp winners, leaving him serving for the title.
Initially Djokovic saved three championship points as a nervy Murray’s serve deserted him, and the Serb even had three break-back points thanks to an unforced error to net from the Briton, a wonderful drop-shot off the net-cord and then a beautiful diving winner across the net.
But Murray saved them all, bringing up his fourth match point with some incredible fight at the baseline, his forehand pass ******* Djokovic to net a volley.
And, after his next serve was returned just inside the baseline, Murray was a spectator as Djokovic netted the follow up, sending Centre Court and an entire nation into raptures.
 
OK, I watched one game. The final game. I hope people don't look back at the "easy" half of the bracket, because after all, the man has just beaten the best player in the world in straight sets in 49 degree heat. With his fair Scottish skin as well. But I will say this : I'm glad I didn't watch it all, because that one game's worth of shots of his ******'s face was just about my limit. Seriously, reaction to every point, BBC? We aren't watching for the spectators. Slow-motion replays of the spectators' reactions is utterly pointless.
 
Nestor and Mladenovic win mixed doubles title

Daniel Nestor and Kristina Mladenovic beat top seeds Bruno Soares and Lisa Raymond 5-7 6-2 8-6 to win the Wimbledon mixed doubles title on Sunday.
Canadian Nestor and Frenchwoman Mladenovic, the eighth seeds who were runners-up at last month's French Open, dropped the first set to the Brazilian and American pairing and saved two match points in the third set before claiming their first grand slam title together.
Wimbledon singles champion Marion Bartoli, a close friend of Mladenovic's, watched the match from the stands before heading off for the champions ball.
It was the 40-year-old Nestor's third grand slam mixed doubles title and he has also won eight major men's doubles crowns, including two at the All England Club, and the 2000 Olympic gold medal.
The 39-year-old Raymond has won four grand slam titles in women's doubles and seven in mixed, including last year's crown at Wimbledon in partnership with compatriot Mike Bryan who won the men's doubles title with his ******* Bob on Saturday.
 
Djokovic predicts more to come from Murray

Novak Djokovic paid tribute to new Wimbledon champion Andy Murray - and believes their rivalry could be the future of tennis.
Djokovic was beaten 6-4, 7-5, 6-4 as Murray ended a 77-year wait for a British men's singles winner at the All England Club.
Murray and Djokovic are now firmly established in the world's top two and honours are even in four Grand Slam final clashes - with two wins a piece, following the Scot's breakthrough Slam victory in New York last year.
"I think Andy knows what he needs to do to win big matches now, after the Olympics, the US Open and now Wimbledon," said Djokovic. "Wins boost your confidence and you need that self-belief in important moments and he's got that now.
"I know it means a lot for him and the country. It's the most important tennis tournament in the world and for him, as a British player, it couldn't be more perfect. He had a huge motivation to win here.
"The atmosphere was incredible for him, not so good for me but I expected that."
Djokovic had chances but the resilience of Murray proved decisive - though the Serb saved three Championship points before he finally surrendered as an expectant nation breathed a collective sigh of relief.
"He was a better player in decisive moments," added Djokovic. "I was up in the second and third sets and I allowed him to come back for no reason.
"He was getting some incredible shots, he was all over the court and played fantastic tennis.
"I should have played better in key moments but I didn't stop fighting, it wasn't my day and I didn't play at the top of my abilities.
"I wasn't patient enough and my serve was not as good as it has been at this tournament but that is also because he is such a good returner.
"I can't be too disappointed with my whole tournament, you can't win every time."
 
Champion Murray in a blur after historic triumph

Andy Murray admitted to feeling dazed and confused as he struggled to comprehend the enormity of his Wimbledon victory.
The British number one produced a stubborn display that underlined his mental toughness and increasing self-belief to beat world number one Novak Djokovic 6-4 7-6 6-4.
He came out to serve for the title as a far from reserved roar, an unleashing of national frustration after so many years, reverberated around the hallowed Centre Court.
Murray quickly established three Championship points and then squandered them all.
He then saved three break points before producing a brilliant winner to set up another chance, which he finally took to end Britain's 77-year wait for a men's singles winner.
The British number one now holds the Olympic, US Open and Wimbledon titles - and, at just 26, is still at the peak of his powers meaning there is surely more to come.
"Winning Wimbledon is the pinnacle of tennis. Those last few points were the hardest of my life and I worked so hard in that last game," said Murray.
"I just can't get my head around it, I can't quite believe it.
"It's all a bit of a blur, from 4-2 down in the third set to holding the trophy, I don't know what to say.
"Mentally, that last game was the toughest game I will play in my entire career. I can't really believe that it's happened. This one will take a while to sink in."
Murray paid special tribute to coach Ivan Lendl, himself a two-time beaten finalist at Wimbledon, who has perhaps added a decisive missing ingredient to the world number two's entourage since his appointment early last year.
"He told me he was proud of me, which coming from him means a lot," added Murray.
"He doesn't smile too much in public but away from the cameras and crowds he is a very different character.
"He'd have loved to win here but this was the next best thing for him, he's stuck by me through some tough losses, he's been very patient and I'm happy I managed to do it for him.
"Ivan has made me learn more from my losses. He is extremely honest with me, if I work hard then he is happy. If I don't, he's disappointed and will tell me.
"He's got my mentality slightly different heading into these big matches."
Murray also paid tribute to the crowd - normally the most reserved on the Grand Slam circuit - who waved their flags and raised the roof with the sort of chanting you normally only find at the Davis Cup.
"It was a different atmosphere to the past, it was incredibly loud," he said.
"It does make a difference and it really helps when the crowd is like that. It's especially good in a tough matches, when it's extremely hot and there are long, ****** rallies. It helps get you through."
Murray admits to feeling strange that his entire career has been contrasted with a player, Fred Perry, who died when he was just seven years old.
And he hopes that he won't be held up as a similar example for those that will surely be inspired by his Wimbledon victory.
"It's an incredibly difficult tournament to win, so it's possible it could take a long time but I would hope not that long," said Murray.
"I think with the amount of money that is invested in the sport in this country, then it shouldn't take 70 odd years."
 
Murray reaches summit to enter British sporting folklore

The last few heart-pounding strides towards the summit proved the most precarious for Andy Murray as he beat Novak Djokovic to end a 77-year British jinx at Wimbledon on a Sunday that will forever be etched in the nation's sporting fabric.
The record books will show an almost routine 6-4 7-5 6-4 win for the boy from Dunblane but the three hours nine minutes it took to finish off a slightly below-par Djokovic felt like an eternity.
It was more tortuous than any of the five-set thrillers that Murray has contested in his career - most recently when he came from two sets down to beat Spain's Fernando Verdasco in the quarter-finals to keep the ***** alive.
With the 15,000 people on a baking Centre Court bellowing his name and millions glued to TV screens around the country Murray stepped up to serve at 5-4 needing four points to emulate Fred Perry who won the last of his three titles here in 1936.
Three points later, amid a cacophony of sound that even surpassed the decibel level reached when he won Olympic gold on the same stage last year, it was 40-0.
But this most unpredictable of Wimbledons, a tournament stacked with shocks and unexpected turns, was not about to let Murray achieve British sporting immortality without one final, stomach-churning, twist.
World number one Djokovic, who was ahead in both the second and third sets only to be engulfed by a tide of patriotic fervour, saved all three and then had a point to make it 5-5 after dribbling a drop volley off the net tape.
Had he done so the statue of Perry perched in the grounds of the All England Club might still be casting a shadow over British tennis but Murray, whose broad shoulders have carried home hopes for nearly a decade, would not stumble.
With his pulse racing and nerves on fire he conjured up a fourth matchpoint and this time Djokovic succumbed, netting a backhand to spark cheers from Land's End to John O'Groats.
"It's the hardest few points I've had to play in my life," said a dazed Murray.
"That last game went my head was everywhere. That last game will be the toughest game I'll play in my career, ever."
Twelve months ago Murray's Wimbledon ***** was crushed by Roger Federer on the same stage - yet that tear-jerking defeat proved to be a watershed for the obstinate 26-year-old.
A few weeks later he claimed the Olympic gold medal before beating Djokovic to win the U.S. Open and his first Grand Slam title after four times falling at the final hurdle.
Despite those milestones, Murray knew that becoming the first British man to win Wimbledon in shorts would ultimately define his career.
"For the last four or five years, it's been very, very tough, very stressful, a lot of pressure," said Murray, the only British man to reach the second round this year.
"I felt a little bit better this year than I did last year. But it's not easy. I think now it will become easier. I hope it will."
When Perry thrashed Germany's Gotfried von Cramm 6-1 6-1 6-0 in 1936 - the same year the BBC made the world's first television broadcast and Jesse Owens won four Olympic golds in pre-war Berlin, it proved to be his swansong.
Approaching his athletic peak and with age and injuries catching up with 17-times grand slam champion Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal, Murray could have several more memorable Sundays on Centre Court in the next few years.
There were ironic shouts of "C'mon Roger" and C'mon Rafa", but as Murray and Djokovic embellished a rivalry that began when they were 12-year-olds it was hard to disagree that they are now the biggest draws in men's tennis.
Similar in style, they have both turned retrieving lost causes and switching from defence to ****** into an art-form.
The opening three games on Sunday took 20 minutes with a succession of punishing baseline rallies leaving both men gasping in the hottest temperatures of the fortnight.
"The first few games were ******," said Murray, who climbed into the stands to hug every member of his sizeable entourage, beginning with coach Ivan Lendl after kneeling with his head bowed on the grass.
"It was a physically incredibly demanding match."
Murray was the early aggressor, earning the first break of serve in the third game - by which time both players were sweat-soaked.
Djokovic hit back immediately but Murray broke again for a 4-3 lead and clinched an absorbing opening set in an hour - just as he had done against Federer a year earlier when he went on to lose the next three.
Murray trailed 4-1 in the second set but Djokovic handed back the break of serve with a double-fault and Murray levelled for 4-4 after saving two break points.
Serving at 5-5 Djokovic began to lose his cool, arguing with umpire Mohamed Lahyani about a line call and Murray pounced to move ahead 6-5 before claiming the second set with an ace.
Six-times Slam champion Djokovic seemed to have given up on a second Wimbledon crown when he went 2-0 down in the third but he reeled off four consecutive games.
There was a sigh of relief as Murray stopped the rot and at 4-4 the Scot played two incredible points to move to within one successful service game of glory.
Even the bust of the late Perry might have perspired during the next 13 minutes but Murray would not be denied.
"The bottom line is that he was a better player in decisive moments," said Djokovic who still leads Murray 11-8 in their career head-to-head.
"He played fantastic tennis, no question about it. He deserved to win."
Play concluded at a memorable 127th Wimbledon championships with more French success as Kristina Mladenovic and 40-year-old Canadian partner Daniel Nestor, cheered on by women's singles champion Marion Bartoli, beat Bruno Soares and Lisa Raymond 5-7 6-2 8-6 to win the mixed doubles title.
 
Cameron backs knighthood for victorious Murray

Prime Minister David Cameron has backed Andy Murray to earn a knighthood after becoming Britain’s first male champion at Wimbledon for 77 years.
Murray defeated Serbia’s Novak Djokovic 6-4 7-5 6-4 on Sunday to delight a country that has waited so long for a successor to Fred Perry.
The world number two, who also holds the US Open and Olympic titles, has quickly been installed as the 1/20 favourite to win the Sports Personality of the Year award but there is also speculation he could earn recognition in the New Year honours list.
While Cameron has no influence over what is an independent process, the Conservative Prime Minster believes Murray is deserving of being knighted, saying on Monday: "Frankly, I can't think of anyone who deserves one more.”
Cameron, who watched Murray’s victory from the royal box at Wimbledon, added that the moment of sporting glory "lifted the spirits of the whole country".
He added: "It was a fantastic day for Andy Murray, for British tennis and for Britain … We were wondering yesterday morning, 'Do we dare to ***** that this is possible?' and he proved absolutely that it was."
 
OK, I watched one game. The final game. I hope people don't look back at the "easy" half of the bracket, because after all, the man has just beaten the best player in the world in straight sets in 49 degree heat. With his fair Scottish skin as well. But I will say this : I'm glad I didn't watch it all, because that one game's worth of shots of his ******'s face was just about my limit. Seriously, reaction to every point, BBC? We aren't watching for the spectators. Slow-motion replays of the spectators' reactions is utterly pointless.

I only watched the 1st two sets and saw him win it at the end.I thought Djokovic had a poor game by his standards.He had a tougher route to the final than Murray did (especially the semi he had with Del Potro) but well done to Murray for taking advantage of it,although sometimes you need that bit of luck.But I think Lendl has made all the difference to him,because without him,I think he would have still have been without a major.

As for BBC's coverage.I think they would be better off having it on ITV to be honest (which I think they did with the French Open) at least then there's less of a chance of having those tedious interludes as you have mentioned.
 
674 complaints over Inverdale's Bartoli comments.

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"She's not a looker." I guess Mr Inverdale doesn't have any mirrors in his home. I'd tap that French ass. And so would he.
 
674 complaints over Inverdale's Bartoli comments.

Not enough, really.

Here's a reminder of what Inverdale actually said :

"I just wonder if her ***, because he has obviously been the most influential person in her life, did say to her when she was 12, 13, 14 maybe, ‘listen, you are never going to be, you know, a looker. You are never going to be somebody like a Sharapova, you’re never going to be 5ft 11, you’re never going to be somebody with long legs, so you have to compensate for that. You are going to have to be the most dogged, determined fighter that anyone has ever seen on the tennis court if you are going to make it’, and she kind of is.”

Incidentally, Bartoli's *** would never have told her "You are never going to be somebody like a Sharapova" because when Marion was 12, 13 and 14 Sharapova would have been 9, 10 or 11 respectively. So not only is Inverdale a sexist prick, he's stupid as well.
 
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