Andy Murray Earns Rare Clay-Court Win at Madrid

Andy Murray of Britain reacts during his men's singles round of 64 match against Dominic Thiem of Austria at the Mutua Madrid Open's tennis tournament at the Caja Magica in Madrid, Spain, 02 May 2022. (EPA)
Andy Murray of Britain reacts during his men's singles round of 64 match against Dominic Thiem of Austria at the Mutua Madrid Open's tennis tournament at the Caja Magica in Madrid, Spain, 02 May 2022. (EPA)
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Andy Murray Earns Rare Clay-Court Win at Madrid

Andy Murray of Britain reacts during his men's singles round of 64 match against Dominic Thiem of Austria at the Mutua Madrid Open's tennis tournament at the Caja Magica in Madrid, Spain, 02 May 2022. (EPA)
Andy Murray of Britain reacts during his men's singles round of 64 match against Dominic Thiem of Austria at the Mutua Madrid Open's tennis tournament at the Caja Magica in Madrid, Spain, 02 May 2022. (EPA)

Great Britain's Andy Murray earned his first clay-court match win in almost five years, defeating Austria's Dominic Thiem 6-3, 6-4 on Monday in the first round of the Mutua Madrid Open.

The match featured a rare first-round meeting of former Grand Slam champions. Murray, who won the US Open in 2012 and prevailed at Wimbledon and 2013 and 2016, is currently ranked No. 78. Thiem, the 2020 US Open winner, is ranked 91st.

Both players have been seeking a return to form after injuries.

Murray, 34, finished with a 9-3 edge in aces and saved all three of the break points he faced. The match featured just two service breaks, one in the middle of each set.

"I enjoyed it," Murray said. "I prepared really hard before coming here. I worked hard and really wanted to go out and put a good performance out there. I feel like I did that.

"When I played a couple of years ago on the clay, I was struggling a little bit with my groin. My body felt really good in the last few weeks and tonight I felt like I moved well and I played a really good match."

Murray's most recent win on clay came against Japan's Kei Nishikori in the 2017 French Open quarterfinals.

Thiem was in his third ATP-level tournament since returning from wrist and finger injuries. He has now lost his opening match in all three events.

"It's extremely difficult," Murray said of Thiem working his way back. "He obviously had the injury initially and has also had some setbacks along the way. Mentally, it will take time to feel confident, totally accelerating on the ball. I had a wrist injury when I was 20 years old and it was very difficult. It took me time before I started to feel comfortable on the forehand side again.

"He uses his wrist a lot when he plays. He plays with heavy topspin. It's obviously going to take him time, but he can still hit the ball great. He's serving well, moving well. It's just going to take time."

The tournament's top eight seeds all received first-round byes. The four seeded players in action Monday -- No. 9 Cameron Norrie of Great Britain, No. 10 Jannik Sinner of Italy, No. 13 Diego Schwartzman of Argentina and No. 14 Denis Shapovalov of Canada -- all won their matches.

Other opening-round winners were Georgia's Nikoloz Basilashvili, Spain's Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, Australia's Alex de Minaur, Bulgaria's Grigor Dimitrov, France's Gael Monfils, French wild card Lucas Pouille and qualifiers David Goffin of Belgium, Dusan Lajovic of Serbia and Lorenzo Musetti of Italy.



Liverpool Braced for Premier League Title Party

Liverpool Braced for Premier League Title Party
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Liverpool Braced for Premier League Title Party

Liverpool Braced for Premier League Title Party

Liverpool have one hand on the Premier League trophy as they seek the solitary point they need against struggling Tottenham on Sunday that would guarantee a record-equaling 20th English title.

A draw at an expectant Anfield would take Arne Slot's men 13 points clear of Arsenal with just four games remaining, meaning they could not be caught.

Below them, Chelsea and Newcastle have the chance to press their case for Champions League qualification with Manchester City, Nottingham Forest and Aston Villa all involved in the FA Cup semi-finals.

At the bottom of the table, Ipswich's fate could be sealed.

AFP Sport looks at three talking points ahead of this weekend's action:

Liverpool on the brink

It is tough to see struggling Tottenham delaying Liverpool's title party at Anfield.

After Arsenal's home draw against Crystal Palace in midweek, Arne Slot's men just need a draw to seal the deal and pull level with bitter rivals Manchester United on 20 English titles.

Out-of-form Tottenham are 16th in the league table and have a miserable record at Anfield -- not winning there since 2011.

Liverpool won the reverse fixture this season 6-3 and were 4-1 winners on aggregate in their two-legged League Cup semi-final.

Captain Virgil van Dijk said it had been an "outstanding season" but that there was still work to do after Liverpool's 1-0 at Leicester last week.

"Now we have the chance to finish it off on the weekend against a very good Tottenham Hotspur, in my opinion," he said. "We played three times already against them this season and every game was very intense.

"To be in this position now, it's a good position but we're not there yet. We all have to realize that and we will. We'll make sure of that. It's a good week of preparation and then we have to be ready."

Champions League shootout

Just four points separate third-placed Manchester City from Aston Villa in seventh in the race for Champions League spots next season.

For the first time the Premier League's top five will all qualify for Europe's top club competition, due to strong performances in continental competition.

Liverpool are already guaranteed a spot and Arsenal, 10 points clear of Chelsea in sixth, are practically there, leaving three places open.

City stole a march this week in the mini-league with a last-gasp win against Villa after Nottingham Forest, now fourth, beat Tottenham on Monday.

Villa play Crystal Palace in the FA Cup semi-finals on Saturday, with Forest taking on City the following day at Wembley.

It means Newcastle, who could have Eddie Howe back on the touchline after a bout of pneumonia, would leapfrog City if they beat lowly Ipswich.

Chelsea badly need to beat Everton at home with a tough run of games to come against Liverpool, Newcastle, Manchester United and Forest.

Southampton playing for pride, Ipswich on brink

Southampton's 1-1 draw at West Ham last week meant they drew level with Derby's record-low points tally of 11 from the 2007/08 season, with five games to go to better the Rams' total.

But it will be of limited comfort after a miserable season for Saints, who were relegated earlier this month.

Leicester are already down and Ipswich appear certain to follow them barring a miracle -- a draw for West Ham at Brighton on Saturday would seal their fate.

It would be the second successive season in which all three promoted clubs had been relegated straight back to the Championship.

Prior to the 2023/24 campaign, this had last occurred in 1997/98.

All the evidence points to a worrying and widening chasm between English football's top two tiers as the season nears its end.

Fixtures

Saturday (1400 GMT unless stated)

Chelsea v Everton (1130), Brighton v West Ham, Newcastle v Ipswich, Southampton v Fulham, Wolves v Leicester

Sunday

Bournemouth v Manchester United (1300), Liverpool v Tottenham (1530)