Murray dominant on return but Wawrinka dumped out

March 01, 2017 - 11:00

World number one Andy Murray eased into the second round of the Dubai Tennis Championships on Tuesday on his return to court five weeks after suffering a shock Australian Open exit.

Andy Murray eanred a berth to compete in the second round of the Dubai Tennis Championships on Tuesday. — Photo internet-us.com
Viet Nam News

Tennis

DUBAI — World number one Andy Murray eased into the second round of the Dubai Tennis Championships on Tuesday on his return to court five weeks after suffering a shock Australian Open exit.

Top seed Murray, now fully fit after a bout of shingles, beat Malek Jaziri 6-4, 6-1, avoiding the fate of second seed and title holder Stan Wawrinka, sensationally dumped out as his form collapsed following an early 4-1 lead.

The Scot Murray, who was knocked out in the fourth round in Melbourne, had to work for 45 minutes to win the opening set but ran away with the second against the outclassed Jaziri.

In contrast, the Swiss three-time Grand Slam winner Wawrinka was beaten 7-6 (7/4), 6-3 in the first round by outsider Damir Dzumhur.

Wawrinka was playing for the first time since suffering a right knee injury in Melbourne, where he reached his eighth major semi-final before falling to Roger Federer.

And following defeat by the 77th-ranked journeyman from Bosnia-Herzegovina, he admitted that his fitness was lacking after only a week of practice.

"I started well but it was tough because I was missing a little bit of something. In practice it was starting to be OK the last few days, but today I was missing something."

Dzumhur will now face Marcel Granollers of Spain.

"This is a big win for me, coming on hard court against a player who likes this surface and who won the tournament last year," the shock winner said.

After taking an early lead, Wawrinka found his game slipping. By the time he got the first-set tiebreak, he was playing catch-up.

The Swiss was broken twice for 5-1 in the second set before a brief rally in which he broke back once.

Despite his exit Wawrinka said that his knee was giving him no pain, a positive sign heading into back-to-back Masters 1000 events starting next week in Indian Wells and Miami.

"I need to focus on myself. I need to practise more, to get in a better level to expect to do some good results," Wawrinka said.

"I’m quite unhappy to lose the first round. It’s tough because I played well last year here. I was happy to be back. I was happy to be back on the ATP Tour after a month." — AFP

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