Andy Murray survives three-hour war of attrition to topple Novak Djokovic for Montreal title on fifth match point
Andy Murray notched his 11th win over a World No. 1 on Sunday, stunning Novak Djokovic 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 for the Rogers Cup title.
Murray extended his win streak in ATP World Tour Masters 1000 matches to 11 straight, capturing his 11th title at the level and second of the year (Madrid). The latest player to secure his spot at the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals, he won tour-level crown No. 35 and his third at the Rogers Cup, following a pair of title runs in 2009-10. Amelie Mauresmo and Jonas Bjorkman’s charge moves to 48-0 when winning the first set this year.
“To win this one was nice, especially the way the match went as well,” Murray said. “It would have been easy for me to let that one slip away. But I fought well and stayed calm in the important moments of the third set.
“I think I did come up and play aggressively when I needed to. Especially in the third set when I was breakpoints down, I finished a couple of points at the net, got some free points on my first serve, as well. I would say the margins were so fine… I felt like I played as aggressively as I could today. That helped.”
The Scot, who will return to World No. 2 in the Emirates ATP Rankings for the first time in two years, handed Djokovic just his fourth defeat this year and first in their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry since Wimbledon 2013 – ending an eight-match slide. Djokovic remains in front by a 19-9 overall margin.
There was much at stake in Sunday’s clash, with three-time Rogers Cup champion Djokovic (2007, ’11-12) chasing a 25th Masters 1000 crown and 55th overall at the tour-level. The top-ranked Serb had won 12 consecutive Masters 1000 finals, since falling to Roger Federer in Cincinnati 2012. Djokovic was also in the midst of a 30-match win streak at the Masters 1000 level, including title runs in Paris 2014 and Indian Wells, Miami, Monte-Carlo and Rome this year.
“Andy is deservedly a winner today on the court,” said Djokovic. “I thought what made the difference was his serve and my serve. I didn’t serve well the first set and a half.
“But not taking anything away from him, from his victory. He deserved it. He stepped in, played some great shots. Most of all the moments when he needed to, he served very, very well.”
Murray takes home $685,200 and 1,000 Emirates ATP Rankings points, while Djokovic earns $336,000 and 600 points in defeat. Both players will next head to Cincinnati for the Western & Southern Open, as the Emirates US Open Series continues to heat up.
How The Final Was Won
Both players started strong, with Murray earning the first break opportunities following a brilliant half volley at 15/30 in the fourth game. Djokovic would do well to save five chances, but the second seed Murray finally broke through on No. 6 after 10 minutes, utlising an aggressive gameplan in capturing more than double the baseline points won. He continued to pick up where he left off after yielding just three games to Kei Nishikori in Saturday’s semi-finals, consolidating for 4-1 in the first set.
But Djokovic would strike back. Murray had a 15/40 glimpse on the Serb’s serve for a double break lead and failed to convert. Djokovic dug deep, grinding from the back of the court with his backhand and drawing a Murray error to break back in the seventh game.
The clock struck one hour on the match at 4-4 and Murray would save a break point to halt the slide, holding for 5-4. With the set on the line, he turned in another strong return game to break Djokovic for the opener 6-4.
Djokovic would respond swiftly, however, winning the first eight points of the second set to break immediately and consolidate for 2-0. Murray secured the break back for 3-3, rifiling a cross-court return winner, but was unable to sustain the momentum as Djokovic broke once again to pull ahead 4-3. Murray looked to continue apply pressure on return, but the Belgrade native refused to concede the lead again, forcing a decider.
Murray answered in kind in the third set, breaking in the second game and surging ahead 3-0. Djokovic entered the match with a streak of 24 consecutive deciding-set wins at the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 level and was poised to break back, but Murray held after a mesmerising 15-minute, 10-deuce fifth game, saving six break points for 4-1. He would miss a trio of match points on Djokovic’s serve at 5-2, but would not disappoint a game later, saving two break points and sealing the win after exactly three hours.
( Courtesy of the ATP and Original Link – http://www.atpworldtour.com/en/news/montreal-2015-final-murray-djokovic )
Topics: Andy Murray, Atp World Tour, Montreal final, Novak Djokovic, Rogers Cup tennis, Sports, Tennis, Tennis News
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