Murray leads British fightback, Aussies sink
Andy Murray sparked a British Davis Cup quarter-final revival by
pulling his team level with France on Friday as crisis-hit 28-time
champions Australia slumped to a new low.
World number three Murray, the only top 10 player on duty in the
quarter-finals, kept Great Britain in the hunt for their first
semi-final place in 34 years as he defeated Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7-5, 7-6
(12/10), 6-2.
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Andy Murray |
Murray was under pressure to win the second rubber of the day on the
grass courts of Queen's Club in west London after Gilles Simon had given
last year's runners-up France the perfect start with a 6-4, 6-4, 6-1
rout of James Ward.
Murray's victory -- his 11th in 13 meetings with Tsonga and his 22nd
in 24 career Davis Cup singles rubbers -- also raised the possibility
that he might play alongside brother Jamie instead of Dominic Inglot in
Saturday's key doubles.
"I always want to play but I've had a long few months," said Murray,
playing for the first time since his Wimbledon semi-final loss to Roger
Federer seven days ago.
"It's about doing what is best for us to win the tie and also about
being fresh for Sunday (reverse singles). Hopefully I can play."
In September's semi-finals, the winners are likely to face Kazakhstan
who piled on the problems for Australia in hot and steamy Darwin by
opening a 2-0 lead. Mikhail Kukushkin swept to a 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 win over
teenager Thanasi Kokkinakis in just over two hours. World number 115
Aleksandr Nedovyesov then stunned 41-ranked Nick Kyrgios 7-6 (7/5), 6-7
(2/7), 7-6 (7/5), 6-4 to put Kazakhstan on the brink of reaching the
semi-finals for the first time.
Kyrgios, who was heavily criticised amid claims of "tanking" during
his fourth-round loss to Richard Gasquet at Wimbledon, and also for
arguing with umpires and sarcasm during his press conferences, admitted
the loss had left him drained.
- Kyrgios drained -
"Physically, I felt OK. I felt like my body was good. But mentally, I
almost felt a bit drained out there," Kyrgios said.
"It was hard to focus. It was hard to dig deep. It was hard to push
myself because a lot has gone on."
The disappointing outcome capped a forgettable day for Australian
tennis after Bernard Tomic was arrested in the United States overnight.
Tomic was taken into custody after failing to follow police orders to
leave his hotel penthouse in Miami following a night of loud partying.
In Ostend, Steve Darcis and David Goffin gave Belgium a 2-0 lead over
Canada.
Darcis saw off world number 272 Frank Dancevic 3-6, 6-1, 7-5, 6-3
before world number 14 Goffin swept past Filip Peliwo, ranked 491, in
straight sets 6-4, 6-4, 6-2.
Belgium are well-placed to make the semi-finals for the first time
since 1999 while Canada were already hamstrung by the absence of top two
singles players.
Eighth-ranked Milos Raonic, who has yet to fully recover from a foot
injury, withdrew as did Wimbledon quarter-finalist Vasek Pospisil.
The winners will face either Argentina or Serbia for a place in the
final.
Serbia, the 2010 champions, were without world number one and
recently-crowned Wimbledon champion Novak Djokovic who opted to rest
rather than travel to Buenos Aires. (AFP) |