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Andy Murray

Re: Andy Murray

Postby vanjabarsa » 13 Jul 2011, 10:19

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Re: Andy Murray

Postby CherieBgd » 13 Jul 2011, 14:29

:mukica: tesko je biti Makica... stvarno mi ga je zao :crybaby:
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Saint-Tropez » 15 Jul 2011, 11:10

Vrlo lep tekst o Makici: FD
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Dejan » 06 Aug 2011, 14:07

...riječi su isto kao i gomile ljudi, nije nužno znati za sve, odaberi za sebe samo one prave...
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Liv » 11 Aug 2011, 15:16

The Hangover, Part III?
Spoiler: pokaži
From the buzzed hair, to the bland white clothes, to the way he kept his head down like a man on the lam, there seemed to be something missing about Andy Murray as he walked through his match in Montreal yesterday. He looked reduced, chastened and humbled, still, perhaps, not recovered from his two-week rollercoaster ride at Wimbledon. Not that you could really blame him if that were the case, considering that it had ended as it always ends, in soul-crushing, Empire-disappointing defeat.

And that’s how Murray played, for the brief time he was on the court: Like a man reduced. He didn’t have his serve or his forehand, which isn’t all that unusual. What was unusual was that he didn’t have his return, he didn’t have his backhand, he didn’t even have his best and most natural weapon, his speed. Murray said he “felt slow" from the start, and he looked it. His opponent, Kevin Anderson, was allowed total control of virtually every rally, and Murray, normally a master of retrieval, couldn’t get himself back into the points.

The last two seasons, Murray has suffered a spring hangover after losing the final of the Australian Open—this year he lost his openers in Indian Wells and Key Biscayne. At first glance this equally stunning defeat makes it appear that Murray has decided to add a second Slam hangover period to his annual calendar. Of course, judging from his recent Tweets, the riots in London, where he owns a house, have been on his mind—no surprise there. But another reason is just as likely: the Novak Djokovic effect.

Murray has spent 2011 watching his junior friend and rival—he and Djokovic were born two weeks apart—leave all of his old physical and mental frailties behind and make good on the early speculation that he was going to be the game’s next No. 1. Murray has heard that same speculation about himself for a decade. His coach when he was a teenager training in Spain, Pato Alvarez, has said that the first time he saw the Scot hit a tennis ball he believed that he was destined to be the best tennis player in the world.

The most famous change that Djokovic has made during his rise has been his switch to a gluten-free diet. The Serb is leaner and lighter, and has, by all appearances, solved the allergy and stamina problems that hindered him in the past. It’s hardly surprising that this summer Murray himself has adopted a new diet of his own. Where he used to carbo-load and stuff himself with 6,000 calories a day—including 50 pieces of sushi after matches (it sounds like he was keeping one of his favorite restaurants, Nobu, in business all by himself)—Murray has now cut out bagels and other carbs, and has even resorted to gluten-free pasta, a food I didn't know existed before Djokovic talked about it this year. Murray, as he has in the past, also went through an intensive period of training in Miami in preparation for the hard-court season.

So far it’s won him four games, against Kevin Anderson, a player ranked 35th and one whom he demolished in Australia last year. But in a way, it might have been expected. A lot of tennis players have had the same seemingly paradoxical experience: You spend a week at a camp hitting thousands of balls and running from morning to night, and then you come out and play your first match and you feel like you’re spinning your wheels in mud and you can barely get the ball over the net. Which is a good way to describe how Murray looked yesterday.

Even at his best, though, he might have struggled. Anderson, quietly and unobtrusively—is there a less flashy personality on the men's tour?—has been having his best year, at age 25. He reached a career-high ranking (33) in April and seems destined to pass that mark this summer. While he’s not likely to crack the Top 10, and he won't be favored in his next match, which might be against Stan Wawrinka, what’s interesting to me about Anderson is that he could be the prototype for the next great tennis player. He’s listed at 6-foot-8 (though he doesn’t appear to be quite that tall to me), but he’s a baseliner who can attack. Anderson said that he was determined to move forward against Murray, and it worked well on the slightly-slicker-than-normal court in Montreal. I can see faster courts making a comeback in the near future, and a player with Anderson’s size and serve and forehand running roughshod over them. The question may be: Can there ever be a player 6-foot-6 or up who possesses the speed of someone four inches shorter? The downside, for me at least, of Anderson’s success is that every time I see him win a match, I think, for a second, “OK, we’ve got an American doing well…” Oh right, he’s from South Africa.

Anderson may seem like a late-bloomer at 25, but he’s only a year older than Murray. I don’t think this loss, as ugly and total as it was, means much in itself, and if he has a good run in Cincinnati you won’t hear about it again, just as Murray’s spring disasters were old news once he got it together at the French Open. For now, you have to applaud Murray for continuing to make changes and trying to find different ways to get better, at least off the court. At the same time, though, while I’ve always believed that Murray had a better than 50-50 shot at winning a major at some point in his career, I’ve started to wonder whether it’s in the cards for him. Just as one Slam tormentor—Federer—is fading, another—Djokovic—has stepped up to take his place. What’s most troubling is Murray’s age: The last man to win his first major at 24 or older was Gaston Gaudio back in 2004, and that was the fluke to end all flukes.

Then again, as of last year, I had begun to wonder whether Djokovic would ever live up to the early No. 1 talk, or whether he would be forever be mired in his own self-defeating frustrations and uncertainties against Federer and Nadal. Now Djokovic is not only No. 1, he has other players trying out his methods—the School of Djokovic is open. Murray says that with his new diet he’s been recovering from matches much more quickly. Let’s hope that’s true of this one. If you’re going to trade Nobu for gluten-free pasta, you better get something out of it in the end.


andy_murray Andy Murray
Can't believe how out of hand the riots are... Big big downer... Ruining peoples homes, businesses, lives... sort it out now!
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Gama » 18 Aug 2011, 11:37

Andy Murray thrilled fans as he practiced at the Western and Southern Open in Cincinnati. Targeting cans of tennis balls set in the corners of the service box, his aim several times was perfect and observers erupted in cheers when back-to-back serves scattered the cans to the back of the court. One serve actually broke the can.
The explosion was startling among the otherwise relatively quiet practice courts at the Lindner Family Tennis Center.
He practiced with David Ferrer and did the serve drills by himself before Juan Mónaco and Fernando Verdasco took the over court.
So far this year, Murray has served 305 aces in competition, ranking him 17th among ATP World Tour players.

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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Gama » 22 Aug 2011, 12:08

7. Masters 1000 titula
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Gama » 22 Aug 2011, 18:57

Can we finally count on Murray?
-Nima Naderi-
Murray’s troubles at the slam level have been widely discussed. He’s either been too passive or too negative to get the job done. He’s given himself a fighting chance on three different occasions, but the more aggressive foe has always managed to prevail. Will this year’s Open provide a better ending for the last member of the big four to never bag a big one?

Let’s take a closer look.

Firstly, Murray will be fresher heading into New York this year. He lost early in Montreal and his victory in Cincy was a relatively easy one. He hasn’t had to play more than two sets in a match since his semifinal loss at Wimbledon, so it would preposterous to think that he won’t have the legs and lungs to last in Queens.
Secondly, Murray couldn’t have asked for more confidence heading into New York. He joined Federer as the only other player to defeat Djokovic this year, and he’ll enter the Open on a winning streak. In many ways, winning in Cincinnati does aid a player’s confidence even more than taking it all in Canada, simply because there are no bad memories to enter one’s mind prior to the tournament.
Lastly, Murray seems hungry. He’s sick of being thrown into the bridesmaid category, and he’s ready to stir the pot with another major winner on tour. A win for Murray in New York would not only solidify his standing in the top four, it would give everyone ahead of him (as well as behind him) something to think about before next year.
Do I think he can pull it off? Absolutely. Do I think he’ll need to step up his aggressiveness and court demeanor for it to happen? There is no doubt.
Murray won’t be the unanimous favorite in New York, but he surely won’t be the forget man, either.
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby loki » 30 Aug 2011, 03:03

Poshto vidim da je heroju (superheroju, tachnije!) ove teme jako teshko bez mene - moracu samo da podignem medju poslednje na pdf-u dok traje josh jedan pohod (i to superpohod!) na GS. Dodushe, diljem enta vidim da raznim navijachima (nazovi navijachima!) sme4ta shto su njegovi pohodi uspeshni kao prosechni AAA programi (znate oni - bio sam na tom programu odvikavanja pet puta - svakog puta uspeshno :D ), ali to je samo zato shto to ni nisu pravi navijachi. Mi pravi navijachi ce podrzhavamo MAndija makar igrao u kiltu! SHto se ozbiljnih shansi tiche, sve mu dodje moguce :laugh: , a shto se mene tiche neka prodje bar prvih shest kola i nekako izvuche pobedu u sedmom, a posle mozhe da ide u zasluzhenu legendu :so:
Another thing. This idea of "I'm offended". Well I've got news for you. I'm offended by a lot of things too. Where do I send my list? Life is offensive. You know what I mean? Just get in touch with your outer adult. And grow up. And move on.
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Liv » 30 Aug 2011, 11:52

Vidim da se gledao SF u odsustvu :lollol:
Tako je Lokiju! Sva podrska vernih navijaca je potrebna da se Maki the Great Skot-Brit vrati u finala :tenis: Mada bih licno da saceka sledecu godinu da zasija u punom sjaju, velika dela u ovoj su vec rezervisana.
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby M.S. » 30 Aug 2011, 13:12

ma ko će ga znati. sad kad bi odigrali finale, samo budala bi stavila na Mareja više od 100 dinara. i to je mnogo.

a tako beše i onomad kad je Federer jurio svoj treći slem (2009), a DP bio težak autsajder. nije podudarno, ali ima neke poveznice.
Najbolji je režim za sve ljude. Najgori su ljudi za sve režime.
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby loki » 30 Aug 2011, 20:38

Liv wrote:Vidim da se gledao SF u odsustvu :lollol:
Tako je Lokiju! Sva podrska vernih navijaca je potrebna da se Maki the Great Skot-Brit vrati u finala :tenis: Mada bih licno da saceka sledecu godinu da zasija u punom sjaju, velika dela u ovoj su vec rezervisana.


MAndy je uvek u punom sjaju, problem vas ostalih posamtracha, realnosti, i ATP liste je shto taj sjaj propushta da vidi. Ali utoliko gore po realnost & co :so:
Another thing. This idea of "I'm offended". Well I've got news for you. I'm offended by a lot of things too. Where do I send my list? Life is offensive. You know what I mean? Just get in touch with your outer adult. And grow up. And move on.
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Liv » 30 Aug 2011, 20:50

Distraktuje me odsjaj ridje kose da vidim taj drugi puni sjaj :manikir:
Bez zezanja Endi ima dobre sanse, niko ga ne pominje, cak ni ovi domaci!! :laugh:
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby Gama » 03 Sep 2011, 15:29

US Open: Murray needs 5 sets to beat Haase

Andy Murray rallied for a 6-7 (5), 2-6, 6-2, 6-0, 6-4 victory over Robin Haase to advance to the third round at the 2011 US Open tennis championships.

Murray said the match went the distance because he wasn’t having any luck chasing things down at the beginning.

“My legs were not getting me around the court like they normally do and I was out of position for a lot of balls,” Murray said. “Once I really just forced myself to get to as many balls as possible, kind of hustled a few points and got the break in the third set, I kind of started playing better. That’s really a big part of my game, so I think it was down to that.”

Murray played championship tennis in this match—most notably in the third and fourth sets when he won 62 points to Haase’s 31. Murray was up 4-0 in the fifth and with Haase cramping, it looked as if Murray would coast to the finish.

Instead, after a visit from the trainer, Haase got his legs back and tore off the next four games to make it 4-4.

“Even when he started coming back I wasn’t panicking, I wasn’t getting frustrated,” Murray said. “I just stayed focused and managed to turn it around.”

Serving at 5-4, Murray had match point and Haase hit a forehand that was called out. Haase challenged and the replay showed the ball barely clipped the line. But Murray answered with a pair of service winners on the next two points to close out the match.

Murray will next play against Feliciano Lopez of Spain.

“To come back from two sets is a difficult thing to do,” Murray said. “Any player will tell you that. And I just feel because of the way I was playing, that’s what was more impressive, because I wasn’t playing that well.”
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Re: Andy Murray

Postby loki » 03 Sep 2011, 15:50

US Open: Murray needs 5 sets to beat Haase


Podcenjivachki naslov navijachki obojenog novinara. Murray doesn't need 5 sets to beat anyone, he just sometime wants to play 5 sets. Junak teme za razliku od tamo nekih Djokovica, Federera i NadalOVa zna da publici pruzhi kvantitet teniske predstave ne bi li se preskupa karta nekako isplatila. Murray je, tako praktichno postao jedini zahstitnik malog i svakodnevnog choveka u svetu ATP glamura, dobrochinitelj medju azhdajama. :so: Predsotojece, a sada vec izvesno svima sem najtvrdokornijim skepticima i nevernicima, osvajanje US opena nece biti samo odraz teniskog kvaliteta, vec i kosmichka pravda. :gitara:
Another thing. This idea of "I'm offended". Well I've got news for you. I'm offended by a lot of things too. Where do I send my list? Life is offensive. You know what I mean? Just get in touch with your outer adult. And grow up. And move on.
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