Andy Murray
Andy Murray beats Feliciano Lopez in US Open third round
US Open
- Venue: Flushing Meadows
- Dates: 27 August - 9 September
Coverage: Listen on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and online; live text commentary on the day's best match
Andy Murray gave an unconvincing account of his US Open title credentials as he struggled to victory over Feliciano Lopez in round three.
Match stats
| Murray | Lopez | |
|---|---|---|
|
16 |
Aces |
18 |
|
61% |
1st serves |
50% |
|
7 |
Double faults |
4 |
|
53 |
Winners |
68 |
|
48 |
Errors |
55 |
|
74% |
1st serve win % |
86% |
|
50% |
2nd serve win % |
53% |
|
29% |
Receiving pts won |
34% |
|
3/12 |
Break points |
4/13 |
Murray edged the first two sets and was twice a break up in the third, only to gift Lopez a route back just as the Spaniard looked a beaten man.
He laboured through 7-6 (7-5) 7-6 (7-5) 4-6 7-6 (7-4) in three hours 53 minutes on a baking Louis Armstrong Stadium.
The British number one will face 15th seed Milos Raonic in the last 16.
He is aiming to win a maiden Grand Slam title, but is likely to need a significant improvement for that to happen.
"I was struggling a bit physically and that made it challenging," said the world number four, seeded third in the absence of Rafael Nadal.
"I was up two sets and a break and should have done better there, but I played well in the tie-breaks and that was the difference.
"He played some really good stuff and served well when he was down. He was able to dictate a lot, win free points and play well at the net.
"It's the last major event of the year and you want to push through anything physically. I will be out here in the next match giving 100%."
Murray was forced to save five break points in the first set before taking it on a tie-break thanks to a couple of Lopez mistakes.
Murray reacts to Lopez struggle
The Scot started the second with an early break of serve, but lost his focus with four errors in game six.
When Lopez held for 4-3 he had captured 12 points in a row, not to mention the initiative and crowd support.
Yet a dispute with the chair umpire at 5-4 and deuce seemed to distract the 30th seed, who again struggled in the tie-break.
Murray was now reading the Lopez serve and damaging his resolve with some relentless defence and incisive counter-punching.
An untimely Lopez double-fault put Murray 2-0 up in the third set, but he immediately relinquished his advantage with a forehand long.
Having moved 4-2 ahead courtesy of another double-fault, Murray again dropped serve and cut a forlorn, exhausted figure.
Murray dominance
Andy Murray has now won all seven of his career meetings with Feliciano Lopez
His usual movement and shotmaking was non-existent and Lopez leapt with delight as he broke once more and served out the set - the first he had taken off the Briton in three Grand Slam meetings.
Murray stuck with a rejuvenated Lopez throughout the fourth set and held firm for 6-5 in a game that featured an incredible 23-shot rally.
In the third tie-break of the match, Murray registered match point with a superb crosscourt backhand pass and was able to celebrate when his opponent sliced into the net.
Comments
Jump to comments paginationAll posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
More from Tennis
Elsewhere on the BBC
-
Story of the S-Class
Mercedes-Benz has been producing the model since 1972. BBC Autos looks back at its history
-
~RS~q~RS~v=~RS~z~RS~16~RS~)

Comment number 142.
searugger24th September 2012 - 20:17
always admire murray's respect for his opponents, plus his encyclopaedic knowledge and recall of players' stats.
when asked about a player its not unusual for him to précis his last 18 months record.
normally a player might manage to say: "he serve good..." or some such; muzza'll start listing their record from the 2011 french open, who their coach was and how many sets they lost in.
Link to this (Comment number 142)
Comment number 141.
DrCajetanCoelho4th September 2012 - 17:41
Step by step Andy Murray is journeying towards where he should be.
Wishing the hardworking Murray and his legion of admirers glorious days ahead. Well played. Let the good work go on and on.
Dr. Cajetan Coelho
Link to this (Comment number 141)
Comment number 140.
Mac4th September 2012 - 15:37
To all the haters: Murray may not be as glorious as Nadal, Fedz or Djocky but he IS the world #4! Yes he struggles at times, yes he has some real bad games, but he IS talented, HAS the heart and the passion. He's achieved more than any of you ever will so why hate on him?
He struggled this game because Lopez was on fire, especially with those perfect straight down the middle aces. Good match.
Link to this (Comment number 140)
Comment number 139.
Giles4th September 2012 - 12:17
OK brightonmummy, I'm very happy to say you were spot on and I was well wide of the mark. Gutted I couldn't watch it. Have to agree with some of the others posting here that Raonic should have been a little more circumspect in his pre-match interview. That's one thing I've never seen Murray do - give his opponent a pep talk. He always seems respectful, even if he's an overwhelming favourite.
Link to this (Comment number 139)
Comment number 138.
Kristofferson4th September 2012 - 10:23
@129. Boro Jonesy
So, bad result for you last night?
Made to look foolish with your caustic remarks AND you lose money!!
Best to stick to football, where you can hide amongst the other ignorant great unwashed.
Link to this (Comment number 138)
Comments 5 of 142