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Thursday, June 12, 2014

Andy Murray- Does he have the will to play?

It was nauseating to watch Murray burn himself or saw the very branch he was perched on or score a self-goal to defeat the very team he was  part of.  Watching the reigning Queen’s Champion relegate himself to a shock third round ouster against Radek Stepanek was painful.  Murray looked sluggish, as if he were playing with ankle weights.  He couldn’t wrest the initiative from Stepanek and looked content to simply respond shot for a shot.  It was Stepanek who tried to do something different by playing backhand spin, rushing to the net and made Murray chase the yellow fluff all over the court- twice in the same game- from the net to the baseline. 
Was Murray sleep-walking through the game? Why is he so reluctant to let go of his defensive game?  A forehand for a forehand, a sliced backhand for a sliced backhand and on and on it went until Radek altered the pace and hit a drop shot, then suddenly the atoms on the court would go on overdrive and Murray would come charging to the net….in vain.  This was the scene during the two straight set defeat of Murray at the Aegon Championships.  His body language gave no indication that he was the defending champion.  Honestly he looked like he couldn’t wait to get the match over with. 
Andy looked tired- mentally exhausted.  Unlike the sharp looked he debuted yesterday to much appreciation- a clean shaven, closely cropped look, his mental frame seemed to sag. 

Maybe it is about peaking at the right time, some would say Nadal too was ousted in the second round at Halle yesterday.  But When Nadal loses it is not due to a lack of will, it is simply because his game fell short or maybe due to a physical discomfort- perhaps an injury or aching muscles.  Murray shots were mediocre but I know with a certainty that Murray does not lose due to his game, his game always matches that state of the mind that he is in.  Case in point being Wimbledon last year (it will always be a benchmark to measure Murray’s prevailing game until he gives us something better to compare). 
I won’t talk about fitness or athleticism because that is a give and all things being equal it is the mental fortitude or lack of thereof in the closing stages of the game that decides the winner.  So When will Murray be ready?  Has he come all this way to go back to square 1? 
Mauresmo has to a lot to work on here. To work on the game is the easiest.  It comes with hard work and hitting balls upon balls endlessly until you get it right.  Working on someone’s mind is the toughest- it is like groping in the dark to feel that you have caught a big fish only to be saddled with a dirty shoe when you finish reeling up.

Who is Amelie Mauresmo?


Looks like Amelie Mauresmo will always be in the news inspite of her intense desire to be out of it.
The erstwhile world no 1 and winner of Aus Open and Wimbledon in the same year is on board Team Murray as the Scot's coach. 
I have seen Andy Murray play the Wimbledon final against Novak Djokovic and it was as close to perfection as he has ever played and I hope I am wrong- he will ever play.
His anticipation, serve, return of serve, footwork and reach were perfect.  I felt that this was the best of Murray I will see for a long time to come and the prediction wasn’t that off.  Since then Wimbledon and Olympics, nada! A bit like Wawrinka then who has struggled with his form since he won the Australian Open in January.  We know Murray has it. How does his potential manifest itself on the court? Without the immovable Lendl by his side, Murray appeared a bit lost, directionless.  But now that he has appointed a new coach, things hope to change for the better and how! His new coach is Amelie Mauresmo, a player I have admired more for her off- the court-news that her play on it.  I have not watched many matches of Mauresmo’s.  She has been a grand slam champion on court and off it for coming out.  I say that takes more courage than being in a final and winning it.  On court there is a certain order and discipline.  Off it, the gloves are off which is what happened when she came out as lesbian.  There were snide remarks from women players and more notably from davenport and  Martina Hingis about her masculine physique and her looks.  It was hurtful but Mauresmo took it in her stride.
And today Amelie is in the news for being appointed as the only woman coach to a man player and that too a No.3 at that. The media was in a tizzy, there were bouquets at this brave decision and derogatory, misogynist brickbats from the players themselves.  Gulbis and Matosevic led the front with comments that reminded you of a BBC radio commentator of a certain age and his remarks vis-à-vis Wimbledon champ, Marion Bartoli. I want to shake hands with Murray and laud him for his brave decision.  Ordinarily it is just one player using the coaching services of another player- older, experienced.  But many saw this as a joke- a woman player coaching a man?  Well as I would love to remind you, it is ‘coaching’ not wrestling! And that sums it up. I can understand if a ‘man’ boxer appointed a woman sparring partner.  I guess it all comes up to educated folks understanding the difference between ‘separated at birth’ and ‘twins’; one has absolutely no connection with the other and more often than not, there is always confusion between the two. 
So we will let the illiterate media cavemen and women wrestle with it while we focus on Mauresmo and Murray.  I always like players who go against the grain- Navratilova, Mauresmo, Venus and Serena Williams, Marion Bartoli, Wawrinka and now Murray.  Why do we doubt Mauresmo’s capacity to contribute to Murray’s winning ways?  She has been on Bartoli’s and Azarenka’s team before. She has also coached Michael Llodra.  I am sure Murray knows more about her than we do as far as coaching abilities are concerned.  He said that she is a great listener and a thinker just like him. While he a teetotaler, she is passionate about wine.  Mauresmo splurged on a bottle of 1921 Chateau d’Yquem after her Wimbledon triumph. 
Of course these are mere footnotes to the more important  issues at hand.  She is my kind of woman- a cellarful of vintage wine bottles, a Harley Davidson bike and a home in Geneva.
Will Mauresmo be able to fill Lendl’s shoes?  The shoes in themselves are easy to fill but what they achieved is not.  Will she be able to instill the confidence back in Murray? Wean him away from his defensive game, his propensity for endless rallying and bring him again on par with his game that he played to perfection at Wimbledon?

Well I for sure don’t know but am all gung ho about this new arrangement.  I have nothing but the very best for Mauresmo and Murray. May theirs be a collaboration for many more grand slams that Murray gas the game for and so richly deserves.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

The drama that was Australian Open 2014 Men’s singles Final.

And……Stanislas Wawrinka takes the first set 6-3 in 37 minutes.  Considering he has  first serve percentage of a mere 35% ad against 73% for Nadal, Wawrinka has been playing like a gladiator on the second serve.  No anxieties or uncertaintu while firing the second serve.  In the second set,  Stan has been abale to rattle Nadal in the second game itself.  That’s the thing about playing the best player in the world.  You can produce brilliance in fits and starts, you cannot slip up at all and the one time he did, Stan paid the price if being almost broken before he saved three set points and pocketed the first set.
22 shots were exchanged in the first game of the second set and Wawrinka came up tops.  Three winners in a row and Wawrinka is 0-40 in Nadal’s serve.  I must say Wawrinka is mixing his shots in a willy way, three sharp backhands and then a stunning forehand that rockets down the line at the speed of light and Wawrinka has broken Nadal again with a winning backhand cross court return.  Federer must be wondering what he could have differently to produce a game like that.  Wawrinka serving the second game and unleashes an ace.  At this point, there is just no room for error, forehand has to be perfect, almost outside the court, for anything within an inch of the baseline and Nadal will pounce on it.  The play it that precision dependent, you have be execute unplayable shots, faultless tennis that is tactical as well.  You simply cannot fall in the bashing-from-baseline trap with Nadal.  The opponent is going to get moments of weakness only far nd few between and you need to be ready and with footwork and good shot selection to exploit them in our favour.  Wawrinka has done just that.
We are into the third game of the second set.  Nadal serves as Wawrinka returns a crosscourt backhand wide.  He is hitting them all deeper, sharper around the bend, Wawrinka is taking more chances by hitting winners and for that you need to be courageous.  Oh oh, wait a moment, I see nadal bending and touching his back.  Is it a moment of regretting a shot or ruing his tactics? What is it? It is deuce,  Nadal’s game has lost a bit of the ball destrying ferocity.  It is a strange sight albeit for a moment.  It is advantage Nadal who has saved a break point to hold his serve.  Wawrinka has taken his chances, has ruched to the net at the right time to execute the brilliant winning volleys.  Something that players are reluctant to do against Nadal.  There is safety in sticking to the baseline but then Nadal dictates the game and makes you do end to end running drills.  So far, we haven't seen Stan scramble madly after the ball. 
At this point Nadal has called a trainer and will receive medical timeout.  A three medical timeout.  Wawrinka is visible agitated. He retires to his chair, does some stretches, spreads the towel over his thighs and speaks to the chair umpire. He tells him…”you need to tell me why..” Chair Umpire says, “ I am not asking why, you just need to accept it  and wait.” The chair umpire’s word is final and there is some frothing from Wawrinka who is basically feeling cheated  that there is no information about the the nature of the medical timeout.  He is thinking that these are delaying tactics a la Azarenka in last year’s Aus Open against Sloane Stephens.  Nadal comes back on to the court, bare chested and is greeted with boos reinforcing the my sentiments that the crowd too has the same thoughts as Stan. 
I just hope that Wawrinka is able to focus on the game. This can prove to be a fatal distraction. Wawrinka responds with an ace and another one, he has so far fired seven aces to Nadal’s one.  It is an all out service game. This was a good one.  It is better at this juncture to just kill it as quickly as possible.  Wawrinka is now leading three games to one.  Nadal is clearly struggling but we know just as well that it wont take time for the game to turn around.  Wawrinka has a temper and tendency to break rackets, it could be his undoing.  Nadal always finds reserves of mental and physical strength and he lets it play havoc with his unsuspecting opponents.  But Nadal is also at his most vulnerable now. His mobility and footwork is awkward.  Nadal touches his back, bends as if to test if his back can stand the effor tof serving.  A very strange sight to see Nadal do away with is usual tics, no ball bouncing or tossing, just throw it up erratically and bring down the racket without the ususal service movements.  Wawrinka breaks again and leads 4 games to 1.  My question now is it the game or is the back? My feeling the pain is going to lull Wawrinka into a complacency or it will cause him question his tactics. Will it be fair to attack a Nadal in pain? What should be his approach? As of now, Nadal is coming undone at the hands of Stanislas Wawrinka.  A ripper of a backhand from Nadal.  There you go.  Nadal is now playing like the fighter he is, but an ace from Wawrinka hands him the advantage.  The ball hits the net before going over to the other side, giving Stan time to get into position to hit backhand down the line.
A non-serve from Nadal, it is as if he is serving at the pre-match warm-up and actually scores two points. Ans just as you felt it was all over for the Mallorcan,  he produces tennis that is a tribute to the steel in his mind.  I don’t think he has made Wawrinka scurry for the ball so much as when he was fighting fit.  He is able to construct points around his serve and that doesn’t need him to move much from the baseline.  Believe it or not, Nadal is dictating play and there goes a double fault from Wawrinka. Another ace from the Swiss and Nadal does not so much as budge from his resting place.  Wawrinka is two set points away and he wins the second set. There is no cheer or relief or fist pumping.  I hope Stan continues to maintain the tempo and temper.  He needs all the reserves fo calm and composure at the moment to ensure that the advantage of being two set up isnot lost.
Nadal serving the first game of the third set.  He has cust short his run up as we say in cricket.  No lengthy prologues, just toss it and hit it acrross the net kind of serve.  It is 15-40 on Nadal’s serve and three break points for Nadal.  And deuce! The power of Nadal is coming in spurts but it is definitely there.  Game Rafa!.  If this continues and Wawrinka is unable to keep his mind on his game, then all will be lost.  Stan serving the second game and double fault! Nadal leads 0-3-. But a fine serve from Wawrinka proves a point only for Nadal to hit a cracking forehand to be a point away from breaking him. A lazy backhand from Wawrinka gives Nadal the much needed break for the forst time in this match.  Nadal leads two games to love.  Nadal is regrouping while Wawrinka’s game is scattering like dist motes.  Unforced errors are flying off the Swiss’ racket fast and furiously.  He has made 9 errors and so far we are only three games into the third set.  Will Wawrinka be able to wrest the initiative and defeat Nadal in straight sets?  Nadal is playing much better now and is certainly aided by the error Wawrinka is making.  Nadal is playing from the baseline.  He has not moved at all and is directing traffic from his favourite spot.  Wawrinka has not been able to read his shots or play and is just retrieving the balls with his racket.  While Wawrinka is fudging regulation shots, Nadal is hitting backhands that defy the rules of angular geometry.   Nadal is leading 5 sets to 3 and looks like we will have a four or even a five setter, of course it depends on the pain that Nadal is going through and if Wawrinka is in that frame of mind to push Nadal to the wire or be pushed instead.
Wawrinka was in the ‘Zone’ for the first two sets.  He was able to maintain the rhythmn even after the medical timeout by Nada, he was able to hold his thoughts about the whole thing at bay and just play tennis.  The beginning of the third set sees Stan serve an ace  and hold his serve.  He goes in for a chage of rackets and it is Nadal’s turn to wait. A nonchalant down-the-line forehand from Wawrinka.  He has been playing his groundstrokes at a much furious pace than Nadal and this was from before medical timeout by Nadal.  Wawrinka screams and shouts at a wayward shot.  Some more drama.  It is 15-30 on Nadal serve.  Nadal hits a backhand wide and the court errupts.  Wawrinka make a ‘zip your lips’ gesture. Is it to the spectators or to himself? A backhand gone long gives Nadal a point.  Wawrinka increases the power of his shots, they do look like missiles and its deuce.  Nadal takes the third set and how! A timeout for his back, a serve without the sting and restricted mobility, all was most unusual to see.  Novices in the game would do well to see this match just to know the mental strength that is needed to stay at the top and the superhuman effort that won Nadal the set. 
Now on to the fourth set.  Will Stanislas Wawrinka, world no. 8 be able to clear the hurdle to topple world no.1 or will he merely pay obeisance to the resilience of Nadal and let his self doubt stop him from the final frontier?  Wawrika is certainly hitting the ball with more brute power.  His serve looks menacing…almost violent.  Wawrinka has gotten into the flow of the game early on.  The uncertainty of the last set seems distant now. It is a new set and a new mind. The quickly dispatches the first game in his favour.  An error from Nadal and it is 15-30 on his serve.  The power of the barrel-chested Swiss has me transfixed.  He has been the balls closer to the net than Nadal, the trajectory is from low to high at a pace and power that is destructive.  Nadal holds his serve.  The power centre is see-sawing between the players now. One point it is Wawrinka and the other sees Nadal barge right back in.  Just when we thought the fire in Nadal had died down, he not just held his nerves and back, but he won the set.  And full marks for Wawrinka for bringing this kind of a game to the match. I haven't seen such raw power even from the likes of Berdych and Janowicz. It makes it particularly fearsome coming as it does from a player who is neither tall not built like a bouncer. Federer make brute look graceful, Wawrinka make  brute like he gave burth to it.  Seriously you just need to look at his strokes. The forehand! 
Two errors from Nadal and  Wawrinka breaks him.  Is Nadal going to break him back?  One moment you felt that it would be lopsided match with Nadal’s pain, but it served to make the match even more interesting and riveting as the initiative travellled back and forth between the two players.  There is just no scope for net play.  Even then Wawinka comes to the net more often to finish the point.  The third set hasn’t dented his confidence.  Nadal breaks him.  I am biting my nails with anxiety.  But Wawrinka breaks him right back.  What kind of a final is this going to be? The index finger points to the temple and fist pumped against the head.  Will the Swiss hold the trophy high over his head or will Nadal finish the story?  It is 40-0. Will he hold his serve or….?And he does it! Stanislas Wawrinka, wins the set point and the match to become only the second person since 2005 to win a grand slam outside of the top 4.  There is no jubilation, no raucous cheer in victory or t-shirt tearing.  He shakes hands and hugs Nadal offers him probably an apology and words of consolation.  It is a prolonged interaction between the conqueror and the vanquished.  And after Nadal shakes hands with the chair umpire, Wawrinka has the court to himself, the winner, he raises his hands and a quiet smile lights up his face, he hugs his team.  I feel for Wawrinka, the sedate appreciation of the moment has only made me root for Stan more.

Here’s hoping he will win more grand slams if for nothing elses than to let out that winner’s roar literally and figuratively.  Here's to Stanislas Wawrinka, finally coming out of the shadows of his illustrious compatriot- Federer and announcing his arrival not only to the world but to Switzerland as well.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Quarterfinal Surprise- Radwanska beats Azarenka

The odds that Radwanska would beat Azarenka were very low indeed.  I thought so too.  Radwanska would simply be no match for the power and sullen aggression of Azarenka.  But, I am going to hang my soothsayer boots and stick to commentating in retrospect.  Radwanska made Azrenka run from one corner to another, made her come to the net to meet her impossibly low and close to the net drop shots, made her scurry back to the baseline for lobs.  Radwanska moved like a demon and she could do no wrong.  She makes it to her first semifinal  of the Australian Open 2014 and awaits the winner of Bouchard V/s Na Li match.  Radwanska plays Cibulkova also called the pocket rocket as she stands at a mere 5”3in she would still be way shorter than Radwanska who is 5”8 in. But watching Cibulkova overcome Sharapova the Russian amazon who packs frightful aggression with her banshee-like screams and her sheer physicality was a spectacle in itself.  There is a gap of 23 ranks and 11 inches between the player and the when Cibulkova plays the backhand, her left knee almost touches the ground.  It was literally and figuratively a David V/s Goliath battle.  Dominika ultimately won the match 3-6, 6-4, 6-1, progressively getting better with every set. 
All my equations are going haywire and as a lover of sports, I couldn't have hoped for a better result and more thrilling entertainment- a more than enough return on my investment in expensive tour tickets and time.  No more predictable outcomes and every match throws up a new player who is a delight for sore eyes. Cibulkova now battles Radwanska and I have absolutely no idea of who will win given the sudden crest and tide in fortunes over three sets.  This ‘inspired play’ throws all my predictions off.  One moment everything is looking great for the usual culprit but then she makes unforced errors and couple with inspired play which is more to do with mental fortitude, the ranked player throws the gauntlet.  The term- play is more apt for the Cibulkova- Sharapova match.  Whereas I would credit Bouchard’s play without any inspired play bit to defeat Ivanovic.  Her composure was remarkable for a mere 19 year old who has no experience playing in such a big theater.  As it has been happening in women’s tennis these days, bigger ranked players who are everybody’s favourite to win matches just self-destruct.
 This year, the ouster of Serena Williams and Maria Sharapova in round 4 and Victoria Azarenka in the quarter finals has really brought in the diversity factor in the semifinals.  Of the four players, we now have Bouchard  who is all of 19 years and has never progressed beyond 3rd round in a slam, Cibulkova who hasn’t made it beyond quarterfinals just once and only Na Li who won at Roland Garros.  Radwanska even though she hasn’t won a grand slam event yet is the only one who have held the no.1 spot and has made it as a runner up and into the semis at Wimbledon in 2012 and 2013 and quarterfinals in 2011, 2012 and 2013 in Australian Open.

Even though I have hung up my boots, old habits die hard and I say that Bouchard will beat Na Li, Radwanska will beat Cilbulkova.  It will be a Agniszka Radwanska V/s Melanie Bouchard Finals.

NEVER GIVE UP!



I always felt that Wawrinka chokes at the pearly gates.  He works all the five setters only to lose and being denied entry inside the golden gates of the slams. Case in point being his epic  battles with Djokovic at Us Open and Australian Open last, year.  A year and a tattoo -Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail Better- later, Wawrinka has announced his arrival on the big stage and demanded attention. The back hand that demonstrates elegance of a ballerina and the lethality of a knife made of German Solingen steel.  I thought Wawrinka will fall at the Djokovic hurdle and the first set Stan lost only served to fuel my anxiety- 2-6.  Thereafter he won the next two sets, lost the fourth set and I felt the match as well because experience tells me that anything that stretched beyond three sets against Djokovic is out the opponent’s bag and into Novak’s.  Except of course if he is playing Rafa. And the decider is always at the fag end of the game when it is a question of who blinks first.  But once you blink, then there is no creeping back out of that hole as today’s quarter finals proved. 
Both were evenly poised till the 7th game of the final set.  Stan lead with seven games to six. Djokovic served to level at seven games each.  Wawrinka served in the 15th game and held to lead at eight games.  Djokovic was now serving to stay in the match.  He took his time to serve, bounced the ball at least 12 times, that clearly was a sign that something had changed.  I think Novak fired an ace and then lost the first serve but managed to score a 15-30.  Then Wawrinka leveled score at 30-30 and suddenly it looked like Stan can make it after all.  And he did win the next two points to defeat Djokovic in the 5-set epic at the Australian Open. I felt that whatever was going on inside Djokovic’s heat during the dying moments of the match which was when the score was 30-30, ultimately lost him the match.  It is a break from the past where Djokovic has literally climbed out of the coffin, dusted the soil off his clothes and resurrected himself to stay in the match and wrestle it away from his opponent. 

This time however it was a different story.  The man with that perfect hyperbola of a backhand had won.  I might go so far as to equate it with the Beckham Bender.  Now the Swiss meets Berdych in the semifinals.  Berdych is another dangerous player but has languished in rankings albeit of the top ten variety.  Keeping him company is Del Po, Tsonga, Federer, Gasquet and Wawrinka.  Gasquet and Wawrinka have been recent entrants in the top 10 club as is Federer! As he won the the last set and the match, he smiled, truly the happy smile of a person who knows what he has achieved. He kept smiling and said “I am really, really, really, really, really happy” and I guess that says it all.  Stan admitted that when Novak plays well, Djokovic is a better player than himself. I interpret that as -Novak plays that level of tennis 'consistently' whereas Stan's brand of tennis is 'inspired' or the superb tennis happens in bursts. But whatever it was in the past, something has changed in Stan's play and demeanour. 


And now time for a long, long ice bath where he might contemplate the next player- Tomas Berdych.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Women's Quarter Finals- One win and one loss for my predictions!

Melanie Bouchard! The first Canadian woman to make it to the semifinal of a grand slam.  As predicted, Bouchard lost the first set and won the next two to oust Ana Ivanovic.  In the on-court interview she was asked who she would like to date and she said..hold your breath, Justine Bieber.  I hope it was said in humour though, I wouldn’t want any teenage girl to date him forget being in the same newsprint space!  Bouchard showed her mettle in the quarter finals.  She now battles Na Li whom she played three years ago in Montreal and lost of course.  She says she has a bit more experience and she is ready for the match. Watch out Li. 
I also said in my last blog that Na LI will lose to Flavia Penetta but she won and how- 6-2, 6-2.  So now you know, you cannot blog about a match and predict the outcome without getting a handle on how the player is faring currently.  And yet I believe that Bouchard will win against Na Li in two sets.
In the other QFs Cibulkova will play Simona Halep and Azarenka will play Radwanska.  Its Halep V/s Azarenka semifinal. This is unless Azarenka can control that imploding anger and play her power game without getting trapped into playing Radwanska at her own game and pace.  Radwanska is no match against the brute power of Azarenka.  The alternative scenario is, Azarenka will lose her cool, commit unforced errors while Radwanska will lie in the wait quietly.  Azarenka will be turn blind in fury at her own ineptitude and will abandon her style of play and tactics.  Then it will of course be a walkover for Agnieszaka Radwanska.

If everything goes as I say, it will be Bouchard V/s Na Li final!

Men's singles, Round 4

In men’s 4th round we have Federer battling it with Tsonga for a place in the quarter finals of the Australian Open.  As I thought, Federer won the first two sets with ease and then in the third set while serving in the 8th game, he showed nerves and I thought Tsonga would break him.  Fortunately if not his forehand, Roger's serve is standing him in good stead and he rode out the game on the strength of his serve.  Federer leads five games to three.  Federer is now serving for the match and a place in the quarter finals.  Second serve is quite menacing and Tsonga hits it in the net.  Second serve from fed again.  This time the ball forces Tsonga into a corner and scurrying to the centre of the court only to find that Federer has hit in the same spot again.  It is 40-0.  And a double fault.  I must say, Federer does show fraught nerves just as he is on the verge of closing a win.  And a beautiful volley wins him the game and match. 
Federer has gained a spot in the Quarter finals and now begins the real task.  He will meet Andy Murray in the QFs.  Murray does not show the delectable, faultless form he was in at Wimbledon in 2013.  The Scot could do no wrong against the equally sparkling Djokovic.  Murray was there within hitting distance of the ball always, wherever you hit it.   I was watching his match with Stephane Robert of France ranked 119th in the world.  Stephane’s been around since 2001 and has never progressed beyond 2nd round at the slams.  Murray made heavy work of the 3rd set which he was expected to win.  Confused shots, unforced errors, leaden footwork and just wayward tennis.  When he started the usual self-flagellation, I thought, oh oh here comes another upset and nothing less than the Nadal-upset brought about by Lucas Rosol. 

Muray is doing all the right things while managing the business end of Enterprise Murray.  He has given the reins in the hands of people who are effective and the best in the business at what they do freeing him thus to ‘focus on what he does best’.  Ideally there should be no dip in form except due to injuries. Alas that is precisely that has plagued him since his winning form of last year.  Right now, even discounting the back surgery, he should be going from strength to strength, winning more tournaments, getting fiercer, getting unbeatable.  Instead what I saw against Robert was not a play befitting world no.4.  I thought Murray was hypnotized by the ball that he kept in play for longer than necessary and not really for any constructed points or anything.  The ball that should have been put away after hitting it twice was finding the racket more often and in pointless rallies.  He did rush to the baseline but there was no thought to it.  Murray, pull up your socks or the man who wears four of them (incidentally Federer wears two pairs of socks to give him extra cushioning and softness should a match run into 5 sets.) will whip your muscular arse.