Wimbledon
Murray brings another title home
Scotsman is the only British man to win since 1936; now he's done it twice in 4 years
Murray, a Scottish native embraced by all Great Britain, used an impenetrable defense — with a strategic peppering of offense — to turn back upstart Canadian Milos Raonic in straight sets, 6-4, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (2).
Where Raonic was making his debut in a Grand Slam final, Murray was playing in his 11th and matched his feat in 2013 of winning a Wimbledon singles title, the first British man to do so in 77 years. In those previous 10 finals, however, Murray played either Roger Federer or Novak Djokovic.
“I'm just really proud that I managed to do it again after a lot of tough losses in the latter stages of the Slams over the last couple of years,” said Murray, who receives the equivalent of $2.59 million in prize money. “I'm also aware of how difficult these competitions are to win once. To do it twice here, an event where there's a lot of pressure on me to perform well, I'm very proud with how I've handled that.”
When the match ended, after he leaped around and pumped his fist, Murray walked to his courtside chair, sat down and sobbed into his towel. All of life's ups and downs in recent years — his back surgery, getting married, the birth of his daughter, the expectations of winning the marquee event in his backyard — seemed to well up and overflow in that moment.
“I feel more content this time,” he said. “I feel like this was sort of more for myself than anything, and my team as well…. Last time it was just pure relief, and I didn't really enjoy the moment as much, whereas I'm going to make sure I enjoy this one more than the others.”
Murray and Raonic represented a contrast in styles, with the 6-foot-5 Canadian leaning on his booming serve-and-volley game, and the 6-3 local hero spending much of his time at the baseline and getting almost everything back over the net.
In the previous six rounds, Raonic averaged 25.7 aces per match. He had just eight against Murray, and didn't get his first until Murray was a game away from winning the opening set. It wasn't that Raonic was serving poorly. It's just that getting a ball past Murray is harder than getting a seat in the royal box.
Murray said he practices returning serves for 30 minutes a day.
He said a lot of players “hit loads of tennis balls, and maybe at the end of practice they serve a little bit and return a little bit. Sometimes, those [return] shots get left out. But they're the most important shots in the game, so I practice them a lot.”