LONDON. — Andy Murray carried Britain to their first Davis Cup semi-final since 1981 after he beat France’s Gilles Simon 4-6 7-6(5) 6-3 6-0 yesterday to give the hosts an unassailable 3-1 lead.
An out-of-sorts Murray, who was playing his third rubber of the weekend following Saturday’s doubles victory alongside brother Jamie, looked to be in trouble as he trailed Simon by a set and a break.
Simon had two medical time-outs during the match following heavy falls and Murray, a double grand slam winner, was able to capitalise in front of partisan crowd at the sun-kissed Queen’s Club in west London.
The gritty Frenchman was able to continue despite the falls but was severely limited in his movement and could only chase gingerly as Murray moved him around the court with his pounding ground-strokes and delicate drop-shots.
Murray completely dominated the final set and sealed the victory when Simon skewed a backhand wide.
“Obviously it feels unbelievable to get through that, it wasn’t looking great,” Murray, who jumped around on court and punched the air before sitting with his head in his hands, told the BBC.
“The whole weekend has been fantastic. This team has done amazing things, we’re punching above our weight here and we’re now in the semi-finals of the biggest team competition in tennis.” — Reuters.



