Andy Murray has pulled out of the Italian Open in Rome, citing fatigue. The Briton was due to play David Goffin in the third round on Thursday after a run of 10 successive victories on clay. The 27-year-old third seed, who had considered skipping the tournament to rest for the French Open, beat Jeremy Chardy 6-4 6-3 in the previous round.
“I’ve played so much over the past 14 days. I’ve played 10 matches with some extremely late finishes and my body needs to rest,” Murray told BBC Sport.
Murray apologised to fans following his decision to withdraw from the tournament in Rome
“I actually felt I played a good match yesterday but my body is tired. I have to listen to that and respect that.”
Murray’s victory over Frenchman Chardy followed back-to-back tournament victories in Munich and Madrid, where he defeated Rafael Nadal for the first time on clay in the final.
Murray’s match against Philipp Kohlschreiber in the second round in Madrid started at 01:12 local time — one minute short of the latest ever on the ATP tour. The match finished at 03:00.
After several lengthy matches forced the late start, the Scot said: “If they want the players to perform at their best, players shouldn’t be playing at three o’clock in the morning.”
The ATP later said it would review its scheduling policy.
The French Open begins on Sunday, May 24. — BBCSport



