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Djokovic beats Murray for Miami treble

Agence France-Presse . Miami

Serbian tennis star Novak Djokovic kisses the trophy after defeating Andy Murray of Great Britain in the final of the Sony Ericsson Open at the Crandon Park Tennis Centre in Florida on Sunday. — AFP photo 
Serbian tennis star Novak Djokovic kisses the trophy after defeating Andy Murray of Great Britain in the final of the Sony Ericsson Open at the Crandon Park Tennis Centre in Florida on Sunday. — AFP photo

World number one Novak Djokovic defeated Andy Murray 6-1, 7-6 (7/4) on Sunday to win his second straight ATP Miami Masters title and third overall.
Djokovic, who won here for the first time in 2007, became just the third man to win the title three or more times, along with Andre Agassi and Pete Sampras.
For his third straight match, Djokovic cruised through the first set before finding himself in a tense tussle in the second.
However, even though the second set went with serve until the tie-breaker, it was Murray who was under pressure most, fighting off break points in three of his service games.
‘I thought I played a great match from start to end,’ said Djokovic, who didn’t drop a set in the tournament.
‘There was a couple of service games I had a chance to break him in the second set. He’s such a quality player, you never know.
‘That’s why he’s right at the top—he always comes back, even if you feel you have control of the match,’ Djokovic said. ‘I’m really happy to close it out in straight sets.’
Djokovic, 24, captured his 30th ATP title, and his second this year after his triumph at the Australian Open. It marked his 11th victory in the ATP’s elite Masters 1000 series.
Murray had beaten Djokovic in the semi-finals at Dubai in February, and the Serb was then upset by American John Isner in the semi-finals of the Indian Wells Masters last week.
Djokovic said that made this win, which made him the first man since Roger Federer in 2006 to successfully defend the Miami crown, all the sweeter.
‘I had a great tournament after that tough loss in the semi-finals at Indian Wells,’ said Djokovic, adding he recalled his 2007 triumph in Miami as a springboard to his current success.
Murray, who beat Djokovic in the 2009 Miami final, was playing his first match since Wednesday, when he downed Janko Tipsarevic in the quarter-finals.
He advanced to the title match on a walkover when world number two Rafael Nadal withdrew before their semi-final with a left knee injury.
Oddly, that was Murray’s second walkover of the tournament, after Canadian Milos Raonic pulled out of their scheduled third-round clash with an ankle injury.
Whether it was the layoff or not, Murray wasn’t at his sharpest, his 39 unforced errors making things easier for Djokovic.
His only break chance in the entire two hour, seven minute encounter came in the fifth game of the first set, but he was unable to convert it and stem Djokovic’s momentum.
The Serb had gained the upper hand in the fourth game of the opening set, which Murray led 40-0 but ended up losing on Djokovic’s second break point.
Djokovic eventually closed out the opening set with his first ace of the match, and Murray promptly found himself in a 0-30 hole in the first game of the second—typical of the pressure he faced throughout the second set.
‘Maybe it took a few games to get used to the pace,’ Murray said, but added he thought the set was closer than the score reflected.
‘There were a lot of close games in the first set. He played better on the big points in the first set.
‘In the second set, it was very close. If I was sluggish and I was only a couple of points away from winning the set, I’d say that’s a very good sign.’
Murray said his biggest problem was his return game, normally his strong point.
‘If I had returned a bit better I would have been right in the match,’ he said. ‘That’s the only thing that I’m surprised that I didn’t do well, because it’s normally the strongest part of my game.’



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