In 248 smashing minutes a new British bulldog is born – now bring on Nadal
Published Date:
02 July 2008
By Stephen McGinty
IT DOESN'T get any easier. Less than 48 hours after one of the most stunning comebacks in Wimbledon history, Andy Murray will today walk on to Centre Court with the aim of out-muscling one of the fiercest competitors in tennis – world No 2 Rafael Nadal.
What he can be sure of is the complete support of every UK tennis fan, all desperately hoping to see the first British men's singles champion since Fred Perry in 1936.
Murray's epic victory over Richard Gasquet triggered a betting frenzy and may persuade thousands to bunk off work to witness his quarter-final clash.
Unofficial ticket prices for today's match on the Centre Court have soared, with one pair offered online for £2,500.
Meanwhile, bookmakers expect the total number of bets to exceed £10 million, twice the figure ever achieved during a Tim Henman match. Murray, however, seeded 12th, remains the underdog, with odds of 3/1, while his opponent, who has already beaten him three times before, is 2/9 to win.
The BBC, however, is already proving to be a major winner, with the broadcaster's decision to carry Murray's epic match against Gasquet on to BBC1 rewarded with audiences of 10.5 million. In Scotland, one in five of the population watched the finale to the match.
Millions will be watching today's match, including his grandmother, Shirley Erskine, who yesterday said that Andy's determination and refusal to concede defeat was already on display as a child when he insisted on winning every friendly family game of snap, dominoes and monopoly.
She said: "Since he was a little boy, he's always been a fighter. He always hated to lose – even if it was snap or dominoes.
"He learned to become a good winner and a gracious loser, but he made it clear from a very early age that he expected to win most things. ."
Yesterday Murray said: "Nadal is obviously the favourite, but I feel I can win."
If so, then the rewards are potentially massive. Publicist Max Clifford said a Wimbledon win could earn Murray tens of millions.
"From a financial point of view what happened yesterday was brilliant, " he said. " If he were to beat Nadal, if he wins Wimbledon, he becomes a superstar and his earnings go through the roof. If he were to win Wimbledon, we're talking about £50 million."
Scotland's First Minister, Alex Salmond, said Murray had shown "tremendous character" and that millions would be supporting him today.
Work exodus as Murray courts victory
BRITISH industry is expected to lose millions of pounds in productivity as a result of Murray mania.
Thousands of British tennis fans are expected to skip work today in order to watch the Scot's quarter-final match. Employment experts predict that staff across the country will either take a whole day off work, or miss the afternoon in order to watch what is expected to be a Wimbledon classic.
Long lunches, a meeting out of the office but near the employee's home and a doctor's appointment are likely to be the top three excuses for people avoiding their jobs. Research by a leading personnel software company, suggests that employees dodging work already cost British business £1 million a week, adding to Britain's £13 billion workplace absenteeism crisis.
The full article contains 559 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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Last Updated:
01 July 2008 11:07 PM
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Source:
The Scotsman
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Location:
Edinburgh
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Related Topics:
Andrew Murray