Why Andy Murray will not be facing Novak Djokovic in the Davis Cup Finals

Murray looked set for his 37th – and perhaps last – professional meeting with Djokovic before being forced to pull out of national team duty

MALAGA — Andy Murray

was looking forward to a “lads holiday to Spain” when he helped Great Britain into the quarter-finals of the Davis Cup.

It is a sad irony that both players in the picture he used to accompany that tongue-in-cheek remark on Instagram are not fit to play: he himself has a minor shoulder injury and Dan Evans, the British No 1, has damaged his calf.

Evans is still here, coming out as a fan with his wife Aleah, while his father was already planning the trip even before his son got injured. Murray has stayed away thou

Italy’s Matteo Berrettini has not played since retiring injured from the US Open second round. It was his fourth injury-related withdrawal of the year and he admitted that the pain of not being involved for the Davis Cup Finals is as bad as the pain his body experiences.

“I was really sad,” Berrettini said, explaining that this latest time out had been far more challenging than previous absences.

“Unfortunately I had many injuries, but I always found [a kind of joy in] the challenge of coming back and feeling kind of like, ‘Okay, now I put the work in’.

gh, revealing he has been filming a BBC Christmas cooking special with Mary Berry called “Highland Christmas” at the Cromlix Hotel he part-owns.

“And I wasn’t feeling that. When I was feeling something on my body, I was really struggling. I went down. Mentally I wasn’t ready to face the challenge.”
By the same token, Murray could have brought much to the doublesMurray, a two-time Olympic gold medallist, is expected to play at Paris 2024 in some form, but his slump in singles could make it difficult for GB to squeeze him into the team. Instead, he may end up playing doubles with either Skupski or Salisbury, in one last dance for golden glory.

 

Last might not be totally accurate: he is unlikely to want to end his professional career, which many predict will be over in 2024, on his hated clay. The positioning of the Olympics in the calendar in July is awkward, as it means he cannot have his retirement party at Wimbledon – although it could be the beginning of a long goodbye.

Instead, there is smart money on the US Open 2024 being his last grand slam – and after that is the Davis Cup group stages and perhaps the finals. After having his shot this year taken out of his hands, that might be a chance too good to resist.

arena, and might also have seen it as a chance to form a partnership that he could reunite next summer.

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