MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) β Andy Murray just wanted to go to the bathroom.
It was 3 a.m., heβd already been playing his Australian Open second-round match against Thanasi Kokkinakis for more than 4 1/2 hours β they would carry on for another set across more than another hour β and Murray was hoping to be allowed to head to the locker room for a quick break.
Rules are rules, though, and Murray already had left the court twice, so chair umpire Eva Asderaki-Moore wouldnβt budge, prompting this rebuke from the three-time Grand Slam champion: βItβs a joke. And you know it, as well.β
Ah,Β the perils of playing all night, something that occurs occasionally in tennis, more than in other professional sports. It all left the 35-year-old Murray angry and wondering aloud after 4:05 a.m. Friday β when he finally, mercifully, finished off the 4-6, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (5), 6-3, 7-5 victory over Kokkinakis following 5 hours, 45 minutes of clashing skills and wills at Margaret Court Arena β why this sort of βfarce,β as he termed it, needs to occur at all.
βIf my child was a ball kid for a tournament, theyβre coming home at 5 in the morning β as a parent, Iβm snapping at that. Itβs not beneficial for them. Itβs not beneficial for the umpires, the officials. I donβt think itβs amazing for the fans. Itβs not good for the players,β said Murray, a father of four. βSo, yeah, we talk about it all the time. Itβs been spoken about for years. When you start the night matches late, and have conditions like that, these things are going to happen.β
Especially at events like the Australian Open and U.S. Open, which hold daily night sessions that usually include two matches on some courts. Which can lead to extreme situations such as Murray vs. Kokkinakis, which came 15 years to the day after the latest finish in Grand Slam history, a match between Lleyton Hewitt and Marcos Baghdatis at the 2008 Australian Open that concluded at 4:34 a.m.
βThereβs no sport that does that. I donβt think itβs very good. … Who really wants to watch a five-, six-hour match? Thatβs long, even for TV,β said the tournamentβs No. 3-seeded woman, Jessica Pegula, whose parents own NFL and NHL teams. βI donβt think any of the players think that should be happening at all.β
She and others pointed out itβs hard to go to bed after a match like that, because of the adrenalin involved, which hurts efforts to recover mentally and physically.
The last womenβs match on Thursdayβs schedule, in which Marketa Vondrousova upset No. 2 seed Ons Jabeur 6-1, 5-7, 6-1 at Rod Laver Arena, finished at after 1 a.m. Friday.
βItβs kind of crazy. For the body, also: I donβt think itβs healthy to play at 1 a.m,β Vondrousova said. βI just need some sleep.β
Murrayβs brother, Grand Slam doubles champion Jamie, tweeted: βTime for tennis to move to only one match at the night sessions. … We canβt continue to have players compete into the wee hours of the morning. Rubbish for everyone involved β players/fans/event staff. Etc.β
Still, do not expect anything to change anytime soon.
βAt this point, there is no need to alter the schedule,β Craig Tiley, the tournament director and head of Tennis Australia, told local broadcasting partner Channel 9 on Friday.
Murray will be back on court Saturday, facing No. 24 Roberto Bautista Agut for a berth in the fourth round.
Murray, who also played a five-setter in the first round against Matteo Berrettini and has already put in more than 10 1/2 hours on court, was back at Melbourne Park before 1 p.m. on Friday.
βItβs no fun for Andy. I saw him today before my match,β said Stefanos Tsitsipas, the 2021 French Open runner-up who won his third-round match Friday afternoon. βI was thinking to myself, βWhat is he doing here? He should be in bed!ββ
Tsitsipas thinks folks such as Tiley are not all that disappointed by this sort of βround-the-clock competition.
βThereβs a great story behind this match, and itβs going to be remembered,β Tsitsipas said. βI do remember very vividly, very well, the match that Baghdatis played with Hewitt. Itβs somewhere back inside my mind somewhere. … It is definitely a very magical moment β for sure, not for the one who loses, because itβs painful.β
At last yearβs U.S. Open, eventual champion Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, two bright young stars, engaged in a five-set struggle over 5 hours, 15 minutes, until 2:50 a.m., setting the mark for the latest finish in that tournamentβs history.
Sinner was on the wrong end of that one. On Friday, his result was better and his schedule more straightforward: His 4-6, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-0 win against Marton Fucsovics began at 11 a.m.; his day was done by 2:45 p.m.
βI donβt care so much, no? Iβm happy to be on court. Doesnβt matter what time,β Sinner said. βFor sure, I prefer (beginning) at 11 than playing in the night, (but) itβs all part of our sport now.β
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