LONDON—What a difference five days can make.
Over the weekend, a sense of gloom had settled across the grounds of the All England Club. Andy Murray was hobbling through his practices, victim of the “the most closely scrutinized hip in England,” as one TV commentator here called it. Just as ominously, he had taken one of the most dismal defeats of his career two weeks earlier, at Queen’s Club. Murray, a five-time champion at the Wimbledon tune-up event, played perplexingly indifferent tennis in a straight-set, first-round loss to 86th-ranked Jordan Thompson. He really didn’t look like he wanted to be out there.
Finally, when the draw was made Friday, Murray appeared to have some significant obstacles in his path to a repeat title. Nick Kyrgios and Lucas Pouille, two hard young hitters who know their way around a grass court, were in brackets nearby, and Stan Wawrinka, the man who beat Murray at the French Open last month, was also in his quarter.
By Wednesday evening, the tennis fans of the U.K. were wondering what they had been so worried about. Murray romped—if the ever-self-critical Scot can be said to do anything as happy-go-lucky as romp—past Dustin Brown, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2, in 96 minutes on Centre Court; that was a little more than half the time it took Johanna Konta to squeak past Donna Vekic in the previous match, 7-6 (4), 4-6, 10-8, in three hours and 10 minutes.
When Murray came off court, he was greeted with the news that the 14th-seeded Pouille had lost to Jerzy Janowicz. First Kyrgios, then Wawrinka, now the Frenchman: All of them are out of Murray’s way.
“It was a good match from my end,” Murray said of his demolition of Brown. “I served well, until the last few games. I returned well. I didn’t make any mistakes. I hit a lot of good passing shots. So I mean, I was really happy with it, obviously.”