WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — The Centre Court crowd roared when Andy Murray walked out onto the green grass for his first Wimbledon match in four years. He smiled and replied with a thumbs-up.
They roared some more when he claimed the first set of his first-round match Monday against 24th-seeded Nikoloz Basilashvili. And again when he claimed the second. And when he seemed on the verge of a stroll through the third.
That's when things got complicated for Murray, who won the title at the All England Club in 2013 — giving Britain its first male champion there in 77 years — and again in 2016, but since has needed two hip operations and dealt with other assorted injuries. After wasting a pair of match points and ceding the third set, Murray — much to the fans' delight and, naturally, his own — pulled out the seesaw of a victory over Basilashvili by the score of 6-4, 6-3, 5-7, 6-3, eliciting more roars.
Those shouts just kept coming, interrupting the 34-year-old Murray while he did an interview on court.
"I keep getting asked: Is this going to be my last Wimbledon? Last match? I don't know why I keep getting asked about it. Like, no. I'm going to keep playing. I want to play," said Murray, pausing as the sound from the stands reached a crescendo.