Brackets are on the minds of many this month in the United States, and while world No. 1 Andy Murray’s 6-4, 7-6 (5) opening-round loss to Vasek Pospisil at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells doesn’t compare to the never-before-seen 16-seed over 1-seed in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, it is a very significant upset that says plenty about both men.

Let’s start with Pospisil, whose current ranking of No. 129 in no way reflects the kind of explosive game he possesses. A Wimbledon quarterfinalist just two years ago (he was beaten by Murray), the 26-year-old has been beset by injuries and inconsistency ever since. But his aggressiveness never went away. Against Murray on a packed Stadium 1, the evening crowd took to Pospisil’s kamikaze style. He approached the net every chance he got, evading the seemingly losing proposition of baseline warfare with Murray (it also inspired some of Murray’s trademark passing shots), and fired fearless forehands. Pospisil has a big serve but an even bigger forehand, and his crosscourt cut on a short ball on his fourth match point was the kind of gusto needed to overcome one of tennis’ best tacticians. On this night, it was Pospisil’s tactic of blasting away, no matter the result, that was superior. His second and third match points in the second-set tiebreaker were thwarted by exquisite returns of serve, but Pospisil refused to abandon his go-for-broke strategy. It is often the way high seeds fall early at major tournaments, in any sport, and tonight was no exception.

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Now to Murray. His first season as No. 1 has gone about as poorly as can be expected, given his sterling play at the end of 2016. In the opening week of this season, he lost a final to Novak Djokovic. He was then beaten in four sets in the fourth round of the Australian Open—the Grand Slam he’d come to close to winning on so many prior occasions—to 50th-ranked Mischa Zverev. Indian Wells is another big tournament Murray hasn’t been able to conquer, and after a title run in Dubai, and an incredibly fortunate draw, there was plenty of reason for optimism. (It should be said that Murray didn’t have to beat any Top 10 players in Dubai.) But instead, Murray will make his way to his U.S. training base in Miami much earlier than expected. Murray isn’t playing the part of a world No. 1, and he needs to regroup quickly. For on Selection Sunday, Murray’s bubble burst.

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Indian Wells Madness: Qualifier Vasek Pospisil ousts No. 1 Andy Murray

Indian Wells Madness: Qualifier Vasek Pospisil ousts No. 1 Andy Murray

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