LONDON—”It was an up and down match,” a bug-eyed and exhausted Andy Murray said after beating Fabio Fognini in a suspenseful third-rounder here on Friday. “It probably wasn’t the best tennis, but at the end, it was very tense.”
The scores don’t quite do justice to the roller-coaster quality of this one. Murray won a four-setter, 6-2, 4-6, 6-1, 7-5, in two hours and 39 minutes, but the match looked all but guaranteed to go on for much longer. Fognini led 5-2 in the fourth set, and had five set points to push it to a decider.
As far as quality goes, Murray’s right: He could have played better. He was on his back foot most of the time—he hit just 26 winners to Fognini’s 44—and said he didn’t feel like he moved as well as he has been. Fognini? He was his customary mercurial self, the perfectly insouciant tormentor for this jumpy, nail-biting Centre Court crowd. He was brilliant for stretches, as he launched explosive ground-stroke attacks with no warning and the shortest of backswings; they kept Murray shuffling like a hockey goalie along the baseline. Fognini won 24 of 32 points at the net, while Murray made it up there just 15 times.
“It’s difficult to see when he’s going to generate pace,” Murray said.