Emma Raducanu's Andy Murray decision: A tennis battle between logic and emotion

Date:

Share post:


At the heart of the row over Emma Raducanu’s decision to blow off her Wimbledon mixed doubles date with Andy Murray is an irresistible three-way tug-of-war between emotion, rationality, and karma that could only unfold in tennis.

After Raducanu confirmed that she would withdraw from their first-round match scheduled for Saturday evening via a Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) statement, Andy Murray’s mother and first coach, Judy ensured that she would forever be the leader of the emotional tug of all this with 11 taps of the keys on social media. She described Raducanu’s decision to break off the engagement with her son on No 1 Court as “astonishing.”

Raducanu, who is on her best run of form at a Grand Slam tournament since winning the U.S. Open in 2021, said she awoke with stiffness in her wrist and did not want to risk further injury ahead of her fourth-round match against Lulu Sun, a 23-year-old qualifier from New Zealand. They play this afternoon, Sunday, on Centre Court.

The decision came just days after Raducanu talked about needing just seconds to accept Murray’s invitation to team up. About how she had watched him play in the Olympics with Laura Robson, and dreamed that one day she might be able to play with him.

Murray’s camp emphasized on Saturday that he was ready to play, and that there was no issue with his back, that had forced him out of his own singles draw.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Murray disappointed after Raducanu withdrawal ends Wimbledon career

On one hand, it’s easy to understand Judy Murray’s emotional reaction to Raducanu’s decision. Her son had offered Raducanu, who has struggled with injuries and battled questions about her commitment to the sport the past two years, a chance to share some of the ethereal light from his career. His invitation also served notice to a British sporting public that has been running out of patience with Raducanu’s trajectory.

The frustration is born to a certain extent of false perceptions. Injuries — requiring operations on both wrists in summer 2023, the site of her current ailment — have derailed her career for over a year; winning a U.S. Open title at 18 as a qualifier is abnormal as much as it is remarkable. She has not yet been able to prove that she can be just a normal tennis player, and a very good one at that, because she hasn’t really had the opportunity, and given how prone she appears to injury, is likely one of those players who may need to put in a lot of training work outside tournaments to stay as healthy as possible and reach her full potential.

GettyImages 2160626170 scaled


Judy Murray attended her son’s Centre Court farewell to Wimbledon earlier this week. (Clive Brunskill / Getty Images)

The irony of all this is that when Murray was Raducanu’s age, he didn’t have the best reputation either. In his case, much of the tennis viewing populace took a sideways view toward his often cranky on-court demeanor. It wasn’t how a rising force in a gentleman’s game was supposed to act in the era of Roger Federer, the greatest gentleman of all — once he figured out how to stop breaking rackets. For Judy Murray to toss a bit of fuel on the fire that Raducanu had begun working hard to snuff out suggested a singular vision about the priorities of the fortnight, which for the players remaining in the singles draws, is to win titles rather than provide a stage for valedictories.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

‘Take your time, you d*ck’: 15 years of defending and deserving Andy Murray


The best way for Raducanu to prove her potential would be a deep run at Wimbledon off the back of the roughest period of her career. Tiring herself into a possible defeat for the sake of a sporting occasion that is largely meaningless in the grand scheme of that career would not be a good way to do it.

Anyone mapping out a rational plan to best prepare Raducanu for a match on a Sunday would not put her on a tennis court late on a Saturday for a match that, while emotional, would likely have also had the air of an exhibition. They would put her on a couch, maybe with an ice pack on her stiff wrist, rather than a racket in her hand.

Playing a symbolic match with Murray in front of over 12,000 screaming fans in the evening is a good route to bad sleep and a body pumped full of adrenaline until the small hours of the morning, once you factor in a post-match treatment, eating, getting into bed and winding down.

Emma Raducanu Wimbledon scaled


Raducanu is looking to regain her consistency after a tough time with injuries. (John Walton / PA Images via Getty Images)

That’s not a rational plan for success during your best run at a Grand Slam tournament since you won one.

But tennis is not a rational sport, it’s an emotional one filled with unique codes of etiquette that players are often loathe to mess with, lest they anger the sport’s karma gods. Blowing off the greatest tennis legend in your country’s tennis history in his final Wimbledon, during a week that has basically been all about celebrating him, when you are only in the championships thanks to a wild card, would seem like a good way to anger them — or at least Judy Murray, which has never been good etiquette.

Walking onto a court with that legend, the essence of good Wimbledon karma, maybe picking up a tip or two about what it takes to win in this place, that would seem like a good way to get the game’s mystical forces on your side.

Raducanu has made the decision that she thinks is right and is best for her tennis at this year’s Wimbledon.

So do those karma gods really exist? Maybe only if you believe that they do.

(Photo: Mike Egerton/PA Images via Getty Images)



Source link

Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams is a writer and editor. Angeles. She writes about politics, art, and culture for LinkDaddy News.

Recent posts

Related articles

Rutgers extends 15-year losing streak to AP-ranked foes after Illinois house call in final seconds

There were 14 seconds left to play when Illinois kicker David Olano lined up for the 58-yard,...

Did Ohio State burst Indiana's bubble? What Buckeyes' dominant win means in Playoff chase

By Cameron Teague Robinson, Justin Williams and Scott DochtermanNo. 2 Ohio State handed No. 5 Indiana its...

Manchester City 0 Tottenham 4 – Maddison's perfect birthday, what's going wrong for Guardiola's team?

Tottenham Hotspur showed Pep Guardiola how much work he has in front of him after signing his...

Gary O'Neil revels in Fulham victory: 'One of my favourite afternoons as Wolves head coach'

Gary O’Neil says his Wolverhampton Wanderers’ 4-1 victory at Fulham was one of his favourite days as...

F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix odds: Ferrari's Carlos Sainz, Charles Leclerc favored after qualifying

Formula One’s Las Vegas Grand Prix is Saturday night, or early Sunday morning in the U.S.’s Eastern...

Steve Cooper frustrated by Andrew Madley calls in Chelsea defeat: 'We've had a tough season with this referee'

Leicester City manager Steve Cooper has criticised the standard of refereeing in the Premier League after his...

Bryce Underwood's meetings with Tom Brady helped flip QB from LSU to Michigan: Source

It has been a rough year for the defending national champions, but on Thursday, the Wolverines got...

Ohio State vs. Indiana live updates: Latest score, predictions, odds and news from today’s college football game

Passing offense: Indiana 276.5 yards per game (23rd nationally), Ohio State 267.6 (31)Rushing offense: Indiana 176.7 (47),...