Murray: ‘I’m the odd one out in the semis’

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Andy Murray has described himself as the 'odd one out' when it comes to Roland Garros form. Photo: Getty Images
Andy Murray has described himself as the ‘odd one out’ when it comes to form leading into the Roland Garros semifinals.

Rafael Nadal arrived at the French Open having won 17 of 18 clay-court matches this season. He also happens to be a nine-time champion at Roland Garros.

His opponent in Friday’s semifinals, Dominic Thiem, entered the year’s second grand slam with some success on the surface, too, reaching a pair of finals and handing Nadal that lone loss.

Stan Wawrinka, the 2015 champion and another semifinalist this year, was coming off a clay title at the Geneva Open the week before play began in Paris.

And what about Andy Murray, who meets Wawrinka on Friday in a rematch of the 2016 French Open semifinals?

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“I came in playing garbage,” Murray said with a smile. “You know, I’m the odd one out in the semis.”

It’s true. In his last clay tune-up before arriving in Paris, Murray lost his first match at the Italian Open. Before that, he bowed out in the third round at both Monte Carlo and Madrid.

Take it back further and add in hard courts: Murray was only 16-7 all season entering Roland Garros.

Hardly the sort of record befitting someone ranked No.1 thanks to quite a string of successes a year ago, including a Wimbledon championship, an unprecedented second consecutive Olympic gold medal and runner-up finishes at the Australian Open and French Open.

And while Murray has been playing better and better over the past two weeks, shaking off a cold and finding his form, he has not been quite as good as the trio of others still around. Murray has dropped a total of three sets through five matches; Wawrinka, Nadal and Thiem have won every set they’ve played so far.

“They are all obviously playing extremely well,” Murray said. “Rafa’s had a great clay-court season, as has Thiem. Stan, this tournament, has played great. Won in Geneva, so is obviously confident.”

Murray and Wawrinka both have three grand slam titles to their name, with the Scot holding the head-to-head advantage 10-7 including a four-set victory in last year’s French Open semi-finals.

“He was pushing me all the time, so was tough for me to find any solution,” recalled the 32-year-old Wawrinka, the oldest man to reach the semifinals in Paris since Jimmy Connors in 1985.

“He’s probably a bit less confident. He’s a bit more hesitant. Hopefully I can take advantage of that.”

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