Andy Murray comeback delayed by pelvic injury setback - 2 minutes read
Andy Murray comeback delayed by pelvic injury setback
Andy Murray says he is not putting a time frame on his recovery from a pelvic injury after delaying his comeback to the middle of February at the earliest.
The injury forced him to miss this month's Australian Open.
He now says "bone bruising" is taking longer to heal than expected.
The Scot, 32, last played at the Davis Cup in November and will now miss tournaments in France and the Netherlands next month.
"I don't want to rush anything or put a timeline on my recovery," said the three-time Grand Slam champion.
"I'm going to listen to my body and step back on the court to compete when the time is right."
He added: "The bone bruising is taking longer to heal that first thought, so I won't be playing in Montpellier or Rotterdam in February."
Murray, who had hip resurfacing surgery at the beginning of 2019, is continuing his rehabilitation and training in the gym, including yoga sessions.
After Wimbledon in 2017, he missed almost a year of tennis because of a career-threatening hip injury.
He then played in only two tournaments between October 2018 and the start of June 2019.
With Feliciano Lopez, Murray won the men's doubles at Queen's Club last June and returned to singles' action in August.
Victory over Stan Wawrinka in the final of an ATP Tour event in Antwerp, Belgium, in October was Murray's first title in two years, before he got injured during the Davis Cup a month later.
Source: BBC News
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Keywords:
Andy Murray • Pelvis • Andy Murray • Pelvis • Australian Open • Bone • Davis Cup • France • Netherlands • Grand Slam (tennis) • Montpellier • Rotterdam • Hip resurfacing • Physical therapy • Gym • Yoga • The Championships, Wimbledon • Tennis • Feliciano López • Andy Murray • 2014 US Open – Men's Doubles • Queen's Club Championships • Types of tennis match • Stan Wawrinka • Association of Tennis Professionals • Barcelona Open (tennis) • Antwerp • Andy Murray • Davis Cup •
Andy Murray says he is not putting a time frame on his recovery from a pelvic injury after delaying his comeback to the middle of February at the earliest.
The injury forced him to miss this month's Australian Open.
He now says "bone bruising" is taking longer to heal than expected.
The Scot, 32, last played at the Davis Cup in November and will now miss tournaments in France and the Netherlands next month.
"I don't want to rush anything or put a timeline on my recovery," said the three-time Grand Slam champion.
"I'm going to listen to my body and step back on the court to compete when the time is right."
He added: "The bone bruising is taking longer to heal that first thought, so I won't be playing in Montpellier or Rotterdam in February."
Murray, who had hip resurfacing surgery at the beginning of 2019, is continuing his rehabilitation and training in the gym, including yoga sessions.
After Wimbledon in 2017, he missed almost a year of tennis because of a career-threatening hip injury.
He then played in only two tournaments between October 2018 and the start of June 2019.
With Feliciano Lopez, Murray won the men's doubles at Queen's Club last June and returned to singles' action in August.
Victory over Stan Wawrinka in the final of an ATP Tour event in Antwerp, Belgium, in October was Murray's first title in two years, before he got injured during the Davis Cup a month later.
Source: BBC News
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Andy Murray • Pelvis • Andy Murray • Pelvis • Australian Open • Bone • Davis Cup • France • Netherlands • Grand Slam (tennis) • Montpellier • Rotterdam • Hip resurfacing • Physical therapy • Gym • Yoga • The Championships, Wimbledon • Tennis • Feliciano López • Andy Murray • 2014 US Open – Men's Doubles • Queen's Club Championships • Types of tennis match • Stan Wawrinka • Association of Tennis Professionals • Barcelona Open (tennis) • Antwerp • Andy Murray • Davis Cup •