I'm going in the right direction: Murray

29 January,2013 08:33 AM IST |   |  PA Sport

Andy Murray heads for home feeling his tennis is going in the right direction despite his Australian Open final defeat to Novak Djokovic


The Serbian became the first man in the Open era to claim three successive Melbourne crowns by seeing off Murray in four sets - and also gained revenge for his US Open defeat to the Scot.

Murray has cut a forlorn figure after his previous grand slam final defeats but he was more upbeat on Sunday as he looked forward with optimism to the rest of the season.


Andy Murray. Pic/AFPu00a0

He said: "There are going to be some obvious reasons for me feeling a little bit better. The last few months have been the best tennis of my life. I made the Wimbledon final, won the Olympics, won the US Open. And I came close here as well. It was close.

"Nobody (in the Open era) has ever won a slam, the immediate one after winning their first. It's not the easiest thing to do. And I got extremely close.

"So I have to look at the positives of the last few months and I think I'm going in the right direction. I felt much more comfortable on the court in the final here than I did at the US Open, so that has to be a positive."

‘Feel at home in finals'
Murray's self-belief has certainly grown over the past six months, to the point he now feels at home in major finals.

"Before the US Open match, I was unbelievably nervous beforehand and was doubting myself a lot," he revealed.

"I didn't go on the court here having those doubts. I went on the court and felt pretty calm from the beginning.

"I was obviously still nervous, but I think I just felt more at home in a match like that on a court like that when you're playing for a grand slam title. The first few times I played for a grand slam title, I definitely struggled with it," he admitted.

Murray also revealed that he only spoke briefly with his coach Ivan Lendl after the defeat, with a proper analysis of where it all went wrong expected to be carried out only when he heads back to Miami today.

"He just said ‘bad luck'. That's it," Murray said.

"There's no point going into huge detail about the match only two minutes afterwards. We'll go away and spend a bit of time apart. When I go to start training over in the US, we'll discuss it - not just this match but the start to this year and all the things I need to improve on if I want to keep getting better," Murray added.

Meanwhile, Murray's conqueror Djokovic flew out of Melbourne last night, just hours after coming off court, to prepare for Serbia's Davis Cup tie in Belgium.u00a0

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