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Andy Murray has criticised Britain’s Lawn Tennis Association for failing to build on his success and grow the game over the last decade. Three-times Grand Slam champion Murray went out of the Australian Open in the first round on Monday, and said the match could be the last of his professional career due to pain in his right hip.
The 31-year-old Scot has been hailed as one of Britain’s greatest sportsmen, a double Olympic gold medallist who in 2013 also became the first British man to win a Wimbledon singles title in 77 years.
“I’m not sure Britain has really capitalised on the last seven or eight years of success we’ve had,” the BBC quoted the former world number one as saying. “Whether it be myself, my brother, Jo (Konta), Kyle (Edmund), the Davis Cup, those sorts of things, I’m not sure how much we’ve done there,” added Murray, who has been critical of the LTA in the past.
The 31-year-old Scot has been hailed as one of Britain’s greatest sportsmen, a double Olympic gold medallist who in 2013 also became the first British man to win a Wimbledon singles title in 77 years.
“I’m not sure Britain has really capitalised on the last seven or eight years of success we’ve had,” the BBC quoted the former world number one as saying. “Whether it be myself, my brother, Jo (Konta), Kyle (Edmund), the Davis Cup, those sorts of things, I’m not sure how much we’ve done there,” added Murray, who has been critical of the LTA in the past.