Murray plays waiting game after taming Verdasco

LONDON, (Reuters) – Andy Murray faces an anxious few  hours to see if he has sealed a semi-final spot in the ATP World  Tour Finals after overcoming Fernando Verdasco 6-4 6-7 7-6 in  his final round-robin match yesterday.

The Briton would have secured a spot in the last four if he  had tamed Verdasco in straight sets but must now await the  result of  yesterday’s second match between world number one Roger  Federer and U.S. Open champion Juan Martin del Potro.

If the Swiss topples the towering Argentine, Murray will extend his stay at the O2 Arena but if Del Potro wins the  evening showdown, calculators will be needed to work out which  two players progress to the semis from Group A.

Murray, seeking a seventh title of the season, was fortunate  to gain the only break of the contest at 4-4 in the first set.

Verdasco, employing an attacking strategy on break point  down, looked poised to hit an easy volley winner but could only  look on in horror as the ball hit the tape, leaving a chorus of  17,500 “oohhhhs” to reverberate around the arena.

Despite holding the upper hand for almost two hours, Murray  looked anything but pleased with his shot selections as he  berated himself, his wrist, his racket, the ball and the chair  following the end of one uneventful game.

The Spaniard then riled the fourth seed further as he  gatecrashed the British party by stealing the second set 7-4 in  the tiebreak, thanks to a double fault from the misfiring  Murray.

Verdasco, no stranger to marathon battles as he proved  during his five-hour semi-final against compatriot Rafael Nadal  at the Australian Open, fought valiantly in the third set but in  the end paid the price for leaking 64 unforced errors.

As the clock struck the three-hour mark, he hit a tired  forehand into the tramlines to hand Murray the tiebreak 7-3 and  a victory that brought an almighty roar of relief from the home  crowd.

Verdasco’s defeat ended a miserable outing for Spain at the  tournament. The country was the only nation to field two  representatives in the elite eight-man line-up but both Verdasco  and Nadal, who was in Group B, failed to win any of their  matches.