No Career Finish Line In Sight For Confident, Pain-Free Andy Murray
Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."
Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typically battling 2-6, 6-3, 10-2 defeat of China's Zhang Zhizhen at the Kooyong Classic. Three-time major winner Murray has been dealing with major hip and abdominal injuries for half a decade, and fell ill in the off-season. But he said his tennis was taking flight again, having lost his Adelaide International first-round match last week to Jannik Sinner. "A lot of things go into it (retirement) -- first there is my family, the most important. Then there is my health," said the former world number one, now ranked 49. "I've been healthy the last seven months. I'm not awakening with aches and pains like in the last few years. "As long as the body holds up well and I'm training properly and performing to a level I'm enjoying, then I will keep going. But I don't have a timeframe."Andy Murray said he is free of pain and has no timeframe for retirement after engineering a turnaround to win his first match of the season on Wednesday. The 35-year-old Scot earned a morale-boosting victory ahead of next week's Australian Open with a typi