
Courtesy of Judy Murray
In his long-form essay Murrayball: How to Gatecrach the Golden Era, journalist Hugh MacDonald traces Andy Murray?s journey from his boyhood in Scotland to this year?s historic Wimbledon title. In this exclusive excerpt, MacDonald describes how Murray?s rivalry with his older brother pushed him to become a great athlete. To read the rest of MacDonald?s essay, you can purchase Murrayball exclusively through the Kindle store.
Andy Murray stands on a beach. He is 2 years of age and he looks expectantly at an older girl who is ready to release the swingball. His brother Jamie, 15 months older, is at his side. They are ready to play, but playing always means winning. The serious looks reflect that truth.
Nature and nurture gave Andy Murray excellent coordination, a build for sport, and a fury for competition. Crucially, nature also gave him Jamie. The Murray household and that of his grandmother were the scenes of hard-fought games from a young age. Swingball?a tennis game played with a ball attached to a pole by a cord?was the acme of sophistication in comparison to the rudimentary elements of catching and throwing that formed the basis of much of their childhood activity. The games always involved scoring. Someone had to win, someone had to lose. Often, it was Andy. Jamie was, and is, a fine athlete, lithe and with an accomplished touch; he was ranked one of the top players in the world at under-12 level. Contemporaries remember Jamie as the Murray more likely to succeed at the top level. Their recollection is that Andy was unfocused, unready to commit exclusively to tennis.
Andy, handicapped by age, found it difficult to match his elder. It did not stop him trying. His mother, Judy, remembers that as early as the age of 5, Andy had become a competitor. Taken to the tennis courts, he was not interested in a knockabout. He wanted to play points because there was, well, no other point. Andy proceeded to whoop in joy when winning a rally against mother or either of his grandparents.
All this precedes a scene more than a decade later when the burgeoning Scottish tennis tyro was working with Bob Brett, the veteran Australian coach. On the very first ball of a drill, Brett hit a wide ball for him to retrieve and Murray just looked at it. Brett asked: ?Why aren?t you running for the ball??
Andy replied: ?Because it was out.?
This blinkered focus on winning the point was honed in hand-to-hand combat with Jamie. The highest level was a goal, rather than a dream, for both of them from an early age.
?I think both of us loved sports,? says Andy. ?He played lots of golf, both of us played a lot of football, we played some squash and obviously tennis. It?s just something we have always done. I didn?t particularly enjoy school, but I enjoyed going to play football and practice tennis ? doing PE rather than learning about science.?
Jamie, who was a successful pupil, shared his brother?s passion for sport. ?We started [playing tennis] when we were about three or four years old. I guess we were always the top ones in our age group at national level and international level, to an extent. It was natural that we thought we could be tennis players and make a career from it.?
And so it came to pass. Both have won grand slam titles; Andy?s victory at Flushing Meadows was preceded in 2007 by his brother?s win in the mixed doubles final at Wimbledon, where he partnered Jelena Jankovic.
But a decade before, this intense rivalry pushed the younger brother to prodigious levels at an early age. Andy found the only avenue open to him as a 5-year-old competitor was to play in under-14 league matches. Accustomed to being outmuscled and outplayed by his talented elder brother, Andy did not take a step back against his older rivals.
The rivalry between the brothers spanned sports. There was no escape from the joint outpouring of their will to win. No game was just pure fun. A chat to Jamie about golf was once interrupted by Andy. Jamie was, perhaps still is, a three-handicap golfer. This latter observation brought the jibe from his brother that, ?I must be a two-handicap golfer because I always beat you.? This mischievous exchange occurred in 2007 when Andy might have been forgiven for being more concerned about his imminent entry into the world top 10 for the first time. It was followed by another bout of verbal sparring.
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