Murray approaching Australian Open from new angle

Reigning Slam winner ready

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Andy Murray serves as coach Ivan Lendl looks on during a practice session Friday at Melbourne Park as he prepares for next week's Australian Open in Melbourne, Australia. (AP)
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MELBOURNE, Australia – The novelty of being the first British man to win a Grand Slam title in 76 years is about to give way to the reality of being a reigning major winner.

It’s just another reason Andy Murray has found to keep Ivan Lendl in his corner.

Murray’s career-changing win at the U.S. Open in September came shortly after his breakthrough win at the London Olympics, where he avenged a painful defeat on the same court to Roger Federer at Wimbledon.

The 25-year-old Scot said it was the most intense 3 months of his life. He’s had time to celebrate the win and dwell on its significance, and now he is days away from his first Grand Slam event since, and at a venue where he has twice lost in the final.

“Obviously, the last few years I got close, but never managed to get over the final hurdle,” he said. “So whether it was a mental thing, whether it was things in my game I needed to improve, physical things, who knows exactly.

“But now that I’ve managed to do it, I hope that when I’m in those situations again, I’ll deal with them better and put less pressure on myself, which obviously will help me play better.”

Murray’s biggest obstacles to a second Grand Slam remain top-ranked Novak Djokovic, who is aiming for a third consecutive Australian Open title, and No. 2-ranked Federer, who has won four Australian titles among his 17 majors. Murray landed in the same half of the draw as Federer, meaning they could potentially meet in the semifinals.

Djokovic is in the other half and has the more favorable run to the final. In the absence of the injured Rafael Nadal, another Spaniard – David Ferrer – moves up to the No. 4 seeding. Ferrer has never reached a major final, and would likely have to beat Djokovic – if results go according to the seedings – in the semifinals to reach that career milestone.

In recent seasons, Murray has arrived in Australia at the start of the season to answer questions about that long British drought that dated to Fred Perry’s last major win in 1936.

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