Murray beaten in Rome
Andy Murray came off second-best against a determined Richard Gasquet in the Rome Masters.
The 25-year-old Scot claimed the first set on a tie-break but Gasquet battled his way back into the match to triumph 6-7 (1/7) 6-3 6-2.
Gasquet goes on to face David Ferrer in the quarter-finals, while Murray's next outing on clay will be at the French Open next week.
Murray was pushed all the way by David Nalbandian before winning his second-round match 6-1 4-6 7-5 but the Scot looked set for an easier time of it after making a promising start.
He won the opening three points of the match on Gasquet's serve with a delicate drop shot, a powerful cross-court forehand and thumping two-handed backhand down the line. However, he failed to convert any of those three break points as Gasquet battled back, and that was to be a story that summed up the opening set for the British number one.
Murray spurned 10 successive break points before finally making the most of his 11th during a lengthy seventh game that allowed the Scot to take a 4-3 lead.
Murray then saved Gasquet's first break point in the next game to go 5-3 ahead and then created a set point in the next. Gasquet saved again though to get back to 5-4, and he broke back in the following game to tie it up at 5-5.
The set went to a tie-break which Murray won comfortably, but Gasquet came racing back, taking the first two games of the second set en route to winning it 6-3.
The decider went with serve until the sixth game, when Murray took a major gamble by advancing to the net on the Gasquet backhand and the move backfired as he could only deflect a return into the net to give the Frenchman a break at 4-2.
Gasquet was looking sharp and held to move 5-2 ahead and claimed a second break on his first and only match point, Murray thumping a tired-looking forehand into the net to bring the contest to a close.
Quick Links
Local News
Local Sport
Dudley's Stick of Dynamite, Dennis Stevens
- Dudley's Stick of Dynamite, Dennis Stevens
- Remembering an Oldbury pub in its 1920s heyday
- 'Although it stands slanting, it's really enchanting, and an ideal place for a spree' The Siden House song
- The Apprentice
- Making a clean sweep in May with sooty boys
- 1935 jubilee medallion from West Bromwich business
Today's Features
Theatre
Paul Foot brings his Words to Wolverhampton
Music
Awareness of Autism Gig gets the Message Out
Food and Drink
From local restaurant to Mayor of London
