BARCELONA – Andy Murray was on Monday anxiously awaiting the results of a scan on the elbow injury that has the potential to keep him from his place in this week’s Barcelona Open. The Monte Carlo Masters semi-finalist, who played through the pain in a three-hour marathon against Rafael Nadal on Saturday, had his right elbow analysed by doctors in the Catalan capital after driving the 600km from Monaco. “I’m hopeful that it will be OK for tomorrow (Tuesday),” said the world number four, who is due to start play on Wednesday at the Real Club de Tenis against either Belgium’s Xavier Malisse or Spain’s Juan Carlos Ferrero.
“I haven’t trained since Monte Carlo but hopefully it will be OK to do so tomorrow. Depending on how I feel, I’ll then decide whether I play or not.”
Murray will hope to make his fourth appearance at the tournament after winning just one match so far at the venue, in 2006. The Scot, who turned his season on its head last week after losing four straight matches and not winning a set since January, suddenly came into form on his least favoured surface with a run to the Monte Carlo final four.
But the elbow problem that started during his quarter-final with Portugal’s Frederico Gil came back to haunt him shortly before his semi, requiring what Murray said was the first major pain-killing injection of his career. “I’ve never had an injury like this before, it seems like an inflammation,” he said. “It’s nothing serious, but I don’t want it to become something more. I’ll wait to hear from the doctors and see how I am tomorrow.” Home hero and five-time champion Nadal arrived to the usual Barcelona fan adulation after winning his historic seventh straight trophy at Monte Carlo.
The king of clay missed the Barcelona event last year when he had to withdraw to have treatment on a knee injury. Prior to that disappointment, he had won the last five editions. “I will try my best this week in Barcelona, it’s another historic tournament,” said the world number one.