Wimbledon says goodbye to Andy Murray with a profound accolade

 

WIMBLEDON, Britain — It had been a difficult day for the Brits, considering that their main two ladies' players and their main two men's players had confronted each other at Wimbledon prior Thursday — the No. 2s took both matches — against the setting of a small little political decision that seems scheduled to end 14 years of Moderate rule.


They abandoned all of that and stuffed into Center Court in any case, wearing Wimbledon-tinted covers and covering exposed necks with scarves as the sun set. They rose and lifted their telephones soon after 7 p.m. at the point when he strolled onto the court, those with free hands beginning the primary floods of praise, everybody joined in a longing to fete Andy Murray once again.


"Hey now, Andy!" one fan shouted in that recognizable rhythm before the umpire had even played out the coin throw.


The cry went on over the course of the evening, from voices youthful and old, cried as a lot to prod on Murray and more seasoned sibling Jamie in a misfortune to Australians John Companions and Rinky Hijikata as it was for any kind of future family.

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