To appreciate Nadal, watch what Murray endured at Wimbledon
LONDON — To appreciate fully just how outstanding Rafael Nadal is at the moment — 28 consecutive completed sets won in Grand Slam play — consider what Andy Murray went through at Wimbledon on Friday.
Murray’s title defence appeared to be on shaky ground in the third round, particularly through a stressful stretch at Centre Court against Fabio Fognini, the 28th-seeded Italian who won their most recent encounter and had five set points to force this one to a fifth.
No telling whether the No. 1-ranked Murray, or his vocal backers, could have handled that test. Didn’t need to find out, because Murray was steady enough to grab the last five games and beat Fognini 6-2, 4-6, 6-1, 7-5 as the sunlight faded.
“The end of the match was tense,” Murray said, in his typically understated way. “It was a very up-and-down match. I didn’t feel like it was the best tennis at times.”


