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Andy Murray’s coach Andy Little says former Wimbledon champ can reach the top again after injury

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ANDY MURRAY heads into the unknown next year — but has the X-Factor to reach the top again.

That is the opinion of his strength-and-conditioning coach Matt Little, who has transformed Muzza into a world-class athlete over the past 12 years.

Andy Murray appeared on the Jonathan Ross show on Thursday night to promote his new Amazon documentary
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In a wide-ranging interview, Little revealed:

  • The heartache and tears the Murray camp felt when he  called it a day in Miami last December.
  • How the world’s leading tennis stars expressed PITY towards the Scot as he struggled to walk with a hip injury.
  • Murray is such a unique athlete he can withstand enormous amounts of pain.
  • And why, post-surgery, the former world No 1 could achieve incredible things  despite being the only player on the singles circuit to have a metal hip implant.

Essex-based Little, 43, is one of Murray’s closest pals and the longest-standing member of his backroom staff.

He was present throughout his two Wimbledon triumphs, US Open victory, two Olympic gold medals and 2015 Davis Cup success.

Little is one of the stars of Prime Video’s Andy Murray: Resurfacing, which shows the emotional  turmoil the Scot went through before his career-saving hip op in January.

Little said: “It was in Miami last December when Andy said to us in the locker room it was all over.

“For us as a team that was the first time he had actually said it — and meant it. We all thought it was game over.

“We were in pieces, absolute bits — myself, Jamie Delgado and Shane Annun. There were lots of tears in that locker room.”

Little says nobody truly appreciated the pain  Murray was suffering.

Before making his situation public knowledge, he concealed it from the  tennis world — yet other players picked up on his physical weaknesses.

Little said: “In 2018 when he was hobbling through corridors, people would all be very polite to him. When he would walk off, they’d start discussing among themselves, ‘Oh, the walk isn’t good’.

“Even when he was practising, you’d see other teams stop what they were doing and look over — ‘Look at Murray, he is still in trouble’.

Matt Little, left, has been alongside Murray for most of his major triumphs
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Andy Murray thought his career was over when he underwent surgery
Amazon
Murray was in Madrid with the Great Britain Davis Cup team last week
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“It was only a year or two before that he was world No 1, the best player on the planet, and they would be in awe of him.

“It was almost pity for him, ‘How are you? How is it going?’.

“That, for me  and the rest of the team, was very difficult to handle.

“One of the great things about being back at tournaments  is he can walk with pride, walk properly and look like the athlete he always should be.”

Murray’s return to the sport has been miraculous.

He won the Queen’s doubles with Feliciano Lopez and then lifted the European Open last month.

Fitness-wise, there is some way to go but his straight-line sprints now are among his fastest ever.

Planning a schedule for 2020 is difficult because nobody has had this type of surgery and returned.

The acid test will be when he faces Roger Federer, Rafa Nadal or Novak Djokovic  for the first time.

Yet Little  added: “His body is special. It adapts to things that we give him quicker than other people.

“Mentally, as well, he is tough. In terms of what he can put up with in training, the pain he can push himself through on the court, it’s more than everyone else.

“There’s no reason why he can’t do well at the Slams if he’s feeling good and no other niggles appear.

“Andy has this X-Factor that normal people just don’t have. There’s no limit to what he can do.”

 Andy Murray: Resurfacing launches today exclusively on Prime Video.

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