Defending champion Andy Murray reached the second round of the US Open
with less than an hour of the third day remaining as he beat France's
Michael Llodra in Wednesday's night session.
The Briton, 26, completed a 6-2 6-4 6-3 victory at
11.33pm local time in New York (04:33 BST), and moves on to face
Argentina's Leonardo Mayer on Friday.
The decision to schedule Murray among the late matches on day three had
met with criticism, as it could leave him at a disadvantage compared to
his leading rivals later in the tournament.
"It's nothing to do with me being defending champion, there were quite a few matches [still going on Wednesday evening]," Murray told BBC Radio 5 live.
"Anyone that knows sport knows that playing seven matches over 13 days is harder than playing seven matches over 15 days.
"You obviously get less time to recover and rest, but you deal with it, do all the recovery stuff and get as much sleep as possible. Now I'm in a routine of playing every other day, which you do at all the other Slams."
Unlike Wimbledon and the Australian Open, but in common with the French Open, the men's first-round matches are spread over three days rather than two at Flushing Meadows.
"The fact that they plan on playing the first round after three days is wrong," 18-time Grand Slam champion Martina Navratilova told BBC Radio 5 live.
"We've had some women finish the first two rounds and Andy hasn't played his first-round match yet. That shouldn't happen."
Murray revealed afterwards that he had
originally been asked whether he wanted to play on Tuesday or Wednesday,
and chose Tuesday.
"Then we were put on Wednesday," he explained. "Again,
that was fine, but it changed from Wednesday afternoon to Wednesday at
night, and I don't know if that's ever happened here before, that a
first-round match has been played at 10 o'clock on the third day. We
were a bit surprised.
"I just wanted to get on and play the match. I've been here for 12 days practising and I just wanted to get on the court and play."
In the end, Murray just might be satisfied that he got the job done at all, as rain earlier in the day threatened to delay the first-round match until Thursday.
After doubling his Grand Slam tally at Wimbledon in July, the Scot's form had been below par in North America, and he arrived in New York nearly two weeks ago in preparation for his title defence.
It was not until 9.47pm that Murray stepped back onto the court where he won his first Grand Slam title last September, and he wasted little time once the action began.
The world number three was sharp from the outset against Llodra, producing a terrific backhand smash in a quick-fire rally at the net on his way to a 2-0 lead and breaking once again as he took the opening set in 26 minutes.
Llodra, a Grand Slam champion in doubles,
was always likely to threaten at times on the fast surface, and the
33-year-old's serve-volley approach took him into a 3-0 lead in the
second set.
Murray smiled to himself at the changeover, suggesting
he was not overly worried, and he duly broke back with a cross-court
forehand pass and again with a fizzing shot that dipped at Llodra's
feet.
Five games in a row effectively sealed the set and such was his dominance that Murray went into the third having hit 19 winners and made only one unforced error.
A screamer of a backhand return flew past Llodra at the net to give Murray his fifth break of the night, and the helpless Frenchman even resorted, unsuccessfully, to serving underarm as he dropped serve one final time.
"It was a good start, I played well today," Murray added. "He's a very tricky opponent to play against, he's unpredictable.
"He's a fun guy to watch but he can be a bit of a nightmare to play against, so it's good that I got off to a good start, especially after waiting around all day."
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