Summary
WHEN you're growing up in sport, it's all or nothing: you'll be the best player in the world or not at all. When you have matured a bit, you realise that, more often than not, your dream has to be tempered by reality if it is to remain alive at all.
At 20 and 21 respectively, Jamie Murray and Colin Fleming are coming of age as tennis players. Their talent is beyond doubt, but so too is the fact that they would find it very hard, to say the least, to make a living on the singles circuit - to do that you have to be in the top 200 players on the planet, and neither is close to that elite level. The solution, they have decided - with a bit of guidance from Judy Murray, the mother of Jamie and his younger brother Andy - is to become a doubles partnership. They complement each other well, and, just as importantly, there is a gap in the market.See the full content of this document
Extract
Scots Team Up to Double Chances
The first evidence of that could come within two months. It is some time since a regular doubles partnership was available to Great Britain for the Davis ...
See the full content of this document
Sponsored links
