Andy Murray beats Feliciano Lopez to reach Australian Open fourth round
Andy Murray gave evidence that he could yet be a contender for the title with an impressive third-round win over 26th seed Feliciano Lopez at the Australian Open.
The Briton, playing only his second tournament since under going back surgery, won 7-6 (7-2) 6-4 6-2 on Hisense Arena to reach the last 16.
There he will face France's Stephane Robert, the first man ever to make the fourth round after losing in qualifying only to get a "lucky loser" place when another player withdrew.
Murray, 26, will go into that match as a heavy favourite but has played down his chances of winning a third Grand Slam title next Sunday, so early in his return from surgery.
Two straight-sets wins in the opening rounds were encouraging, but no great indicator of his chances given the low-ranked opposition
Lopez, 32, represented the first serious test of Murray's form, and in a blustery 20C - in contrast to highs above 40C for the previous four days - the Scot passed in some style.
Neither man was at their sharpest in the early stages, Murray dropping serve immediately before Lopez returned the favour, but it was the Wimbledon champion who posed the greater threat.
Four break points slipped by in game six and two set points at 6-5, the Spaniard's big serve and attacking instincts keeping him alive, but Murray produced when it mattered in the tie-break.
It was the Briton who swept into the net and grabbed the early break at 1-1 with a forehand volley, and two deadly drop shots eased him into a 5-1 lead before he clinched the set with a forehand into the corner.
Murray was dictating the points from the baseline now and Lopez, under pressure, dropped serve with a double-fault at the start of the second.
It was all going to plan for the fourth seed, whose defensive skills looked back to their best, and the fact that he continued to berate himself after errors felt more like things getting back to normal than any sign of real distress.
There was a hint of danger for Murray when trying to serve out the set at 15-30 as he chased down an excellent Lopez lob, but he played a clever dipping backhand and closed it out moments later.
When Murray planted a brilliant backhand winner down the line on his way to breaking at the start of the third, an eighth win in eight matches against Lopez was within sight.
If the opening games of the match had seen Murray searching for his rhythm, the final set was the Scot at his best - firing 11 winners and dropping just one point behind his first serve as he sealed the win in two hours and 15 minutes.
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