Andy Murray Friday blamed the balls for the marathon rallies which were a function of the Australian Open, saying the difficulty wanted to be checked out.
He is the newest participant to weigh in on what look like fluffier, and slower, balls, with nine-time champion Novak Djokovic and Spanish nice Rafael Nadal additionally commenting.
“It’s strange because the courts are fast, the courts are not slow,” Murray mentioned after beating Australian Thanasi Kokkinakis in a gruelling 5 hours and 45 minutes epic that completed after 4am.
“But the balls, I mean, when we started, like at the beginning of the match, it felt like there was no pressure in the ball, like flat almost.
“That was what I was complaining about quite a lot during the match, as well. It’s just difficult to hit winners once you’re in the rallies.
“You’ve seen it. I think there was a 70-shot rally yesterday, multiple 35, 45-shot rallies, which is not normal. Yeah, probably need to look at that.”
The unimaginable 70-shot rally got here in a match between house favorite Jason Kubler and Russian 18th seed Karen Khachanov at John Cain Arena.
With neither participant making a mistake nor capable of finding a winner, the slugfest stored going till a backhand from Kubler clipped the web dropped over to win the purpose.
Title favorite Djokovic mentioned he too had seen that the longer you performed “the fluffier or the bigger the ball becomes and it’s slower”, which may make for longer matches.
“The outside courts are pretty quick. The stadium courts are a bit slower. But the ball is slower, so that affects the play,” he famous this week.
Defending champion Nadal, who exited within the second spherical with a hip harm, mentioned he had been informed the balls had been no totally different from earlier than “but the ball is worse quality, without a doubt”.
Weather and temperatures can each have an effect on bounce, as can whether or not the match is being held underneath a roof, which has been the case occasionally on the Australian Open this 12 months due to rain and warmth.