Novak Djokovic may be the world number one but Tim Henman thinks Andy Murray has been the better player over the past six months.
Murray
overcame Djokovic to win the Internazionali d'Italia in April,
triumphing at Queen's and Wimbledon before successfully defending his
Olympic title at Rio 2016.
However, the world
number two lost the Madrid Open and French Open finals to the Serbian,
who suffered early exits at the Monte Carlo Masters, Wimbledon and the
Olympics and missed out on a 13th major title to Stan Wawrinka at the US
Open.
Murray was eliminated by Kei Nishikori at
the quarter-final stage in Flushing Meadows, but Henman still thinks
he's had a better six months than Djokovic.
"If
you look at Murray's performances over the last six months, it's been
the best in the world. From Monte Carlo, through the clay [season],
winning in Rome, he made his first French Open final, losing to Djokovic," SportsAid ambassador Henman told Omnisport.
"He
won Queen's, won Wimbledon again, unbelievable performance, then
straight onto Rio to defend his Olympic title. It's just absolutely
relentless the big tournament, the big matches he's played.
"He
got a little bit frustrated but after six months of almost perfect
tennis, he's a human being at the end of the day. He didn't quite play
his best but Nishikori is a great player, so still plenty to play for
Andy Murray for the rest of the year."
However,
Henman is not sure Murray will be able to displace Djokovic at the top
of the rankings by the end of 2016, with March 2017 a more realistic
target.
"I don't think it's [Murray getting
number one] out of the window in terms of a 52-week rolling ranking. I
think for the end of this year, to try and finish number one will be
hard," continued the former world number four.
"I
think Andy is 2,000 points behind so he's going to need a hell of an
indoor season and World Tour Finals at the O2 [Arena]. It's not
impossible but Djokovic is certainly the favourite.
"If
you look at 52 weeks starting from March in Monte Carlo and if Andy
plays incredibly well between now and March and plays better than
Djokovic then I think he's got a chance of being world number one."
Tim
Henman will be playing Champions Tennis at the Royal Albert Hall from
30th Nov – 4th Dec 2016, with SportsAid as the Official Charity partner
to raise funds for aspiring British athletes. Tickets are available from
£18.50 at www.championstennis.co.uk/tickets
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