Get involved: send your photos, videos, news & views by texting WFNEWS to 80360 or email » »
9:28pm Monday 13th October 2008
Andy and Jamie Murray's participation in the Madrid Masters doubles ended at the first hurdle on Monday as they were dumped out by Arnaud Clement and Michael Llodra.
The match lasted less than an hour, with the French pair winning in straight sets, 6-4 6-3.
The Scottish duo had already saved one break point but their opponents made the most of chance number two in the 10th game - on the Andy Murray serve - to take the opening set. Another break of serve, in the fourth game of the second set, helped Clement and Llodra advance to the next round.
Andy will now focus on his singles challenge, which will begin against Italian Simone Bolelli, who beat Nicolas Almagro 7-6 (7/4) 6-1.
After his bye in round one, Murray would probably have expected to face Spaniard Almagro, who he lost to in the third round of the French Open earlier this year, but instead it will be a first career meeting with Bolelli.
The encounter with the world number 43 will be Murray's first ATP Tour match since he reached the US Open final and climbed to number four in the world.
Murray is in the same quarter of the draw as Andy Roddick, while Roger Federer is a potential semi-final opponent for the 21-year-old.
Tournament officials confirmed Murray would begin his campaign against Bolelli on Tuesday, during the day session.
Q. I am looking for a small table that can be mounted on the wall and folds down when not in use.
DRUNKENNESS seems to be the main driving force behind Harold Pinter’s classic 1974 play No Man’s Land.
He may have made the successful transition from Slough to Hollywood, but you won't catch Ricky Gervais losing his head over fame and fortune. As he makes his first lead debut in Ghost Town, the British funnyman reveals why he plans to stay grounded.
Henry Hobson runs a successful bootmaker's shop in nineteenth-century Salford.
questions@thehousedirectory.com HTML color chart Halloween falls in half term this year and it promises to be one of the biggest scarefests yet. JAMES MURPHY finds the best places to go
Walthamstow’s photographic society, founded in 1894, isn’t just one of the oldest in the country, it’s also one of the most successful. Its free annual exhibition is on this week at St Mary's Welcome Centre in Walthamstow village: weekday evenings and all day Saturday 1 November.
Enter your postcode, town or place name
Need a change? Search thousands of jobs locally and across the UK.
Search Now »
Find friendship and romance online with Two’s Company
Search Now »
Tens of thousands of houses and flats for sale and rent.
Search Now »
Every major make and model, thousands of options to choose from.
Search Now »