Andy Murray won his first Wimbledon title and ended Britain's 77-year
wait for a men's champion with a hard-fought victory over world number
one Novak Djokovic.
The Scot, 26, converted his fourth championship point
in a dramatic final game to win 6-4 7-5 6-4 and claim his second major
title.
In an atmosphere reminiscent of his Olympic final win last summer, Murray was willed on by the majority of the 15,000 spectators on Centre Court, thousands watching on the nearby big screen and millions more around the country.
The final game was a battle in
itself, with Murray seeing three match points slip by from 40-0 and
fending off three Djokovic break points with some fearless hitting,
before the Serb netted a backhand to end the contest.
After a gruelling three hours 10 minutes in searing
temperatures, Murray had finally followed in the footsteps of Fred
Perry's 1936 win at the All England Club.
Perry used to leap over the net in celebration, but Britain's new champion roared in delight before sinking to his knees on the turf.
Murray, who collected a first prize of £1.6m, then headed into the stands to celebrate with his family and support team, moments later parading the trophy around Centre Court.
He could barely believe he had won saying: "It feels slightly different to last year. Last year was one of the toughest moments of my career, so to manage to win the tournament today...
"It was an unbelievably tough match, so many long games."
He later tweeted: "Can't believe what's just happened!!!!!!!"
And he gathered his thoughts in a BBC TV interview telling Sue Barker: "It was tough speaking after the match. There are a lot of people who have worked with me over the last 10 or 15 years or so.
"I didn't know what to do with myself. The noise levels during the whole match were just incredible."
The Dunblane native becomes Scotland's first Wimbledon singles champion since Harold Mahony in 1896.
Murray had been on top from the outset against an unusually erratic Djokovic, finally converting his seventh break point after three dramatic games that took 20 minutes.
The home supporters were brought down immediately when Djokovic recovered the break to love, but the Serb was leaking errors and his 13th in just seven games saw Murray move clear again at 4-3.
A tense game followed after Murray, serving into the sun, opened with two double faults, but he fought his way out of three break points and served out the set to love.
An hour gone, and all was going to plan for the British number one, but Djokovic began to find his range in the early stages of the second set.
Murray was the man in command once again and when he cracked a 128mph ace and a nerveless smash to save two break points for 4-4, the crowd sensed a real opportunity developing.
Djokovic was vulnerable and he showed it with a tirade at the umpire over a line call when serving at 5-5, but he had run out of Hawk-Eye challenges and moments later netted a forehand to give Murray a priceless opportunity.
Once again, Murray found his best serving form when he needed it most, closing out the set to love with an ace to bring the Centre Court crowd to its feet.
The sense of hope around the stadium became something closer to disbelief when Murray raced in to pick up a drop shot and hammer a forehand on his way to a break at the start of the third, and he threatened to run away with it with seven out of eight games.
Back Djokovic came, throwing in drop shots to get the Briton on the run and reeling off four straight games on his way to a 4-2 lead, but Murray was not to be denied.
All that was left was to serve for the title, and it was never likely to be straightforward, but after 10 tortuous minutes Murray stepped in and cracked a forehand that Djokovic could only put in the net.
The Scot added: "I have played in a lot of Slam finals, all against Roger or Novak. Roger is probably the greatest player ever, Novak is one of the mentally strongest ever. I never had experience on my side, to beat him was so tough, it was such a tough match."
Murray's victory
- Wimbledon is Murray's second Grand Slam title after he won the 2012 US Open
- It is the 36th time a British man has won the Wimbledon singles title - more than any other nation
- Fred Perry was the last British man to win Wimbledon, completing a hat-trick of wins in 1936
- Harold Mahony was the only other Scotsman to win the Wimbledon singles title - in 1896
- Murray is the most successful British man in terms of Grand Slam match wins with 113, ahead of Fred Perry on 106
- Fred Perry won eight Grand Slam titles - three Wimbledons, three French Opens, one US Open and one Australian Open
- Murray has reached seven Grand Slam finals, behind Fred Perry on 10
congrats murray
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