By Caroline Cheese
BBC Sport at Wimbledon
Andy Murray safely negotiated his opening match at Wimbledon, but not without some nervous moments against wily Frenchman Fabrice Santoro.
The British number one, seeded 12th, came through 6-3 7-5 7-6 (7-5) to set up a meeting with Xavier Malisse.
Santoro, 35, frequently bamboozled Murray with some devilish spin and forged a 4-2 lead in the second set.
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"To win in straight sets against someone with as much experience is a good start," Murray told BBC Sport.
"It was a really fun match. He hit some awesome shots, especially at the beginning, which got the atmosphere going.
"But once I settled down in the second set, I started to feel better about my game."
Murray was playing his first match on Centre Court for two years after missing last year's Championships through injury.
He showed few signs of nerves, rifling a backhand pass to earn his first break point in the third game before eventually sealing a 2-1 lead with a magnificent lob which completely deceived Santoro.
But the break did not prove decisive and Murray's habit of playing drop shots at inopportune moments returned to haunt him as one such effort allowed the Frenchman to level at 3-3.
Murray, though, remained admirably calm, rocking Santoro with some brutal returns to break twice more to snatch the set.
However, Santoro appeared determined to put on a show as he made his singles debut on Centre Court and the variety of shot on display from both players made for a hugely entertaining encounter.
The Frenchman ran back and hammered a backhand past a startled Murray to break immediately in the second set.
But once again Murray kept his patience, and the British supporters began to warm to a professional performance, punctuated with flashes of brilliance.
Having broken back to make it 4-4, Murray saw two set points come and go before another fabulous lob sealed a two-set lead.
Santoro dug deep to take the third set to a tiebreak but there was to be no nail-biting epic for the capacity crowd.
A delicate cross-court volley to end a thrilling rally earned Murray a 4-3 lead and the Scot sealed victory on his third match point with a running backhand pass.
(BBC)
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