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Tuesday, 24 February 2015 00:55 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
mid-March.
Murray was due to knock up with Fernando Verdasco on Sunday but the Spaniard was held up at Dubai airport for eight hours.
Verdasco’s compatriot Feliciano Lopez, who is a left-hander like Murray’s first-round opponent Gilles Muller, also scrapped a mooted practice session on Monday due to illness.
The Scot said he preferred to have a coach with him.
“If you have a coach around it’s a lot easier to do basket drills or work on specific things,” Murray told reporters. “You can get constant feedback with what you’re doing.”
In Rotterdam two weeks ago - his first tournament since Melbourne - the twice grand slam champion eliminated two low-ranked opponents in the opening rounds before losing to world No. 19 Gilles Simon in straight sets.
That followed a mixed 2014 for Murray, who slipped outside the world top 10 last September for the first time in six years after failing to make it beyond the quarter-finals in all but two tournaments from January to August.
His form improved markedly thereafter as he won in Shenzhen, Vienna and Valencia and this year’s run to the Australian Open final put him back among the elite quartet of the men’s game alongside Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.
Of those, only Nadal is absent from Dubai, which Murray said he was playing to prepare for the heat of the U.S. hard court circuit.
But Dubai was engulfed in a sandstorm for the previous two days and rare rainfall spotted the practice courts on Sunday.