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AMANDA PLATELL: Shame on you Emma Raducanu for abandoning Andy Murray. I fear she’s a one-hit wonder who has lost the support of millions of British tennis fans like me

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AMANDA PLATELL: Shame on you Emma Raducanu for abandoning Andy Murray. I fear she’s a one-hit wonder who has lost the support of millions of British tennis fans like me

Shame on you Emma Raducanu for abandoning your mentor Andy Murray.

Can the millions of fans who tuned in to watch Raducanu play Lulu Sun on Sunday on Centre Court be forgiven a moment of schadenfreude as the rookie ranked 123 trounced our £10 million golden girl?

Was it just me who noticed the cheers for Emma were often eclipsed by those for the unknown Lulu?

And was the muted applause solely due to the fact that the New Zealander was a brilliant tennis player who hit 52 stellar winners to Emma’s 19, or down to the way Emma had treated our undisputed Wimbledon champion Andy Murray.

At the last minute, Emma Raducanu pulled out of partnering Andy Murray in the mixed doubles,  his final historic appearance at Wimbledon before he retired

Andy is reportedly ¿absolutely devastated¿ to miss out on his Wimbledon farewell

Andy is reportedly ‘absolutely devastated’ to miss out on his Wimbledon farewell

Having gleefully agreed to partner Andy in the mixed doubles on Saturday – games which would have been his final historic appearance at Wimbledon before he retired – she pulled out at the last minute, denying our champion his last farewell, and leaving Andy reportedly ‘absolutely devastated’.

Raducanu had cited a minor injury for quitting the mixed doubles, but seasoned commentators could see ‘no signs of the right wrist stiffness’ on Centre Court on Sunday.

In comments completely tone-deaf to the public mood, Emma acknowledged her withdrawal had cast ‘a bit of a cloud’ over proceedings, but defiantly insisted she had ‘no regrets’, adding: ‘I just had to put myself first.’

The same way she prioritised herself and not her country by pulling out of the Olympics three weeks ago, justifying the move by saying: ‘Not a diva in any way. I’m very single minded and I do things my own way and in my own time whenever I want.’

Was there not something quite heartless in defending her mixed doubles no-show with the words: ‘I have to prioritise myself, my singles and my body. I didn’t want to take his last match away from him [Andy], but I think a lot of players in a similar situation would have done the same thing.’

But Andy is not just any other player, is he Emma. He has been your loyal friend, cheerleader and mentor for many years. You first met at his mum Judy’s under-10s tennis training camp when you were just nine years old and, even at that young age, she spotted your talent.

Judy said of that first meeting: ‘What impressed me then was she asked a lot of questions, she was very smart and very good.’

Andy took on the baton in 2019 when Emma won the Prime Video Future Talent Award, alongside the current British male number one Jack Draper. For Emma, this not only came with a then unheard of £60,000 in funding over two years, but the real prize: the mentorship of Andy Murray, who was already our leading tennis star.

Knowing all this, is it any wonder that the fiercely protective Judy Murray responded to Emma’s late withdrawal with a single word: ‘Astonishing’. A feeling millions of us shared.

She later said it was meant as sarcasm but few believed that she, like Andy, must have felt utterly betrayed by the self-centredness of the player they had both nurtured as a child.

Raducanu had cited a minor injury for quitting the mixed doubles but seasoned commentators could see ¿no signs of the right wrist stiffness¿ on Centre Court on Sunday

Raducanu had cited a minor injury for quitting the mixed doubles but seasoned commentators could see ‘no signs of the right wrist stiffness’ on Centre Court on Sunday 

And who could blame them if they took just a tiny bit of satisfaction from seeing Emma crash out so lamely just a day later.

The sad truth is that Emma has lost the affection of many Brits, myself included.

This one-hit-wonder, who shot to fame after becoming the youngest British player to win a Grand Slam title by taking the U.S. Open in 2021, has been plagued by injuries and has not lived up to our great expectations.

While she has won no tournaments since her win at Flushing Meadows and her on-court earnings so far this year account for a relatively modest $290,530 (£227,000), she has used her celebrity status to coin it, with her endorsement portfolio alone worth more than £9million.

She has massive sponsorship deals with Vodafone (£3million), Dior (£2million), Tiffany & Co (£2million) and British Airways (£1million), while Porsche pay her an undisclosed amount to drive around in a £150,000 911 Carrera GTS Cabriolet.

Our enchantment with Emma the ingenue who won a Grand Slam has waned if not disappeared after her selfish and disrespectful treatment of the nation’s most iconic champion.

Ahead of her doomed mixed doubles debut with Andy, The Tennis Gazette reported that Emma ‘hopes she can learn something from the double Olympic champion, and the doubles partnership which could perhaps sow seeds for a player-coach relationship in the future’.

Let’s not forget that in 2022, when hinting at a future coaching career after retirement, Andy said the female player he would most want to coach was Emma Raducanu. Or that Emma had said: ‘When I think of Wimbledon, I think of Andy… the hero I would look up to.’

Now their relationship lies in ruins, sacrificed over a match that ended in ignominious defeat.

I can’t be the only one who thinks, after her monumental betrayal, hell will freeze over before we see an Emma and Andy double act.

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