Andy Murray fights back to beat Gilles Simon at Vienna Erste Bank Open
- Published
Britain's Andy Murray won a gruelling encounter against France's Gilles Simon to reach the quarter-finals at the Erste Bank Open in Vienna.
Murray, the top seed and world number two, won 4-6 6-2 6-2 and will face American John Isner in the last eight.
The Scot, 29, could be within sight of the world number one ranking if he wins the title in Austria on Sunday.
Another victory at next week's Paris Masters would mean Novak Djokovic must have made the semis to retain top spot.
Murray has now won his last 12 matches, taking in titles in Beijing and Shanghai as he tries to capitalise on a chance to finally top the rankings.
That winning run looked to be coming to an end when Simon took the first set, after Murray managed just five winners to 24 errors, and then broke early in the second.
Murray looked weary on the slow Vienna surface but dug deep, saving six break points in a 14-minute game on his way to clinching the second set.
Simon then required heavy taping over a large blister on his foot and Murray took the third to win in two hours and 41 minutes.
"It was a very long match, but I expected it to be very hard because it's just that way against Gilles," said Murray.
"You play a lot of long points. You feel like the harder you hit the ball, the harder it comes back.
"You just have to try to use some variety, some slice and drop shots, and find that balance to get him out of his rhythm."
In the doubles, top seeds Jamie Murray and Brazilian Bruno Soares beat Guillermo Duran and Marius Fyrstenberg 7-6 (7-5) 6-4 to reach the semi-finals.
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