Monday, 8 July 2013

Victory has a lot of friends – New Wimbledon Champion, Andy Murray enjoying the attention.

Hours of media interviews for Andy Murray this morning and the Wimbledon champion has a few moments to sit down and reflect on the blanket coverage of Sunday's win in the nation's newspapers.
Murray has a promotional event to attend at lunchtime, before he heads to a reception with Prime Minister David Cameron at Downing Street .

David Cameron fuels speculation that Wimbledon champion Andy Murray will be recommended for a knighthood.
The Prime Minister says honours were decided independently but "I can't think of anyone who deserves one more" 

By the way, Andy isn’t English, he is actually Scotish. In fact, this issue is nearing causing problems now.
Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond denies suggestions he sought to gain political profit from Andy Murray's Wimbledon win by displaying a Scottish Saltire flag directly behind David Cameron's head as the two leaders sat in the Royal Box on Centre Court on Sunday.
Stressing that the incident happened after the match, in which Murray defeated Novak Djokovic 6-4, 7-5, 6-4, had finished, Salmond pointed out that, while Britain had waited 77 years, no Scot had won the tournament since Harold Mahoney in 1896.


"It is not something that happens very often so I think a few Saltires hoisted over Wimbledon does not do any harm at all," he tells BBC Radio 4. "I had no idea what the seating arrangements were - that is absolutely the case."

You see why I said, victory doesn't have enemies only friends


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