Foligno - Fabio Fognini is hoping to capitalise on the
mediocre form of Britain's world number one Andy Murray when they meet in the
second round of the Rome Masters on Tuesday.
Fognini, ranked 29th in the world, booked his place in the
second round with a clinical 6-1, 6-3 win over fellow Italian Matteo Berrettini
on Sunday.
Murray claimed his maiden Rome title with victory over Novak
Djokovic in the Eternal City last year.
But the Scot, ousted by unseeded 20-year-old Croat Borna
Coric at the Madrid Open last week, has admitted his game on clay has gone awry
- and Fognini wants to capitalise.
"It's not a bad time to be meeting him, he's not
playing at his usual level. But to beat him, I'll need a big hand from the
(supporters on) centre court," Fognini said.
Murray, who celebrated his 30th birthday on Monday, leads
their ATP head to head series 3-2 and has beaten Fognini in their last two
meetings.
But Fognini was the only player to push Rafael Nadal to
three sets last week in Madrid, where the Spaniard triumphed Sunday with
victory over Dominic Thiem, and Murray said he is taking nothing for granted.
"(Fognini) is one of the better clay-court players, for
sure. He obviously would be highly motivated, I would think, playing in Italy
as well," Murray said.
"I have had some tough matches with him in the past, so
it won't be easy. I will definitely need to play well in that one to have a
chance of winning."
Nadal underlined his status as the tournament favourite when
he ousted Djokovic in their Madrid semi-final to claim his first clay victory
over the Serb in three years.
He then dominated Thiem in the final on Sunday to take his
record on the surface to 15-0 this year, in the process moving up to fourth in
the rankings ahead of Swiss rival Roger Federer.
Spain's 14-time Grand Slam champion is now a strong
favourite to claim his 10th French Open crown next month, although he remains
tight-lipped about his ambitions.
"I am aware that if I am fit and I can play well, I
have the capacity to win important titles and achieve my goals," said
Nadal.
It already looks ominous for Murray's hopes of defending his
title, and Fognini has also given four-time Rome champion Djokovic, the
defending French Open champion, the edge.
"On clay he (Murray) is just a little inferior to Djokovic, given that he's never won in Paris," added the Italian.
Yet Fognini, who has never made it past the third round in
Rome and has a win-loss record of 5-9 in the capital, has never forgotten
exiting the tournament under a hail of criticism from his home crowd in 2014.
He added: "I've never had a good run in this tournament. I will never forget being whistled off the court when I was ranked 15th (in the world)."