Andy Murray 1/1 | Romain Safiullin 7/10
This looks set to be a tantalizing clash between World No.40 Andy Murray and World No.41 Roman Safiullin. Former World No.1 Andy Murray simply loves it in Shanghai, reaching four finals and winning three titles in this prestigious Masters 1000 event.
But the Brit is currently undergoing a bit of an existential crisis. The Scot had a decent start to the season, reaching a final in Qatar and accumulating three Challenger titles. But he has disappointed in the latter parts of the season and he has openly expressed his dissatisfaction with his level.
He was crushed by Dimitrov at Flushing Meadows and he comes to Shanghai off the back of early exits at the Zhuhai Championships and the China Open.
Another early exit could really get the retirement bells clanging. And he has once again been handed a pretty disastrous draw as he comes up against recent Chengdu finalist Roman Safiullin.
26-year-old Russian Roman Safiullin has enjoyed a really encouraging under-the-radar campaign. The aggressive Russian baseliner produced heroics at SW19, becoming only the 12th man in history to reach a Wimbledon quarterfinal on debut.
And he arrives in Shanghai in fine fettle, reaching his maiden ATP final at last week’s Chengdu Open. He never dropped a set en route to the final and actually led the rejuvenated Alex Zverev by a set in the championship match.
Safiullin has a useful- if not explosive- serve that allows him to settle into his rhythm. He then likes to dictate play with an aggressive style. His brilliant movement at the back of the court actually reminds me of prime David Goffin. He is just an industrious player who doesn’t give you a moments rest.
Verdict: Safiullin to win in three
Murray won their only previous encounter at last year’s Swiss Indoors event. This is really a bit of a nightmare draw for Murray. He pushed ‘Speed Demon’ De Minaur to three sets in the China Open and he will once again face a stern physical examination here.
I don’t think those defensive skills are what they used to be and I can see the Russian getting the upper hand here. The Russian is also defensively sound and I don’t see him growing impatient in extended rallies.