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Andy Murray denies he fell out with former coach Amelie Mauresmo

Murray and Mauresmo enjoyed a successful two-year working relationship
Image: Andy Murray and Amelie Mauresmo worked together for two years

Andy Murray has denied he parted with former coach Amelie Mauresmo because the pair fell out.

The Scotsman was quizzed about the split at his news conference on Tuesday after he had won a five-set epic with Radek Stepanek in the first round of the French Open.

Murray became the first high-profile male player to hire a woman coach when he started working with Mauresmo in June 2014.

Interviews conducted by the two Grand Slam champions since the split was announced seemed to suggest their relationship had deteriorated before they parted ways.

But Murray has insisted that was not the case, pointing instead to the limited amount of time they were able to spend working together.

To say that the reason that we stopped working together is because of my behaviour on the court, that is not true.
Andy Murray

"Me and Amelie have a good relationship, we certainly didn't fall out," said Murray.

"The reason we stopped working together... was the fact that we literally are spending hardly any time together in a three-month period right before major events coming up. And she was not able to help me during that period."

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Murray won seven trophies under Mauresmo's guidance, including his first two titles on clay.

Andy Murray of Great Britain plays a forehand during the Men's Singles first round match against Radek Stepanek of the Czech Repub
Image: Murray won his first two clay court titles while Mauresmo was his coach

However, the Frenchwoman has not been seen regularly on the circuit with Murray since giving birth to her son Aaron last August.

Mauresmo had indicated that the union ended because she felt she could not "take things further anymore" with Murray before adding: "Andy is complex. On court, he can be opposite of what he is in life. It can be confusing."

But Murray clarified that wires had simply got crossed.

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Highlights from Murray's victory over Djokovic in the Rome Masters final earlier this month

"I did an interview before anything that Amelie had said had come out and the last two days... I was supposedly hitting back at Amelie's comments and disagreeing with everything that she said and that we had a really tough break-up," added Murray.

"That simply is not true. When we sat down in Madrid... it was far from heated. We spoke very calmly.

"To say that the reason that we stopped working together is because of my behaviour on the court, that is not true. In Madrid when we spoke, we didn't discuss that one time."

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Tim Henman believes Andy Murray can win the French Open after being encouraged by his on-court aggression and improved serving on clay over the last month

Responding to Mauresmo's observation that he was a complex character, Murray admitted he still needs to try and curb his tendency to shout at his coaching team when things are not going well.

"On the court... when I'm losing I get very frustrated. When I'm winning, obviously I'm happier," he said.

"I don't know if that's complex or not. It's actually quite simple, to me."

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