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Andy Murray warned not to rush his comeback by Stan Wawrinka

Andy Murray of Great Britain reacts during Day 2 of the Fever-Tree Championships at Queens Club on June 19, 2018 in London, United Kingdom
Image: Andy Murray played his first competitive game for 11 months on Tuesday

Stan Wawrinka has warned Andy Murray not to rush his return from hip surgery after the former world No 1 hinted he is not certain to compete at Wimbledon.

Murray was beaten 2-6 7-6 7-5 by Australia's Nick Kyrgios in the Queen's Club first round on Tuesday in his first competitive match for 11 months.

The 31-year-old Scot, whose ranking has plummeted to 156, admitted after the defeat he was unsure if his body could hold up to the demands of best-of-five-set ties at Wimbledon.

With Wimbledon starting on July 2, Murray does not have much time to regain full fitness and Swiss star Wawrinka, working his way back from a lengthy injury of his own, has told Murray just how difficult it is to play at a Grand Slam after so long on the sidelines.

Britain's Andy Murray reacts to Australia's Nick Kyrgios during their first round men's singles match at the ATP Queen's Club Championships tennis tournament in west London on June 19, 2018
Image: Murray showed glimpses of his best on his comeback at Queen's

"Well, my first match was at the Australian Open, and two days after I was not feeling pain or whatever, but my body was completely off. I felt dead," Wawrinka said.

"I lost in my next match, but I couldn't really do anything. That's mentally tough because you have never experienced that in the past.

"So you need to learn from it, you need to adapt and accept it and be patient with yourself and what you're going to do."

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Wawrinka needed two operations on a knee problem last year and, in a trend Murray will hope to buck, the three-time Grand Slam winner still is not back to his best.

Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland looks dejected after defeat in his second round match against Tennys Sandgren
Image: Stan Wawrinka has suffered with injuries of his own

Wawrinka showed that lack of confidence and rhythm as he crashed to a 7-5 6-7 6-1 defeat against Sam Querrey in the second round at Queen's on Wednesday.

"For the first match I think Andy was for sure moving, playing well, knowing that he's been away for a year," Wawrinka said.

"But if I take my experience, what's important is how he's going to be in the next match he plays."

We have tennis coverage from the ATP Tour as Roger Federer bids for another title at the Gerry Weber Open in Halle. Watch the action live on Sky Sports Arena all this week.

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