Heart & Soul: How an AED saved Murphy Jensen's life, and gave him new direction
By Oct 28, 2022Sebastian Korda chasing match-day butterflies in 2026 after pair of stop-and-go seasons
By Jan 29, 2026Clara Tauson weathers illness, “boom boom” tennis to advance at Australian Open
By Jan 22, 2026Elina Svitolina finds strength in stepping back, talks burnout recovery at Australian Open
By Jan 21, 2026Karolina Pliskova navigates uncertain future after injury odyssey, Australian Open comeback
By Jan 20, 2026Eliot Spizzirri achieved something “amazing” last year. How much further can he go?
By Jan 16, 2026Dino Prizmic is ready to make another Melbourne mark, eyes Novak Djokovic reunion
By Jan 13, 2026Nick Kyrgios brings the show, and new perspective, to Madison Square Garden
By Dec 08, 2025After longest off-season ever, Tommy Paul talks injury comeback, wedding plans at MSG
By Dec 08, 2025Following in family footsteps, Elli Mandlik clinches Australian Open return in wild card play-off
By Nov 25, 2025Heart & Soul: How an AED saved Murphy Jensen's life, and gave him new direction
In 2012, the American was first exposed to the power of automated external defibrillators. A decade later, they are the reason he can share his survival story.
Published Oct 28, 2022
Advertising
Advertising

We love you, Murph.
© Matt Fitzgerald
Advertising

The Jensen brothers lifted four tour-level trophies together, including their first at the 1993 French Open.
© Getty Images
Advertising
Advertising

An AED should be stored in an unobstructed location where anyone can access it on a moment's notice.
© Matt Fitzgerald
Advertising
Advertising

Playing an exhibition for the first time since his sudden cardiac arrest, Jensen gave himself a moment before serving to Bob Bryan in Tucson. Later this year, it was announced The Gootter Foundation was being renamed to The Gootter-Jensen Foundation.
© Matt Fitzgerald
Advertising

Bob Bryan, Murphy, Duke, Mike Bryan and Luke at the 2022 Gootter Grand Slam event.
© Matt Fitzgerald