After losing in four sets to Britain's Andy Murray at Roland Garros in front of a raucous crowd, France's Richard Gasquet says his opponent was "so lucky during the second set, so many shots, not far away. He was so lucky. But then during the beginning of the third set I made a few mistakes. But then when he gains confidence, it's really difficult, because he's a fighter, and he's always present."
The two argued a little during the match when Murray told Gasquet not to ask the umpire down to check a mark.
Murray said he enjoyed playing in the hostile atmosphere and used it to charge himself up.
"The shots I hit were lucky?," Murray asked. "Maybe they were. And then, sometimes, if you're the one on the court, when the crowd's obviously against you, there's a few close line calls back and forth. If you query a line call, you get booed. But then when he does one, it's sort of cheered. So, when I circled the mark and it was clearly out, maybe I used that, to give me that extra push at the end of the second set. If he was unhappy with that, that's his problem. He should have just tried to get on with it."