Christopher Akers

Scotland has failed Andy Murray

Andy Murray (photo: Getty)

So much for building upon the legacy of the nation’s greatest ever sportsman. There will be no tennis balls hit at a proposed £20 million sports centre close to Andy Murray’s hometown of Dunblane, after the cancellation of the tennis star’s project this week. More than a decade of wrangling, planning system headaches and complaints about development on green belt land conspired to end the ‘legacy’ project, led by Judy Murray. It’s game, set, and match for the naysayers. 

The Park of Keir site was meant to have 12 tennis courts, a six-hole golf course and four-star hotel, along with a museum and restaurant. The idea was to celebrate the significant achievements of Murray and clan at a flagship venue for tennis training and competition. An economic impact assessment found the project would have created around 170 jobs and delivered regional benefits worth almost £5 million.

Fundamentally, the cancellation represents a peculiar lack of ambition

But this week, the Murray Play Foundation confirmed that it had pulled the plug on the project because of an unpleasant cocktail of planning and financial issues.

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