Andy Murray After being asked to join the club for training, he revealed that he could have played for Rangers Efc.
The three -time Grand Slam champion was forced to choose between tennis and football as a young man.
When he made the right decision, Murray confessed that he had a regret of leaving the football if he had the right decision.
Murray has reached everything possible in tennis in his two decades of life. He won three major titles, two Olympic Gold Medals, ATP finals, 14 Masters 1000s and a large number of titles – and reached the World No. 1.
Brit at the Olympic Games last year, which finally hung his scam, enjoying a lot of golf, which set the goal of becoming a scratch player.
The 37 -year -old has now revealed that he has another game as a young man. Murray enjoyed playing football, and as a teenager, Rangers even scored during a training.
But it should not be, he explained why the retired star now chose tennis on football.
“I think this is about 13, 14. The Ooty team for the Rangers team I played, and we went to the Rangers School of Excellence test,” said Murray Chris Hoy’s game when the game appeared in the wrong Botgast.
“After that I was asked to go to training with the rangers. When I had to make a decision, that was some sort of sort of time.”
Murray already started competing in the Junior Tennis Circuit, knew it was a safe bet. He continued: “At that age, with tennis, it was very helpful because I played matches around the world at that point.
“So I played in the United States and I played in France and Italy. In Europe, the ranking system is like 14 years of age. At that point, I was 14 years old and 3 in Europe.
“With football, I was good for my local Central Scotland team I play. But you don’t know what this means. You know. How good is that really?”
Murray’s football was not long before leaving the entirety. “One day I was doing a tennis session. It should be like one and a half hours. After an hour, my dad came to me because I had to go to football training, ”he explained.
“I was walking in the car. I said to my dad, ‘Dad, no, no, I don’t want to go to football. I want to go back and finish my tennis.
“It was a kind of when I decided that I was going to actually continue tennis as my life as 14 and 15 years old.”
Asked if he had any regrets, Murray confessed that there was only one. He replied: “If you have given me a career as a football player, I would like the team features of football.
“I like it very much. In tennis, we only have to enjoy a few times in our life. There was one of the Olympics, as part of some of them, I was lucky, in our Davis trophy. ”