WIMBLEDON, England — As is now well established, it has been a through-the-looking-glass Wimbledon.
Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal were dismissed before the third round. The double-handed outsider Marion Bartoli won the women's title without dropping a set despite being seeded 15th and not going past the quarterfinals in any other tournament this year.
"Well, that's me!" Bartoli said Saturday with a why-worry-now shrug.
But this Wimbledon has also been odd because everyone keeps asking Andy Murray about the 77-year drought even though he already had the chance to celebrate a cathartic victory at the All England Club just last year by winning the Olympic gold medal.
That deep emotional victory came on the same rectangle of lawn where Murray will try to win his first Wimbledon on Sunday. It is difficult to have experienced Murray's triumph and all the encomiums that came with it and feel the same sense of urgency about his quest to win the Wimbledon men's single title this time around.
Murray has proved his point already, and he added muscle to his new stature by winning his first Grand Slam singles title at the United States Open in 2012.
But the British are sticking to their long-running plotline, the one that dates to Fred Perry, the last British man to win the singles at Wimbledon. That was, as Murray knows so well, in 1936.
"This place means so much to the English, to the British," said Paul Hayward, the chief sportswriter for The Daily Telegraph. "It's been 77 years. It's got to be cured."
To cure it — or what is left of it — Murray has the trickiest of assignments: beating Novak Djokovic, the world's No. 1 player, in a Grand Slam final.
Federer is clearly in a slump that looks a great deal like a decline. Nadal has been vulnerable on grass for the last two years. But Djokovic, the only other member of what remains of the Big Four, is very much in form and in his prime at 26.
Unlike Murray, he already has won the Wimbledon title, at least the one without the gold medal, claiming it in the midst of his phenomenal 2011 season.
"He's won here; he's obviously in the final here; semis last year," Murray said. "He has a very, very good record on the grass. I don't think this surface gives me an advantage."
That may be true, but it is hard not to believe that the site — and the more partisan atmosphere that now accompanies it — will not be a help.
"I do think Andy's handling it all much differently now," said David Felgate, who long coached Tim Henman. "He just looks comfortable in his own skin, comfortable about being one of the big boys, comfortable about everyone wanting him to win."
For years, Wimbledon's fans seemed more enthusiastic by obligation than pro-Murray to the core. He is still not quite Henman, the perennial semifinalist who represented, in clean-cut, understated fashion, the essence of traditional Middle England.
Murray, a Scotsman from a more modest background, remains rougher around the edges even with his stylish English girlfriend, Kim Sears, and his increasingly well-burnished image.
But his tears when he lost to Federer in last year's Wimbledon final humanized him for many here, and there were more tears in a popular and poignant documentary about Murray shown on BBC shortly before this year's tournament.
In the interview, Murray choked up and cried as he discussed the massacre that occurred at his primary school in Dunblane, Scotland. A gunman, familiar to Murray and his older brother Jamie, shot and killed 16 students — all aged 5 or 6 — and a teacher in the gymnasium on March 13, 1996. Andy Murray's class was on its way to the gymnasium before being turned away, according to Murray's mother and first coach, Judy.
Andy Murray told the BBC: "At the time, you have no idea how tough something like that is. And then, and yet as you start to get older, you realize. And the thing that is nice now, the whole town, they recovered from it so well.
"It wasn't until a few years ago that I started to actually research it and look into it a lot because I didn't really want to know. So, yeah, it's just nice that I've been able to do something that the town is just proud of."
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: July 6, 2013
An earlier version of this article misstated a quotation from Rudyard Kipling's "If." It should have read, "If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster / and treat those two impostors just the same," not as "If you can meet with triumph and disaster and treat them both the same."
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