ANDY Murray will get his All England Club campaign under way on Tuesday with a Battle of Britain against Liam Broady. The Wimbledon draw, which was made yesterday morning, set up a first ever competitive meeting between the World No 2 and World No 234 Broady, the Mancunian wild card and Davis Cup team-mate. Having not met one of his fellow countrymen in a competitive match for almost a decade, the match will be the Scot's third such match in a fortnight, having taken care of Aljaz Bedene and Kyle Edmund during his run to a record-breaking fifth Queen's Club title.

On the face of it, this was a favourable draw for the 29-year-old Scot, who cannot meet Milos Raonic, Roger Federer or Novak Djokovic until the final, although the likes of Nick Kyrgios, Richard Gasquet and Stan Wawrinka - two of which he disposed of at Roland Garros - are potential obstacles in his path.

Murray, meanwhile, has revealed that his appetite for a second Wimbledon title is being fuelled by a perfectly balanced diet. The Scot has been working closely with LTA nutritionist Glenn Kearney in the last few weeks with a view to ensuring that nothing is left to chance when it comes to meal times. For instance, pre-match pasta is off the menu as it was making him belch during matches.

"I try to avoid pasta before matches now," said Murray. "Often, if I ate it too close to a match and then drank a lot, I would feel like I was burping a lot during the match which actually happened a lot at the French Open in the match against [Mathias] Bourgue. I didn't feel that great during that match.

"Obviously eating chocolate and stuff before matches is not good. I wouldn't do that anyway but there is nothing that was in my diet that has changed drastically. It is just having it better planned and getting what I need at the right times of the day, eating an hour and a half before a match rather than two hours before a match.

"You tell a nutritionalist when you are playing and he sends a plan through for the day and then I just stick to what it is. Often breakfast is the same: I normally have a smoothie with scrambled eggs and a bagel and then during the day it changes. I don't ever have salmon for dinner one night then salmon the next night. I just have a more balanced diet than before but I am eating the same things really. I think it can help a little bit but it doesn't make drastic changes to how you are."

While Murray is only second favourite for victory at the All England Club this fortnight, taking second billing to Novak Djokovic is hardly a disaster. Greg Rusedski compared the Scot last night to Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo. "When you are talking about World No 2, then you are basically talking about Ronaldo and Messi every week," said Rusedski. "So he is basically Ronaldo or Messi, depending on who your argument is about. If you were talking about European Championships or World Cup and you finished first and second every time then I think you would be pretty happy."

Elsewhere in the draw, another Brit, James Ward takes on Djokovic, while Scottish doubles experts Jamie Murray and Colin Fleming are scheduled to meet in the first round.