MELBOURNE: Andy Murray will get another chance to end a near 75-year winless streak for British men in Grand Slam singles tournaments after beating Spain's David Ferrer 4-6, 7-6 (2), 6-1, 7-6 (2) Friday to reach the Australian Open final. The semifinal win put Murray into Sunday's final against Novak Djokovic of Serbia, the 2008 champion who holds a 4-3 edge in head-to-head matches. Murray, however, has won the last three. No British male has won a Grand Slam singles title since Fred Perry in 1936 — more than 270 Grand Slam tournaments ago. The drought endured through British hopes including Tim Henman and most recently by Murray in last year's straight-set loss to Roger Federer at Melbourne Park. Federer is gone from this tournament, beaten by Djokovic in the semifinals. Top-ranked Rafael Nadal, who was trying to win his fourth straight Grand Slam tournament, is gone too. He was hobbled by a thigh injury in his quarterfinal loss to Ferrer. Friday night's semifinal was filled with long rallies and plenty of booming forehands that just cleared the net. Murray mixed it up enough at times that his looping lob on break point at 4-1 in the third set went high over seventh-seeded Ferrer's head, allowing the Spaniard to only watch as the ball bounced meters inside the line. “My body was feeling it a bit at the end,” said Murray. “Both of us did a lot of running.” The Murray match was so popular Friday in Britain — late morning and early afternoon there — that it crashed the British Broadcasting Corporation's website server's live footage. “Change of server for our website in face of high traffic ... Love a change of server — means we're doing something right!” said a Twitter message from a BBC Sport's website editor. Ferrer won the first set by breaking Murray's serve in the 10th game, and had a set point to go up 2-0 in the second. But Murray saved it and leveled at 5-5. The two exchanged service breaks in the next two games to send the second set to a tiebreaker, which Murray led 6-0 and easily prevailed. Murray says he and Djokovic are good friends and often train together. “I think experience-wise we are similar,” Murray said. “There won't be any secrets with our games but it's going to be a brutal match.” Earlier Friday, the top-ranked team of Gisela Dulko of Argentina and Italian Flavia Pennetta rallied from a set and 4-1 down to beat Victoria Azarenka and Maria Kirilenko 2-6, 7-5, 6-1 for the women's doubles title. It was the first Grand Slam title for the Dulko-Pennetta combination, who made it to the quarterfinals at all the Grand Slams last year and the Wimbledon semifinals. Dulko and Pennetta, ranked No. 1 and No. 2 among doubles players, were already up a break in the deciding set at 3-1 when they broke again when Kirilenko netted a backhand. They held in their next service game, then broke Azaranka and Kirilenko again to close out the match. Kim Clijsters, who will play the women's final Saturday against Li Na of China, thinks that 2011 will “probably” be her last full year on the tennis tour. When asked Friday if the Australian Open women's final could be her last appearance at Melbourne Park, the 27-year-old Clijsters replied: “Yeah, it is.” “I know this is probably going to be my last full season on the tour, and then we'll see,” Clijsters said ahead of Saturday's final against China's Li Na. Fellow Belgian and former No. 1-ranked Justine Henin retired for a second time Wednesday, citing a lingering elbow injury that forced her off the tour after Wimbledon last year. She won seven Grand Slam singles titles. “Obviously it's a sad situation to see such a great player end her career in this kind of way,” Clijsters said this week. Clijsters only returned to the tour in late 2009 after a 2-1/2-year break, during which she got married and had a child. She won the US Open in her third tournament back and has won five singles titles in all since her return, including the 2010 US Open.