Stats breakdown: Jamie Murray’s historic career
• 2 minute read
Jamie Murray is one of the greats of modern British tennis.
His achievements stand above many in the history of the sport and have paved the way for impressive doubles success over recent years.
We look at some of the statistics and numbers behind Murray’s amazing career at the top of the ATP Tour.
1 – Murray was the first British player to reach the world No.1 ranking in the modern era.
His achievement paved the way for his brother Andy to reach the same ranking later that year and the three British men’s doubles players since (Joe Salisbury, Neal Skupski and Lloyd Glasspool).
3 – Consecutive US Open mixed doubles titles. Murray ruled the US Open mixed doubles between 2017 and 2019, winning two trophies with Bethanie Mattek-Sands and one with Martina Hingis.
4 – Olympic Games. Murray represented Team GB at four Olympic Games in Beijing, London, Rio and Tokyo.
7 – Grand Slam titles won. Murray enjoyed great success at the major tournaments throughout his career, combining for nine men’s and mixed doubles titles at the Australian Open, Wimbledon and the US Open.
9 – Doubles partners Murray won ATP titles with in his career. His most successful partnership was with Brazilian Bruno Soares, but he also won alongside Eric Butorac, Max Mirnyi, Andre Sa, Andy Murray, John Peers, Neal Skupski, Matthew Ebden and Michael Venus.

10 – The gap between Murray’s first and second Wimbledon mixed doubles titles.
Murray stunned the world in 2007 to win the title with Jelena Jankovic – becoming the first Brit to win a senior Wimbledon title for 20 years – and then repeated the feat 10 years later with Hingis.
12 – Years in the ATP top 50. Murray was consistently strong throughout his career and held a top 50 ranking from 2013 to 2025.
20 – Murray made his ATP debut at the age of 20. Competing alongside brother Andy at the 2006 Nottingham Open.
21 – Davis Cup matches for Great Britain. Murray played 21 matches in 20 ties for his country in Davis Cup, including an historic run to the title in 2015. He played one singles match against Robin Haase of the Netherlands in 2007, losing in three sets.
34 – ATP titles won. Murray was a 34-time ATP champion, starting in San Jose back in 2007 and finishing in Belgrade in 2024.
589 – Tour-level matches won. An unbelievable achievement, Murray finished his career with almost 600 wins in his career from 2006-2025.
1019 - Matches played on the ATP Tour. He is the first British player to compete in over 1000 matches on tour, a testament to Murray’s love and dedication to the game for almost 20 years.
1936 – The last time Great Britain won the Davis Cup title before the Murray brothers led the team to glory in 2015. Their doubles wins throughout the competition were pivotal to the lifting Britain’s 10th title in the history of the competition.
2024 – Joined forces with his brother at the 2024 Wimbledon men’s doubles for the final match of Andy’s career on Centre Court.