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Former Doubles World Number One Jamie Murray Retires
The former world No. 1 in doubles won 34 ATP Tour titles and seven Grand Slam crowns before ending his career.
- British doubles legend Jamie Murray has retired from tennis at age 40, becoming the first British doubles player to reach world No 1 during his lengthy career.
- Murray won 34 doubles titles across his career, including the 2015 Davis Cup alongside brother Andy, marking Britain's first tournament victory in 79 years.
- He reached 13 major men's doubles finals and won mixed doubles grand slam titles at Wimbledon and the Open alongside partners including Bruno Soares and Martina Hingis.
- After 36 years in tennis, Murray said he is "Excited to enter the real world." He previously became tournament director of the Queen Club Championships in late 2023.
- Retiring with the most grand slam and ATP Tour doubles titles of any British player in the Open Era, he represented Britain in 20 Davis Cup ties and four Olympic Games.
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26 Articles
26 Articles
British tennis player Jamie Murray announced that he is putting an end to his playing career.
·Belgrade, Serbia
Read Full ArticleJamie Murray has won two of his 34 doubles titles with Andy, and together they shone when Great Britain won the Davis Cup in 2015.
Jamie Murray, Andy’s brother and former doubles World No. 1, announces retirement
Jamie retires with 34 titles to his name, with a Grand Slam haul that includes doubles crowns at the Australian Open and U.S. Open in 2016. He also won five mixed doubles titles split between Wimbledon and the U.S. Open.
·India
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources26
Leaning Left8Leaning Right6Center4Last UpdatedBias Distribution45% Left
Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources lean Left
45% Left
L 45%
C 22%
R 33%
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