Are Andy Murray’s days numbered at the top of tennis?

Injury retirement
Injuries and form
Terrible record
Spoken about retirement
A fitting finish
Titles
Setbacks
Time to retire?
Injury retirement

Former world number one Andy Murray was forced to injury retire in the second round of the Queen's Championship against Jordan Thompson and was raced in for surgery on a spinal cyst.

Injuries and form

His latest setback means he is now likely to miss the Olympic Games and Wimbledon. If Murray is to be declared fit for Wimbledon, he will be up against it, with injury problems and form taking a turn for the worse in 2024.

Terrible record

According to the ATP website, Murray has only won two matches in a tournament at one event in 2024 and had lost in the opening round of the last three tournaments before Queen's.

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Spoken about retirement

It's been no secret that Murray has thought about retirement already this year, having spoken on his future at Indian Wells in March 2024.

"Finishing in the summer"

The Radio Times reports Murray said: "I'm planning on finishing in the summer. I don't know what more I'm supposed to say. I've been getting asked about it for 18 months or so, and it's obviously something I have thought about, but I hadn't made a decision on."

A fitting finish

Just days before his retirement at Queen's, Murray admitted he couldn't see himself playing at the US Open or the Davis Cup and said it would be more fitting to finish at the Olympics or Wimbledon.

"Wimbledon or an Olympic Games"

He told BBC Sport: "Probably if I was going to finish my career, I would rather finish at Wimbledon or an Olympic Games – to me, that would probably be more fitting."

Titles

The British tennis star has fond memories at both places, becoming the first tennis player to win back-to-back Olympic Golds, winning Wimbledon in 2013 and 2016, and winning the US Open in 2012.

Setbacks

Since his Wimbledon victory in 2016, the Scot has suffered terrible injuries and surgeries to his hip, ankle, groin, back, and abdominals. He has subsequently dropped out of the top 100 in the ATP Rankings.

Time to retire?

At 37 and potentially facing another six weeks out to recover, is it time for Andy Murray to hang his racket up and retire from tennis?

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