One of Scotland’s greatest sportsmen. In a glittering career, he won Wimbledon twice in 2013 and 2016 and the US Open in 2012. He also won two Olympic gold medals: in London in 2012, beating Roger Federer in the final, and in Rio de Janeiro in 2016, where he became the first player to win consecutive golds. When he retired in August 2024 after the Paris Olympics, he had won 46 ATP singles titles in his career and had been world No.1 for a total of 41 weeks.
Murray is now working on his golf with the same passion he showed for tennis and is targeting bringing his handicap down to scratch.
This is his first Dunhill Links appearance.


