Jamie Murray

Player Information

James Robert Murray (born 13 February 1986) is a British professional tennis player who specialises in doubles. He is a seven-time major doubles champion (five in mixed doubles and two in men's doubles), a Davis Cup winner, and a former doubles World No. 1.
Birthdate:
13 February 1986
Full Name:
James Robert Murray
Birthplace:
Glasgow, Scotland
Nationality:
British
Residence:
London, England
Gender:
Male
Height (cm):
191
Status:
Married
Partner:
Alejandra Gutiérrez
Career Started:
2004
Notable Achievements:
Davis Cup (2015), Grand Slam Men's Doubles Champion (2016), Grand Slam Mixed Doubles Champion (2007, 2017, 2018)
Awards:
Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) (Win Year 2016)
Player Active:
From - 2004, To - Present

Jamie Murray Bio

James Robert Murray OBE (born 13 February 1986) is a British former professional tennis player who specialised in doubles. A seven-time Grand Slam champion across men’s and mixed doubles, he also won the Davis Cup with Great Britain in 2015 and held the world No. 1 doubles ranking in 2016. He is the older brother of former singles world No. 1 Andy Murray, and is recognised as one of the most accomplished British doubles players of the modern era.

Over a career that began in 2004, Jamie Murray compiled 34 ATP doubles titles, earned more than $7.1 million in prize money, and reached the men’s doubles final at three Grand Slams, winning the 2016 Australian Open and 2016 US Open with Brazilian partner Bruno Soares. After two decades on tour, he retired from professional tennis in 2026.

Early Life and Background

James Robert Murray was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on 13 February 1986. He is the elder son of William Murray and Judith Murray (née Erskine), who later separated in 1998. After his parents split, Jamie and his brother Andy lived with their father while continuing to be coached in tennis by their mother. He grew up in Dunblane and attended Dunblane Primary School, where he and Andy were pupils during the 1996 Dunblane school tragedy, taking cover in a classroom with other students.

Jamie’s maternal grandfather, Roy Erskine, was a professional footballer who played reserve matches for Hibernian and featured in the Scottish Football League for Stirling Albion and Cowdenbeath. Jamie grew up supporting Hibernian and Manchester United.

By the age of 10, Murray was ranked No. 3 in his age group in Europe, and at 11 he was a finalist in the boys’ under-12 category at the Junior Orange Bowl. As a 13-year-old, he rose to No. 2 in the junior world rankings and was selected to study at The Leys School in Cambridge alongside other promising juniors. Because he was the youngest in the group, he attended St Faith’s School, a feeder institution, where he was isolated from the other players. After eight months he returned home and did not pick up a tennis racquet for two years.

Path to Tennis

Murray returned to competitive tennis in his mid-teens, and in 2004 he partnered his brother Andy to the boys’ doubles semifinal at the US Open Junior Championships. That same year he turned professional, beginning a steady climb through the lower rungs of the doubles game.

Partnering fellow Briton Colin Fleming, he won his first Futures tournament in September 2005 in Nottingham, and went on to collect four Futures titles and four satellite titles in 2005 and 2006. He made his ATP Tour debut with brother Andy at the 2006 Nottingham Open, and the pair also competed together at the 2006 Wimbledon Championships after receiving a wildcard.

A breakthrough came in 2007, when Murray teamed with American Eric Butorac. The pair, nicknamed Booty and Stretch, won three ATP titles that year and lifted Murray into the top 50 of the doubles rankings. He also received his first Davis Cup call-up, partnering Greg Rusedski to victory over the Netherlands in the Europe/Africa Zone.

Jamie Murray Career

Early Career (2005–2010)

Murray’s developmental years were spent primarily on the Futures and Challenger circuits, where he sharpened his doubles craft. With Fleming, he captured his first Futures crown in Nottingham in 2005 and added titles in Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Exmouth. In 2006, the pair made their ATP Challenger debut in Southampton and earned a wildcard into the main draw of the 2006 Wimbledon men’s doubles, where they fell in the first round.

After Fleming returned to the University of Stirling, Murray began rotating partners. He reached the Los Angeles ATP final in 2007 with Butorac, and later that year the pair won back-to-back ATP titles at San Jose and Memphis. Their partnership ended in 2008, and Murray went on to play with Max Mirnyi, Kevin Ullyett, and others, reaching the 2008 US Open mixed doubles final with Liezel Huber. He also represented Great Britain in Davis Cup ties and competed at the 2008 Beijing Olympics with brother Andy.

Partnership With John Peers and Breakthrough (2013–2015)

Murray began his partnership with Australian John Peers in February 2013, and the duo wasted little time in finding success. They won their first title together at the US Men’s Clay Court Championships, upsetting the legendary Bryan brothers in the final. The pair added a second ATP title in Gstaad later that summer, and reached the men’s doubles quarterfinal at the US Open, the deepest Grand Slam men’s doubles run of Murray’s career to that point.

In 2014 and 2015, Murray and Peers became one of the most consistent teams on tour, reaching multiple finals and semifinals at Masters 1000 events. Their crowning moments came in 2015, when they reached the final at Wimbledon, finishing as runners-up to Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecău, and then the final of the US Open, where they lost to Nicolas Mahut and Pierre-Hugues Herbert. They also lifted the Brisbane International title in 2015 to open the season.

Partnership With Bruno Soares and World No. 1 (2016–2018)

After splitting with Peers, Murray teamed with Brazilian Bruno Soares in 2016, and the duo enjoyed immediate success. They won the 2016 Australian Open, beating Daniel Nestor and Radek Štěpánek in the final, and added the 2016 US Open title later in the year, defeating Pablo Carreño Busta and Guillermo García-López. Those victories helped Murray rise to the world No. 1 doubles ranking on 4 April 2016, a position he held for nine weeks.

In 2016, Murray was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the Birthday Honours for services to tennis and charity. He and Soares continued to add titles in 2017 and 2018, including the 2017 Stuttgart Open, the 2017 Queen’s Club Championships, the 2018 Washington Open, and the 2018 Cincinnati Masters. The pair split in 2019.

Davis Cup Glory (2015)

Murray played a central role in Great Britain’s 2015 Davis Cup triumph, the nation’s first title in the competition in 79 years. He partnered his brother Andy to win crucial doubles rubbers in the quarterfinal against France, the semifinal against Australia, and the final against Belgium, helping secure a 3–1 victory in Ghent. The British team was later named BBC Sports Personality Team of the Year for 2015.

Partnership With Neal Skupski and Return to Soares (2019–2022)

Following his split from Soares, Murray partnered fellow Briton Neal Skupski in 2019 and 2020, winning one ATP title. He then reunited with Soares in 2021, reaching the US Open men’s doubles final for the third time in his career. In November 2022, partnering Mathew Ebden at the Paris Masters, Murray recorded his 500th career doubles win, becoming only the second active player at the time to reach that milestone.

Partnership With Michael Venus and Final Years (2023–2026)

In 2023, Murray began a new partnership with New Zealander Michael Venus, winning four titles in a single season for the first time in his career, including the Dallas Open, Banja Luka, Geneva, and the Zhuhai Championships. The pair also reached the Cincinnati Masters final, falling short despite holding a championship point. In 2024, they added the Qatar Open, Swiss Indoors, and Belgrade Open to their joint tally.

In June 2024, brother Andy announced the two would pair up for the 2024 Wimbledon Championships, where they lost in the first round to Rinky Hijikata and John Peers. Murray retired from professional tennis in 2026 after more than two decades on tour.

Notable Events and Milestones

Murray’s signature achievement remains the 2015 Davis Cup, where his doubles play helped Great Britain end a 79-year wait for the title. He was the first Briton in 20 years to win a Wimbledon title when he took the 2007 mixed doubles with Jelena Janković, and in 2016 he became Britain’s first men’s doubles world No. 1 in the modern ATP rankings era. He also reached his 500th career doubles win in 2022 and lifted his 30th career title in 2023.

Jamie Murray Career Wins

Across his career, Jamie Murray accumulated 34 ATP doubles titles, including two Grand Slam men’s doubles crowns and five Grand Slam mixed doubles titles. He also won the 2015 Davis Cup with Great Britain and reached the men’s doubles final at Wimbledon in 2015 and the US Open in 2015.

Grand Slam Highlights

Murray won his first major title at the 2007 Wimbledon mixed doubles, partnering Jelena Janković to become the first Briton in two decades to win a Wimbledon title. He added two more mixed doubles crowns with Martina Hingis in 2017, including Wimbledon and the US Open, and won a fifth mixed doubles title in 2018 at the US Open with Bethanie Mattek-Sands. In men’s doubles, his biggest moments came at the 2016 Australian Open and 2016 US Open, both won alongside Bruno Soares.

Other Wins and Performances

Beyond the Slams, Murray reached the Wimbledon men’s doubles final in 2015 with John Peers, the US Open men’s doubles final in 2015 and 2021, and the Australian Open men’s doubles final in 2016. He also won multiple ATP Masters 1000 doubles titles, including the 2018 Cincinnati Masters with Soares and was a finalist at the 2023 Cincinnati Masters with Venus.

Series Wins Top Tens Poles
ATP Doubles Titles 34 0 0
Grand Slam Men’s Doubles 2 0 0
Grand Slam Mixed Doubles 5 0 0
Davis Cup 1 0 0

Jamie Murray Family

Family Background and Racing Lineage

The Murray family is one of the most famous in British sport. Jamie’s younger brother, Andy Murray, is a three-time Grand Slam singles champion, two-time Olympic gold medalist, and former world No. 1 in singles. The brothers share the nickname ‘Tight’ for each other, and their mother, Judith Murray, was a key mentor in both their tennis development. Their maternal grandfather, Roy Erskine, was a Scottish professional footballer who played for Hibernian reserves and Scottish Football League clubs Stirling Albion and Cowdenbeath.

Personal Life

Jamie Murray married Colombian MBA student Alejandra Gutiérrez in 2010, with brother Andy serving as best man. The wedding took place at Cromlix House near Dunblane, a venue Andy later bought and refurbished, and where both he and their father Willie would also hold wedding receptions. The couple resides in London, England.

2025 Season Performance

Murray’s 2025 campaign continued alongside partner Michael Venus, with the duo building on the momentum of four titles in 2023 and three more in 2024. The pair opened the year with promising results in the early hardcourt swing, looking to add to their shared trophy haul and chase a return to the top tier of the doubles rankings.

Mid-season, the team showed competitive form on clay and grass, though they faced stiff competition from a deep doubles field. Their partnership withstood the grind of the Masters 1000 circuit, and they remained consistent threats in the late stages of major events heading into the North American hardcourt summer.

Heading into the closing stretch of the season, Murray and Venus focused on securing their place among the top eight teams to qualify for the ATP Finals. With a combined eight titles together across the previous two seasons, they entered 2025 as one of the more established pairings on tour, and were widely regarded as contenders at the Grand Slams later in the year.