Andy Murray has an impressive career record of 739–262 across 1001 matches (73.8% — strong). A win rate of that calibre over 1001 matches is a reliable indicator of genuine quality. With 46 titles, among the most prolific champions in the Open Era: Tour Finals, San Jose, St. Petersburg, Doha and 24 more.
At Grand Slam level (Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon, US Open): Andy Murray has been outstanding at the Slams — 200–57 (77.8%) across 257 matches. Winning more than 7 in 10 Grand Slam matches is the benchmark of an all-time great.
ATP Masters 1000 (Indian Wells, Miami, Monte Carlo, Madrid, Rome, Canada, Cincinnati, Shanghai, Paris): Andy Murray is elite here — 230–101 (69.5%) across 331 matches. Sustaining that win rate in the Tour's deepest regular-week draws is a defining quality of the very best.
71 finals reached — won 46, lost 25 (solid 65% conversion) — consistently getting to finals and winning the majority is a hallmark of elite performers. 99 semifinals. 139 quarterfinals.
vs. Top 10: 105–96 (52.2%, 201 matches). Competitive against the elite, but still narrowly below .500 — closing that gap would directly elevate the overall career profile.
By format — best-of-five: 229–60 (79.2%); best-of-three: 510–202 (71.6%). Slightly better in five-set matches — a positive sign for Grand Slam campaigns specifically.
Historic season: 2016 — 78–9 (89.7%) from 87 matches. A campaign of 78 wins in a single season is among the finest single-season records the Open Era has seen — the clearest benchmark of what is achievable at peak level.
Andy Murray assembled a remarkable 28-match winning streak — a run of that length goes far beyond form and into a different level of dominance.