Andy Murray will be honoured by Wimbledon with a special statue at the All England Club in two years’ time.
Murray, who won the men’s singles at Wimbledon amid joyous scenes in 2013 and 2016, retired from professional tennis last year after a fifth and final Olympic appearance.
Fred Perry, the last British winner of the men’s singles at Wimbledon prior to Murray, has a full-length statue outside Centre Court and Wimbledon chairperson Debbie Jevans confirmed plans are in place for Murray to receive a similar honour.
The plan is for the statue to be unveiled in 2027, the 150th anniversary of The Championships.
“We looked at Rafa Nadal having that sort of plaque unveiled to him at Roland Garros which was all very special. We thought, what do we want for Andy?” Jevans told the Performance People podcast.
“We had a great celebration for Andy when he played his last match [in 2024], which was on Centre Court.
“And then when he came, when all the old players came, and they greeted him and Sue Barker interviewed him. So, we did a similar thing for him here last year but we are looking to have a statue of Andy Murray here and we’re working closely with him and his team.
“And the ambition is that we would unveil that on the 150th anniversary of our first championships, which was 1877, so would be in 2027.
“It will be lovely and really special. So he’s got to rightly be very involved in that and he and his team will be.”

As well as Perry, past British champions such as Virginia Wade, Kitty Godfree, Dorothy Round, Angela Mortimer and Ann Jones have all been recognised with statues, plaques or busts around the All England Club.

Get 4 months free with ExpressVPN
Servers in 105 Countries
Superior Speeds
Works on all your devices
Try for free
ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.

Get 4 months free with ExpressVPN
Servers in 105 Countries
Superior Speeds
Works on all your devices
Try for free
ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.
Murray, 38, is a three-Grand Slam champion, having won his first major at the 2012 US Open, a two-time Olympic gold medal winner and led Great Britain to the 2015 Davis Cup.
He also reached world No 1 at the end of 2016 and has won the Sports Personality of the Year award a record three times.
Wimbledon 2025 starts on Monday 30 June.