the AntiPusher said:
This big four may all be in the top ten of all time(Fed, Rafa and surely Djoker will but Murray has time also).
Fed and Rafa are already there, and barring a catastrophic collapse Djokovic will be as well. But Murray? He's got a long way to go and it may be too little too late.
Not to "thread-jack," but if we say that Grand Slam totals are the baseline for greatness--among other stats--then Andy has a lot of players to pass. Looking at all of tennis history, there are 29 men with 5+ Slams, only seven of whom have 10+ Slams. I think all seven except for Roy Emerson deserve to be considered top 10, so you've got six spots--Federer, Sampras, Nadal, Borg, Laver and Tilden--that are likely safe as Andy Murray is unlikely to get 8 more Slams. But then you have a log-jam of 20 players with 6-8 Slams, and then add Emerson in the mix, not to mention Pancho Gonzales, who only won two Grand Slams but won 15 Pro Slams and was probably the greatest player of the 50s.
If we look only at the Open Era, which is much easier and cleaner, Andy's chances of being top 10 are much greater. Ahead of him in Slam count are Federer, Nadal, Borg, Connors, Lendl, Agassi, Wilander, Newcombe, Rosewall, Laver, Edberg, Becker, Djokovic, Ashe, Vilas, Courier, Kodes and Kuertan - 18 players in all. If we assume that Andy has at least three more Slams, he passes Ashe, Vilas, Courier, Kodes, and Kuerten - but is still outside the top 10.
My point being, Andy is going to have to win at least 6 Slams, possibly 7 or 8, to be a top 10 player - even just of the Open Era. That 6-8 range is really key, and separates the very best ("inner circle greats") from the next tier ("outer circle greats"). Novak is already in the latter group and is likely to join the former group, while Andy still has to work his way into the latter group. We'll be watching.