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Andy Murray takes pride in reaching No. 1 in era of Federer, Nadal and Djokovic

'It's about 12 months of work to get there,' sums up the Scot.

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Andy Murray of Great Britain smiles on court following his walkover in the Mens Singles semi final match against Milos Raonic of Canada on day six of the BNP Paribas Masters at Palais Omnisports de Bercy on November 5, 2016 in Paris, France
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Andy Murray took special pride in reaching the world number one ranking in an era when Roger Federer, Rafa Nadal and Novak Djokovic - arguably some of the greatest players ever - have dominated the game.

The first Briton to achieve the feat, Murray will take over from Serb Djokovic when the ATP rankings are updated on Monday, after his Paris Masters semi-final opponent, Canadian Milos Raonic, withdrew with a leg injury on Saturday.

"That's the most satisfying thing, really. It's been such a difficult thing to do during my career because of how good the guys around me have been, the guys ahead of me," Murray, who will take on American John Isner in Sunday's final, told a news conference. "It has been really, really hard to do it, been really difficult. Obviously they are three of the best players that have ever played the game."

The 29-year-old Murray is the 26th player to reach number one since the creation of the rankings in 1973, but only the fourth man in almost 13 years. Murray patiently fought his way to the top and he was satisfied that his hard work had been rewarded, even if in anti-climatic fashion.

"I felt like getting to No. 1, it wasn't about this week and it wasn't just about last week or a few days here and there. It's about 12 months of work to get there," the Scot said. "It felt obviously a little bit strange when it happened. But everyone was talking about this week, Oh, if you win or do this or whatever.

"Obviously, it's unfortunate the way that it happened today. I would have liked to have done it on the court, but it's been many years of work to get here." Murray was far behind Djokovic after the Serb beat him in the French Open final in June, but an impressive series of victories leading to titles in Wimbledon, Beijing, the Shanghai Masters and Vienna, combined with his rival's loss in the Paris quarter-finals, propelled him to the top.

"I was so far behind in terms of points, and the amount of matches it would take me to win. I never expected to do what I had done after the French Open, so I was really down after I lost that match," Murray said. "But things can turn around quick in sport, and it's just a strange sport. You had Novak losing yesterday to a guy against whom he'd won 14 times in a row. Stuff can turn around quick, and the last few months have been really good."

Murray will now set his sights on the ATP World Tour finals in London from Nov. 13-20. "Now that I have done it, I need to obviously sort of reset my goals and find the next thing to motivate me and try and push me to keep getting better," he said.

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