Andy Murray is hopeful that he can push on from his landmark 500th win on the ATP Tour by claiming further success in the years to come.
The 27-year-old became the first Briton to reach the milestone on Tuesday evening, having edged out Kevin Anderson 6-4 3-6 6-3 in the fourth round of the Miami Open.
Only 46 men have previously hit the 500-victory mark since the Open era began, and Murray was quick to set himself a new target as he prepares to take on Dominic Thiem in the last eight of the tournament.
"I've been through quite a lot of pain on that court in the last few years," he told BBC Sport. "I hope I can use this as motivation to win some more and I hope today's match wasn't the last one.
"There's different ways of judging the success of someone's career, but winning 800-900 matches is something that's happened very rarely and a difficult thing to do - so it gives you something to aim at."
It has taken Murray just under 10 years to reach the impressive tally.