Inscribed above the doors that lead to Wimbledon's Centre Court is a famous line from Rudyard Kipling's poem, If.
"If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster and treat those two impostors just the same," it reads.
It is there to remind the world's best and their challengers that you are defined by more than the scoreboard.
No-one knows that as well as Andy Murray.
The grass courts at SW19 were the scene of a four-week period in 2012 that changed the way a swathe of the British public thought of Murray. Beaten in the Wimbledon final, he regrouped, returned and won Olympic gold on the same court in front of packed stands.