LONDON: Britain’s world number one men’s tennis player Andy Murray won a record third BBC Sports Personality of the Year award on Sunday after claiming his second Wimbledon title and first ATP World Tour crown in a stellar 2016 season. Murray, who also retained his Olympic men’s singles title in Rio de Janeiro, picked up the BBC trophy again after claiming it in 2013, when he won Wimbledon for the first time, and in 2015. “It’s been a great year for British sport and I am so proud to have been a part of it,” Murray, who led Britain to the Davis Cup semifinals after their first triumph for 79 years in 2015, said via a video link from his training camp in Miami. The 29-year-old Scot, who joined boxer Henry Cooper and racing drivers Damon Hill and Nigel Mansell as the only double winners of the event last year, is now out on his own after a year in which he also reached the Australian and French Open finals. Although Murray lost to Novak Djokovic at Roland Garros, he became the first British man to reach the French Open final since Bunny Austin in 1937. He also lost to Serbian Djokovic at the Australian Open but finished the year as world number one. Triathlete Alistair Brownlee was runner-up and show jumper Nick Skelton third in the annual BBC awards. Brownlee, 28, became the first man to retain the Olympic triathlon title when he took gold in Rio, finishing ahead of Jonny, who claimed the silver. (Reuters)