It's been a wonderful bonus for Murray to have Ivan Lendl back because he was going through a bit of lost patch.
With Amelie Mauresmo it went a bit strange at the end - she couldn't be found anywhere at his tournaments.
There's a fascinating coaching subplot to this final as well. John McEnroe would love to get one over on Lendl. They were feisty rivals when players.
Andy is used to the big match final now. Playing against a Grand Slam rookie is very much in Murray's favour.
Ivan Lendl and John McEnroe used to go toe-to-toe on court in the 1980s, and now their old rivalry has been reignited.
The former Grand Slam winners weren't the best of friends during their playing days (a bit of an understatement).
Lendl won 21 of their 36 tour meetings, while McEnroe won 77 titles compared to his rival's 94, and the American shared a few spiky thoughts on his rival in his autobiography.
But now they seem to have patched things up and meet today as opposing coaches.
Lendl is in his second spell mentoring Andy Murray, while McEnroe recently hooked up with Canadian Milos Raonic to help him with his grass game.
Milos Raonic is attempting to claim a historical landmark even more weighty than the 77-year search for a British men's singles champion that Andy Murray ended in 2014.
If he wins today, he will be the first Canadian man ever to win a Grand Slam title.
He would also become the first player outside the so-called Big Four (Murray, Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal) to win Wimbledon since Lleyton Hewitt's victory way back in 2002.
Serena Williams - like tennis' Marty McFly - just seems to pop up in Champions Dinner shots across all eras.
Head-to-head
Murray v Raonic (14:00 BST)
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Queens to King?
Murray v Raonic
But Andy Murray suddenly found another gear to roar back and claim a record fifth Queen's title with a 6-7 (5-7) 6-4 6-3 win.
That was coach Ivan Lendl's first week back in the job after the pair's reunion. Murray and Lendl mark two are still an unbeaten team
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