The Association of Tennis Professionals, or ATP, was formed in September 1972. The men's professional tour, known as the Grand Prix tennis circuit from 1970 to 1989, was administered by the Men's International Professional Tennis Council (MIPTC) from 1974 –1989, which was a sub-committee of ATP, International Tennis Federation (ITF) and tournament representatives.[1][2] The ATP became the only governing body for men's tennis from 1990.
These are some of the important ATP records since the inception of the ATP in 1972. They may or may not include ITF events such as Davis Cup, since the ATP is not consistent in what they include as "official." For a complete list of Open Era records (1968 – present) see the article Tennis records of the Open Era – men's singles.
Singles (1972 – present)
Grand Slam tournament records
Player totals
Active players in boldface
|
| Finals | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 27 |
2. | Rafael Nadal | 20 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 19 |
Novak Djokovic |
5. | Pete Sampras | 18 |
6. | Björn Borg | 16 |
7. | Jimmy Connors | 15 |
Andre Agassi |
9. | John McEnroe | 11 |
Mats Wilander |
Stefan Edberg |
|
| Semifinals | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 39 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 31 |
3. | Novak Djokovic | 29 |
4. | / Ivan Lendl | 28 |
5. | Andre Agassi | 26 |
6. | Pete Sampras | 23 |
Rafael Nadal |
8. | John McEnroe | 19 |
Stefan Edberg |
10. | Boris Becker | 18 |
Andy Murray |
|
| Quarterfinals | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 47 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 41 |
3. | Andre Agassi | 36 |
4. | Novak Djokovic | 35 |
5. | / Ivan Lendl | 34 |
6. | Pete Sampras | 29 |
Rafael Nadal |
8. | John McEnroe | 26 |
Stefan Edberg |
10. | Andy Murray | 25 |
|
| Match wins | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 302 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 232 |
3. | Andre Agassi | 224 |
4. | / Ivan Lendl | 222 |
5. | Novak Djokovic | 214 |
6. | Pete Sampras | 203 |
7. | Rafael Nadal | 198 |
8. | Stefan Edberg | 178 |
9. | John McEnroe | 167 |
10. | Boris Becker | 163 |
|
|
Consecutive streaks
Active streaks in boldface
|
| Finals | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 10 |
2. | Roger Federer (2) | 8 |
3. | Rafael Nadal | 5 |
Novak Djokovic |
5. | Andre Agassi | 4 |
Novak Djokovic (2) |
7. | Three in a row has been accomplished 15 times | 3 |
|
| Semifinals | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 23 |
2. | Novak Djokovic | 14 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 10 |
4. | Novak Djokovic (2) | 8 |
5. | / Ivan Lendl (2) | 6 |
6. | Boris Becker | 5 |
Novak Djokovic (3) |
Rafael Nadal |
Andy Murray |
Rafael Nadal (2) |
|
| Quarterfinals | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 36 |
2. | Novak Djokovic | 27 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 14 |
4. | Rafael Nadal | 11 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 10 |
David Ferrer |
7. | Andy Murray | 9 |
Andy Murray (2) |
9. | / Ivan Lendl (2) | 7 |
Mats Wilander |
|
| Match wins | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 27 |
Roger Federer (2) |
Novak Djokovic |
4. | Jimmy Connors | 25 |
Pete Sampras |
Rafael Nadal |
7. | Novak Djokovic (2) | 21 |
8. | Björn Borg | 20 |
Björn Borg (2) |
John McEnroe |
Roger Federer (3) |
|
|
Consecutive streaks in non-consecutive tournaments
Player skipped one or more Grand Slam tournaments during his streak
|
| Semifinals | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 11 |
2. | Jimmy Connors (2) | 7 |
3. | Jimmy Connors (3) | 6 |
Björn Borg |
5. | Björn Borg (2) | 5 |
John McEnroe |
7. | Lleyton Hewitt | 4 |
Andy Murray |
9. | Vitas Gerulaitis | 3 |
John McEnroe (2) |
/ Ivan Lendl |
Andre Agassi |
|
| Quarterfinals | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 27 |
2. | Andy Murray | 18 |
3. | Björn Borg | 12 |
4. | Pete Sampras | 11 |
5. | John McEnroe | 9 |
6. | Guillermo Vilas | 8 |
/ Ivan Lendl |
John McEnroe (2) |
9. | Björn Borg (2) | 7 |
Jimmy Connors (2) |
|
Titles per tournament
|
|
|
| US Open | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 5 |
Pete Sampras |
Roger Federer |
4. | John McEnroe | 4 |
5. | / Ivan Lendl | 3 |
|
Consecutive titles per tournament
Finals per tournament
|
|
|
| US Open | # |
1. | / Ivan Lendl | 8 |
Pete Sampras |
3. | Jimmy Connors | 7 |
Roger Federer |
5. | Andre Agassi | 6 |
Novak Djokovic |
|
Consecutive finals per tournament
|
|
|
| US Open | # |
1. | / Ivan Lendl | 8 |
2. | Roger Federer | 6 |
3. | Jimmy Connors | 5 |
4. | Novak Djokovic | 4 |
5. | John McEnroe | 3 |
Pete Sampras |
|
Semifinals per tournament
|
|
|
| US Open | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 14 |
2. | Andre Agassi | 10 |
Roger Federer |
4. | / Ivan Lendl | 9 |
Pete Sampras |
Novak Djokovic |
|
Consecutive semifinals per tournament
|
|
| Wimbledon | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 7 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 6 |
Björn Borg |
Novak Djokovic |
5. | John McEnroe | 5 |
/ Ivan Lendl |
Stefan Edberg |
Andy Murray |
|
| US Open | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 12 |
2. | Novak Djokovic | 9 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 8 |
Roger Federer |
5. | John McEnroe | 5 |
|
Match wins per tournament
|
|
|
| US Open | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 97 |
2. | Andre Agassi | 79 |
3. | Roger Federer | 78 |
4. | / Ivan Lendl | 73 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 71 |
6. | John McEnroe | 65 |
7. | Novak Djokovic | 57 |
8. | Lleyton Hewitt | 47 |
9. | Guillermo Vilas | 43 |
Stefan Edberg |
Michael Chang |
Andy Roddick |
Rafael Nadal |
|
Winning percentage per tournament
|
| French Open | % * | W–L |
1. | Rafael Nadal | 97.22 | 70–2 |
2. | Björn Borg | 96.08 | 49–2 |
3. | Mats Wilander | 83.93 | 47–9 |
4. | Gustavo Kuerten | 81.82 | 36–8 |
5. | Jim Courier | 81.63 | 40–9 |
6. | / Ivan Lendl | 81.54 | 53–12 |
7. | Novak Djokovic | 81.36 | 48–11 |
8. | Roger Federer | 80.25 | 65–16 |
9. | Guillermo Vilas | 77.33 | 58–17 |
10. | Andre Agassi | 76.12 | 51–16 |
* minimum 30 wins |
|
| Wimbledon | % * | W–L |
1. | Björn Borg | 92.73 | 51–4 |
2. | Pete Sampras | 90.00 | 63–7 |
3. | Roger Federer | 88.76 | 79–10 |
4. | Novak Djokovic | 86.67 | 52–8 |
5. | Boris Becker | 85.54 | 71–12 |
6. | John McEnroe | 84.29 | 59–11 |
7. | Andy Murray | 83.64 | 46–9 |
8. | Jimmy Connors | 82.35 | 84–18 |
9. | Rafael Nadal | 81.63 | 40–9 |
10. | Stefan Edberg | 80.33 | 49–12 |
* minimum 30 wins |
|
| US Open | % * | W–L |
1. | Pete Sampras | 88.75 | 71–9 |
2. | Roger Federer | 87.64 | 78–11 |
3. | Novak Djokovic | 86.36 | 57–9 |
4. | Jimmy Connors | 85.09 | 97–17 |
5. | / Ivan Lendl | 84.88 | 73–13 |
6. | John McEnroe | 84.42 | 65–12 |
7. | Rafael Nadal | 82.69 | 43–9 |
8. | Bjorn Borg | 81.63 | 40–9 |
9. | Andre Agassi | 80.61 | 79–19 |
10. | Andy Murray | 80.00 | 40–10 |
* minimum 30 wins |
|
Match win streaks per tournament
|
|
|
| US Open | # | Years |
1. | Roger Federer | 40 | 2004–09 |
2. | / Ivan Lendl | 27 | 1985–88 |
3. | John McEnroe | 25 | 1979–82 |
|
Consecutive sets won per tournament
|
|
|
| US Open | # | Years |
1. | / Ivan Lendl | 26 | 1985–86 |
2. | / Ivan Lendl (2) | 25 | 1986–87 |
3. | Stefan Edberg | 24 | 1991–92 |
4. | Roger Federer | 22 | 2007–08 |
|
Match wins per court type
|
|
| Grass | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 106 |
2. | Roger Federer | 79 |
3. | Boris Becker | 77 |
4. | John McEnroe | 66 |
5. | / Ivan Lendl | 64 |
Stefan Edberg |
7. | Pete Sampras | 63 |
8. | Björn Borg | 56 |
9. | Roscoe Tanner | 54 |
10. | Novak Djokovic | 52 |
|
Winning percentage per court type
|
|
| Grass | % * | W–L |
1. | Pete Sampras | 90.00 | 63–7 |
2. | Björn Borg | 88.89 | 56–7 |
3. | Roger Federer | 88.76 | 79–10 |
4. | Novak Djokovic | 86.67 | 52–8 |
5. | Boris Becker | 83.70 | 77–15 |
6. | Andy Murray | 83.64 | 46–9 |
7. | John McEnroe | 83.54 | 66–13 |
8. | Jimmy Connors | 83.46 | 106–21 |
9. | Stefan Edberg | 82.05 | 64–14 |
10. | Rafael Nadal | 81.63 | 40–9 |
* minimum 30 wins |
|
Career match/finals winning
|
| Finals winning | % | T–F* |
1. | Pete Sampras | 77.78 | 14–4 |
2. | Rafael Nadal | 70.00 | 14–6 |
3. | Björn Borg | 68.75 | 11–5 |
4. | John McEnroe | 63.64 | 7–4 |
Mats Wilander |
6. | Roger Federer | 62.96 | 17–10 |
7. | Boris Becker | 60.00 | 6–4 |
8. | Novak Djokovic | 57.89 | 11–8 |
9. | Stefan Edberg | 54.55 | 6–5 |
10. | Jimmy Connors | 53.33 | 8–7 |
Andre Agassi |
* Minimum 5 titles. |
|
Winning title without losing a set
Career Golden Slam
Player | Tournaments (in completion order) |
Andre Agassi | 1992 Wimbledon, 1994 US Open, 1995 Australian Open, 1996 Olympics, 1999 French Open |
Rafael Nadal | 2005 French Open, 2008 Wimbledon, 2008 Olympics, 2009 Australian Open, 2010 US Open |
Career Grand Slam
Player | Tournaments (in completion order) |
Andre Agassi | 1992 Wimbledon, 1994 US Open, 1995 Australian Open, 1999 French Open |
Roger Federer | 2003 Wimbledon, 2004 Australian Open, 2004 US Open, 2009 French Open |
Rafael Nadal | 2005 French Open, 2008 Wimbledon, 2009 Australian Open, 2010 US Open |
|
Calendar year achievements
Four Majors
3 Slam wins & 1 final | Year |
Roger Federer | 2006 |
Roger Federer (2) | 2007 |
Novak Djokovic | 2015 |
|
2 Slam wins & 2 finals | Year |
Roger Federer | 2009 |
|
Three Majors
|
|
1 Slam win & 2 finals | Year |
Björn Borg | 1981 |
Jim Courier | 1993 |
Roger Federer | 2008 |
Rafael Nadal | 2011 |
Novak Djokovic | 2012 |
Novak Djokovic (2) | 2013 |
|
3 Slam finals (all losses) | Year |
Jimmy Connors | 1975 |
|
Consecutive titles
Three
Two
|
Cons. French Open/Wimbledon | Year |
Björn Borg | 1978 |
Björn Borg (2) | 1979 |
Björn Borg (3) | 1980 |
Rafael Nadal | 2008 |
Roger Federer | 2009 |
Rafael Nadal (2) | 2010 |
|
|
Non-consecutive titles
Three
Two
|
Non cons. Australian & US Open | Year |
John Newcombe | 1973 |
Jimmy Connors * | 1974 |
Mats Wilander * | 1988 |
Roger Federer * | 2004 |
Roger Federer * (2) | 2006 |
Roger Federer * (3) | 2007 |
Novak Djokovic * | 2011 |
Novak Djokovic * (2) | 2015 |
|
|
- * indicates that the player won more than two grand slam tournament titles during that calendar year
Match winning percentage
Other selected achievements
| Cons. 3+ finals seasons | # | Years |
1. | Roger Federer | 4 | 2006-09 |
2. | Novak Djokovic | 3 | 2011-13 |
3. | Jimmy Connors | 2 | 1974-75 |
Bjorn Borg | 1980-81 |
Ivan Lendl | 1986-87 |
Rafael Nadal | 2010-11 |
|
| Cons. 2+ finals seasons | # | Years |
1. | Roger Federer | 6 | 2004-09 |
2. | Ivan Lendl | 5 | 1983-87 |
Rafael Nadal | 2010-14 |
Novak Djokovic | 2011-15 |
5. | Björn Borg | 4 | 1978–81 |
6. | Jim Courier | 3 | 1991-93 |
Pete Sampras | 1993-95 |
Rafael Nadal (2) | 2006–08 |
9. | Jimmy Connors | 2 | 1974-75 |
Guillermo Vilas | 1977-78 |
Jimmy Connors (2) | 1977-78 |
John McEnroe | 1980-81 |
Mats Wilander | 1987-88 |
Stefan Edberg | 1989-90 |
Andy Murray | 2012-13 |
|
| Cons. 1+ finals seasons | # | Years |
1. | / Ivan Lendl | 11 | 1981–91 |
Pete Sampras | 1992–02 |
3. | Roger Federer | 10 | 2003–12 |
Rafael Nadal | 2005–14 |
5. | Björn Borg | 8 | 1974–81 |
6. | John McEnroe | 7 | 1979–85 |
Stefan Edberg | 1987–93 |
Novak Djokovic | 2010–16 |
9. | Jimmy Connors | 5 | 1974–78 |
Andre Agassi | 1999-03 |
|
| Cons. finals won | # | Years |
1. | Pete Sampras | 8 | 1995–00 |
2. | Roger Federer | 7 | 2003–06 |
Rafael Nadal | 2008–11 |
4. | Björn Borg | 4 | 1979–80 |
Pete Sampras (2) | 1993–94 |
Novak Djokovic | 2011–12 |
7. | Jimmy Connors | 3 | 1974 |
Björn Borg (2); (3) | 1974–76; 77–78 |
John McEnroe | 1980–81 |
Mats Wilander | 1983–85 |
Stefan Edberg | 1990–92 |
Andre Agassi | 1999–01 |
Roger Federer (2) | 2006–07 |
Rafael Nadal (2) | 2012–13 |
Novak Djokovic (2) | 2015–16 |
|
| Cons. sets won (all slams) | # | Years |
1. | Roger Federer | 36 | 2006–07 |
2. | John McEnroe | 35 | 1984 |
3. | Björn Borg | 28 | 1980 |
Rafael Nadal | 2010 |
5. | Stefan Edberg | 26 | 1991–92 |
6. | Ilie Năstase | 25 | 1972–73 |
|
ATP career records
Singles titles, finals and semifinals
|
| Finals (Active) | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 136 |
2. | Rafael Nadal | 99 |
3. | Novak Djokovic | 87 |
4. | Andy Murray | 53 |
5. | David Ferrer | 51 |
6. | Tomas Berdych | 29 |
7. | Tommy Haas | 28 |
8. | Juan Martin del Potro | 25 |
Richard Gasquet |
10. | Marin Cilic | 23 |
Tommy Robredo |
Gael Monfils |
|
| Semifinals (Active) | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 180 |
2. | Rafael Nadal | 131 |
3. | Novak Djokovic | 122 |
4. | David Ferrer | 92 |
5. | Andy Murray | 82 |
6. | Tomas Berdych | 66 |
7. | Tommy Haas | 64 |
8. | Tommy Robredo | 51 |
9. | Richard Gasquet | 50 |
10. | Gael Monfils | 49 |
|
Titles per court type
Most titles / finals at a single tournament
Note: Grand Slams are in boldface
# | Titles | Tournament | Years |
9 |
Rafael Nadal | French Open | 2005–08, 10–14 |
8 |
Guillermo Vilas | Buenos Aires | 1973–76, 77 (2), 79, 82 |
Rafael Nadal | Monte-Carlo | 2005–12 |
Rafael Nadal | Barcelona | 2005–09, 11–13 |
Roger Federer | Halle | 2003–06, 08, 13–15 |
7 |
Pete Sampras | Wimbledon | 1993–95, 97–00 |
Roger Federer | Wimbledon | 2003–07, 09, 12 |
Rafael Nadal | Rome | 2005–07, 09–10, 12–13 |
Roger Federer | Dubai | 2003–05, 07, 12, 14–15 |
Roger Federer | Cincinnati | 2005, 07, 09–10, 12, 14–15 |
Roger Federer | Basel | 2006–08, 10–11, 14–15 |
6 | Jimmy Connors | Birmingham | 1974–77, 79–80 |
Björn Borg | French Open | 1974–75, 78–81 |
Balázs Taróczy | Amersfoort | 1976, 78–82 |
Ivan Lendl | Canada | 1980–81, 83, 87–89 |
Andre Agassi | Miami | 1990, 95–96, 01–03 |
Roger Federer | Tour Finals | 2003–04, 06–07, 10–11 |
Novak Djokovic | Beijing | 2009–10, 12–15 |
Novak Djokovic | Australian Open | 2008, 2011–13, 2015–16 |
|
# | Finals | Tournament | Years |
12 | Roger Federer | Basel | 2000–01, 06–15 |
10 |
Guillermo Vilas | Buenos Aires | 1972–76, 77 (2), 79, 81–82 |
Roger Federer | Halle | 2003–06, 08, 10, 12–15 |
Roger Federer | Wimbledon | 2003–09, 12, 14–15 |
Roger Federer | Tour Finals | 2003–07, 10–12, 14–15 |
9 |
Ivan Lendl | Tour Finals | 1980–88 |
Rafael Nadal | Monte-Carlo | 2005–13 |
Rafael Nadal | Rome | 2005–07, 09–14 |
Rafael Nadal | French Open | 2005–08, 10–14 |
Roger Federer | Dubai | 2003–07, 11–12, 14–15 |
8 |
John McEnroe | WCT Finals | 1979–84, 87, 89 |
Ivan Lendl | Canada | 1980–83, 85, 87–89 |
Ivan Lendl | US Open | 1982–89 |
Boris Becker | Tour Finals | 1985–86, 88–89, 92, 94–96 |
Pete Sampras | US Open | 1990, 92–93, 95–96, 00–02 |
Andre Agassi | Miami | 1990, 94–96, 98, 01–03 |
Rafael Nadal | Barcelona | 2005–09, 11–13 |
|
Winning percentage in finals
- Walkovers not to be counted as wins, nor withdrawals as losses.
Matches played / matches won
Match wins per court type
Winning percentage per court type
[4]
- Note that the figures below represent career winning percentages of players that are retired (regular font) as well as current active players (boldface). The latter are subject to change and do not reflect the final figure.
|
|
| Grass | % * | W–L |
1. | Roger Federer | 87.65 | 142–20 |
2. | John McEnroe | 85.61 | 119–20 |
3. | Björn Borg | 84.72 | 61–11 |
4. | Andy Murray | 84.11 | 90–17 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 83.47 | 101–20 |
6. | Jimmy Connors | 83.33 | 170–34 |
7. | Boris Becker | 82.27 | 116–25 |
8. | Novak Djokovic | 81.71 | 67–15 |
9. | Andy Roddick | 79.62 | 86–22 |
10. | Stefan Edberg | 78.57 | 99–27 |
* minimum 50 wins |
|
| Carpet | % * | W–L |
1. | John McEnroe | 87.12 | 318–47 |
2. | / Ivan Lendl | 83.76 | 227–44 |
3. | Björn Borg | 82.41 | 164–35 |
4. | Jimmy Connors | 82.23 | 338–73 |
5. | Boris Becker | 80.06 | 229–57 |
6. | Pete Sampras | 76.43 | 120–37 |
7. | Yevgeny Kafelnikov | 74.37 | 148–51 |
8. | Stefan Edberg | 72.64 | 146–55 |
9. | Goran Ivanišević | 72.31 | 175–67 |
10. | Brian Gottfried | 68.53 | 183–84 |
* minimum 100 wins (not used since 2009) |
|
Playing top 10 ranked opponents
Pressure situations
- ** note: not counting pre-ATP matches
Year-end championships
(1970 – present)
- The best players of all participants on the world tour, within a season, would qualify for the year-end tournament.
- The world tour event began in 1970 and was originally known as the Masters Grand Prix as part of the Grand Prix tennis circuit. It was organised by the International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF).
- In 1990, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) took over the running of the men's tour and replaced the Masters with the ATP Tour World Championship. Between 2000 and 2008, the event was called the Tennis Masters Cup and was endorsed by ITF, ATP and the Grand Slam tournaments (as a result of merging the ATP Tour World Championship with the Grand Slam Cup). In 2009 the Championship was renamed the ATP World Tour Finals.
- Currently, the tournament is organized at the O2 Arena in London, under efficient lighting conditions of play, on blue, medium fast, low bouncing, hard courts.
(1971 – 1989)
- The best players of the season, from a reduced pool of professionals under contract for the WCT circuit, would qualify for the circuit finals.
- The WCT Finals was the season-ending championship for the World Championship Tennis circuit. The event was held annually in Dallas, Texas, and played on indoor carpet courts. The 1971 quarterfinals and semifinals were played in Houston, and final played at Moody Coliseum in Dallas. The 1972–1979 editions were played at Moody Coliseum, and the 1980–1989 tournaments at Reunion Arena in Dallas. The WCT, in 1974, was the first tennis tournament to experiment with electronic line calling
ATP year-end championships titles
ATP year-end championships match wins
|
| Win % | | W–L * |
1. | Ilie Nastase | 88.00 | 22–3 |
2. | Roger Federer | 81.25 | 52–12 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 79.59 | 39–10 |
4. | Boris Becker | 73.46 | 36–13 |
5. | Novak Djokovic | 72.97 | 27–10 |
* minimum 10 matches |
|
| Not losing a set | # | Year |
1. | / Ivan Lendl | 3 | 1982, 1985–86 |
2. | John McEnroe | 1 | 1983 |
|
WCT finals totals
WCT finals match wins
|
| Match winning | % * | W–L |
1. | Ken Rosewall | 85.71 | 6–1 |
2. | John McEnroe | 80.76 | 21–5 |
3. | Jimmy Connors | 76.92 | 10–3 |
/ Ivan Lendl |
5. | Björn Borg | 71.42 | 10–4 |
* minimum 5 matches |
|
| Not losing a set | # | Year |
1. | John McEnroe | 2 | 1981, 1984 |
|
ATP World Tour Masters 1000
After the Grand Slams and the World Tour Finals, the ATP Masters series are nine annual tournaments that hold most importance. They have existed under different names: from 1970 until 1993 they were called the Grand Prix Championship Series. Then until 1999 they were held under the name Mercedes-Benz Super 9. The name Tennis Masters started in 2000: until 2004 the Tennis Masters Series, from 2005 until 2008 the ATP Masters Series, and since then they have been held under the name ATP World Tour Masters 1000.
Career performance
Performance in a season
|
| Finals in a season | # | Year |
1. | Novak Djokovic | 8 | 2015 |
2. | Roger Federer | 6 | 2006 |
Novak Djokovic | 2011 |
Novak Djokovic | 2012 |
Rafael Nadal | 2013 |
6. | Jimmy Connors | 5 | 1976 |
Stefan Edberg | 1987 |
Stefan Edberg | 1990 |
Rafael Nadal | 2005 |
Roger Federer | 2007 |
Rafael Nadal | 2007 |
Rafael Nadal | 2009 |
Novak Djokovic | 2009 |
Rafael Nadal | 2011 |
Roger Federer | 2014 |
|
| Semifinals in a season | # | Year |
1. | Rafael Nadal | 8 | 2013 |
Novak Djokovic | 2015 |
3. | Rafael Nadal | 7 | 2008 |
Rafael Nadal | 2009 |
Novak Djokovic | 2009 |
Novak Djokovic | 2012 |
Andy Murray | 2015 |
8. | John McEnroe | 6 | 1982 |
Roger Federer | 2006 |
Rafael Nadal | 2007 |
Rafael Nadal | 2010 |
Novak Djokovic | 2011 |
Novak Djokovic | 2014 |
|
Match wins
Titles per court type
- Consecutive titles: 4 – Rafael Nadal (2013) and Novak Djokovic (2013–2014, 2014–2015)
- Consecutive finals: 5 – Rafael Nadal (2011, 2013) and Novak Djokovic (2015)
- Consecutive titles in non-consecutive Masters 1000: 5 – Novak Djokovic (2011, 2014–2015)
- Consecutive finals in non-consecutive Masters 1000: 9 – Novak Djokovic (2014–2015)
ATP World Tour 500 series
Includes the predecessors ATP Championship Series (1990–1999) and ATP International Series Gold (2000–2008).
ATP World Tour 250 series
Includes the predecessors ATP World Series (1990–1999) and ATP International Series (2000–2008).
Single season records
|
| 10+ titles seasons | # | Years |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 4 | 1973–74,76,78 |
/ Ivan Lendl | 1981–82,85,89 |
3. | John McEnroe | 3 | 1979,81,84 |
Roger Federer | 2004–06 |
5. | Ilie Năstase | 2 | 1972–73 |
Björn Borg | 1977,79 |
Rafael Nadal | 2005,13 |
Novak Djokovic | 2011,15 |
|
| Cons. 10+ titles seasons | # | Years |
1. | Roger Federer | 3 | 2004–06 |
2. | Ilie Năstase | 2 | 1972–73 |
Jimmy Connors | 1973–74 |
/ Ivan Lendl | 1981–82 |
|
|
|
| Cons. titles on 3 surfaces | # | Years |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 5 | 1972, 1974(2)–76 |
2. | John McEnroe | 3 | 1981, 1983–84 |
/ Ivan Lendl | 1985(2), 1989 |
4. | Björn Borg | 1 | 1979 |
Roger Federer | 2004 |
Rafael Nadal | 2008 |
|
- M/Y = Average number of matches per year
Winning streaks
|
|
| Grass | # | Years |
1. | Roger Federer | 65 | 2003–08 |
2. | Björn Borg | 41 | 1976–81 |
3. | John McEnroe | 23 | 1980–82 |
Pete Sampras | 1994–96 |
Pete Sampras | 1998–00 |
|
| Carpet * | # | Years |
1. | / Ivan Lendl | 66 | 1981–83 |
2. | John McEnroe | 65 | 1983–85 |
3. | Arthur Ashe | 32 | 1975 |
* not used since 2009 |
|
| Player | # | Years |
1. | Guillermo Vilas | 46 | 1977 |
2. | / Ivan Lendl | 44 | 1981–82 |
3. | Novak Djokovic | 43 | 2010–11 |
4. | John McEnroe | 42 | 1984 |
5. | Björn Borg * | 41 | 1979-80 |
Roger Federer | 2006-07 |
7. | Björn Borg * | 35 | 1978 |
Thomas Muster | 1995 |
Roger Federer | 2005 |
|
- * note: Björn Borg's 1979–80 streak totals do not include an additional 7 wins in Davis Cup, Swiss Indoors or Palermo events. His streak total in some sources is 48 during this time period. The 1978 streak totals do not include an additional 14 wins at the Las Vegas Indoor, Davis Cup or the Milan WCT. His streak total should be 49 in 1978.[10][11] Some of this may be confusion or errors over walkovers (which count as neither wins nor losses).
ATP Rankings (since 1973)
Weeks at No.1 & in Top 2, 3
(as of February 15, 2016).[12]
|
| Cons.No. 1 | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 237 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 160 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 157 |
4. | Pete Sampras | 102 |
5. | Novak Djokovic | 85 |
6. | Jimmy Connors (2) | 84 |
7. | Pete Sampras (2) | 82 |
8. | / Ivan Lendl (2) | 80 |
9. | Lleyton Hewitt | 75 |
10. | John McEnroe | 58 |
|
| Top 2 | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 470 |
2. | / Ivan Lendl | 409 |
3. | Rafael Nadal | 403 |
4. | Pete Sampras | 376 |
5. | Jimmy Connors | 356 |
|
| Cons.Top 2 | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 346 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 300 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 280 |
4. | Novak Djokovic | 257 |
5. | Rafael Nadal | 212 |
|
| Top 3 | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 601 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 595 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 499 |
4. | Rafael Nadal | 460 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 457 |
|
| Cons.Top 3 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 507 |
2. | / Ivan Lendl | 497 |
3. | Roger Federer | 432 |
4. | Pete Sampras | 391 |
5. | John McEnroe | 374 |
|
Weeks in Top 4, 5 & 10
(as of February 15, 2016).
| Top 4 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 669 |
2. | Roger Federer | 625 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 510 |
4. | Rafael Nadal | 498 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 484 |
|
| Cons.Top 4 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 651 |
2. | Roger Federer | 522 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 501 |
4. | Novak Djokovic | 450 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 403 |
|
| Top 5 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 705 |
2. | Roger Federer | 652 |
3. | Rafael Nadal | 537 |
4. | / Ivan Lendl | 524 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 511 |
|
| Cons.Top 5 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 658 |
2. | Roger Federer | 548 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 524 |
4. | Rafael Nadal | 522 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 491 |
|
| Top 10 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 817 |
2. | Andre Agassi | 747 |
3. | Roger Federer | 707 |
4. | / Ivan Lendl | 664 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 586 |
|
| Cons.Top 10 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 788 |
2. | Roger Federer | 697 |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 612 |
4. | Pete Sampras | 565 |
Rafael Nadal |
|
Most Years end
(as of end 2015).
| No. 1 | # |
1. | Pete Sampras | 6 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 5 |
Roger Federer |
4. | John McEnroe | 4 |
/ Ivan Lendl |
Novak Djokovic |
|
| Top 2 | # |
1. | Roger Federer | 10 |
2. | Jimmy Connors | 8 |
Rafael Nadal |
4. | John McEnroe | 6 |
/ Ivan Lendl |
Pete Sampras |
|
| Top 3 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 12 |
Roger Federer |
3. | / Ivan Lendl | 9 |
Pete Sampras |
Rafael Nadal |
Novak Djokovic |
|
| Top 4 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 14 |
2. | Roger Federer | 12 |
3. | Rafael Nadal | 10 |
4. | John McEnroe | 9 |
/ Ivan Lendl |
Pete Sampras |
Novak Djokovic |
|
| Top 5 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 14 |
2. | Roger Federer | 12 |
3. | Rafael Nadal | 11 |
4. | / Ivan Lendl | 10 |
Pete Sampras |
|
| Top 10 | # |
1. | Jimmy Connors | 16 |
Andre Agassi |
3. | Roger Federer | 14 |
4. | / Ivan Lendl | 13 |
5. | Pete Sampras | 12 |
|
Other events
Olympic Games (since re-introduction in 1988)
Prize money leaders
Career earning as of February 1, 2016.[13]
Prize money stats
| Career | Prize money (S+D) | Year |
1. | Roger Federer | $97,855,881 | 2016 |
2. | Novak Djokovic | $96,583,278 | 2016 |
3. | Rafael Nadal | $76,023,547 | 2016 |
4. | Andy Murray | $43,601,346 | 2016 |
5. | Pete Sampras | $43,280,489 | 2003 |
6. | Andre Agassi | $31,152,975 | 2006 |
7. | David Ferrer | $28,648,017 | 2016 |
8. | Boris Becker | $25,080,956 | 1999 |
9. | Tomas Berdych | $24,119,144 | 2016 |
10. | Yevgeny Kafelnikov | $23,883,797 | 2003 |
|
| End of Season | Prize money (S+D) | Year |
1. | Novak Djokovic | $21,646,145 | 2015 |
2. | Rafael Nadal | $14,570,935 | 2013 |
3. | Novak Djokovic | $14,250,527 | 2014 |
4. | Novak Djokovic | $12,803,737 | 2012 |
5. | Novak Djokovic | $12,619,803 | 2011 |
6. | Novak Djokovic | $12,447,947 | 2013 |
7. | Rafael Nadal | $10,171,998 | 2010 |
8. | Roger Federer | $10,130,620 | 2007 |
9. | Roger Federer | $9,343,988 | 2014 |
10. | Roger Federer | $8,768,110 | 2009 |
|
Miscellaneous
Aces (since 1991)
Career aces include aces served at all ATP World Tour and Grand Slam matches, but not at Davis Cup. Note that three players listed (Goran Ivanišević, Pete Sampras, and Richard Krajicek) were already active on the ATP Tour before 1991, so their listed ace counts do not fully reflect their career totals.
Tie-breaks
Oldest winners of a singles title
In the following table only the last tournament won by each player is listed.
- Pancho Gonzales: 43 yrs, 4 months, 17 days (1971 Pacific Southwest Open)
- Ken Rosewall: 43 yrs, 0 months, 11 days (1977 Colgate Tennis Patrons Classic)
- Marty Riessen: 37 yrs, 8 months, 30 days (1979 Lafayette)
- Jimmy Connors: 37 years, 1 months, 21 days (1989 Tel Aviv Open)
- Roy Emerson: 36 yrs, 10 months, 28 days (1973 San Francisco)
- Cliff Drysdale: 36 years, 8 months, 3 days (1978 Baltimore)
- Jaime Fillol: 36 years, 5 months, 25 days (1982 Bahia)
- Rod Laver: 36 years, 0 months, 0 days (1974 Volvo International)
- Ivo Karlović: 35 years, 11 months, 25 days (2015 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships)
- Tom Okker: 35 years, 7 months, 21 days (1979 Tel Aviv Open)
Longest gaps between titles (5+ years)
Other
Doubles (1972 – present)
Grand Slam tournament records
Grand Slam Doubles titles and finals
|
| Finals | # |
1. | Mike Bryan | 28 |
Bob Bryan |
3. | Todd Woodbridge | 20 |
4. | Daniel Nestor | 17 |
5. | Mark Woodforde | 16 |
Leander Paes |
7. | Jonas Björkman | 15 |
8. | Anders Järryd | 13 |
9. | John McEnroe | 12 |
Paul Haarhuis |
|
ATP career records
Doubles titles and finals
Matches played / matches won and winning percentage
See also
Notes
References
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| Grand Slam | |
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| Men's |
- Singles
- ATP Tour
- No. 1 rankings
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| Women's |
- Singles
- WTA Tour
- No. 1 rankings
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| Other | |
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