ATP Tour records

The ATP Tour is the modern top-level men's professional tennis circuit. It was introduced in 1990 and it's administered by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP). All the records listed here are only for the players who played most of their careers on the ATP Tour and they're based on official ATP data.[1] The names of active players appear in boldface. However, no boldface is used in lists exclusively for active players.

All tournaments

[edit]
  • All totals since the ATP Tour inception in 1990.

Titles & finals

[edit]
  • Active players in bold.
No. Titles
103 Switzerland Roger Federer
99 Serbia Novak Djokovic
92 Spain Rafael Nadal
64 United States Pete Sampras
52 [a] United States Andre Agassi
46 United Kingdom Andy Murray
39 [b] Austria Thomas Muster
32 United States Andy Roddick
31 [c] United States Michael Chang
30 Australia Lleyton Hewitt
No. Finals
157 Switzerland Roger Federer
141 Serbia Novak Djokovic
131 Spain Rafael Nadal
88 United States Pete Sampras
79 [d] United States Andre Agassi
71 United Kingdom Andy Murray
54 [e] United States Michael Chang
52 United States Andy Roddick
Spain David Ferrer
48 Croatia Goran Ivanišević
% W–L Finals record
83.0 39–8 Austria Thomas Muster
78.3 18–5 Italy Jannik Sinner
76.2 16–5 Spain Carlos Alcaraz
75.0 21–7 Russia Nikolay Davydenko
73.1 19–7 Sweden Thomas Enqvist
72.7 64–24 United States Pete Sampras
70.23 92–39 Spain Rafael Nadal
70.21 99–42 Serbia Novak Djokovic
69.0 20–9 Brazil Gustavo Kuerten
66.7 60–30 United States Andre Agassi
minimum 20 finals

Other active players

[edit]
No. Titles
23 Germany Alexander Zverev
21 Croatia Marin Čilić
20 Russia Daniil Medvedev
18 Italy Jannik Sinner
17 Austria Dominic Thiem
16 Switzerland Stan Wawrinka
France Richard Gasquet
Russia Andrey Rublev
Spain Carlos Alcaraz
12 Japan Kei Nishikori
France Gaël Monfils
Norway Casper Ruud
Spain Roberto Bautista Agut
11 Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas
10 Italy Matteo Berrettini
minimum 10 titles
No. Finals
38 Russia Daniil Medvedev
37 Croatia Marin Čilić
36 Germany Alexander Zverev
34 France Gaël Monfils
33 France Richard Gasquet
31 Switzerland Stan Wawrinka
29 Austria Dominic Thiem
Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas
26 Japan Kei Nishikori
Russia Andrey Rublev
23 Norway Casper Ruud
Spain Roberto Bautista Agut
Italy Jannik Sinner
22 Canada Milos Raonic
21 Spain Carlos Alcaraz
Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov
minimum 20 finals
% W–L Finals record
63.9 23–13 Germany Alexander Zverev
61.5 16–10 Russia Andrey Rublev
58.6 17–12 Austria Dominic Thiem
56.8 21–16 Croatia Marin Čilić
52.6 20–18 Russia Daniil Medvedev
52.2 12–11 Norway Casper Ruud
52.2 12–11 Spain Roberto Bautista Agut
51.6 16–15 Switzerland Stan Wawrinka
48.5 16–17 France Richard Gasquet
46.2 12–14 Japan Kei Nishikori
42.9 9–12 Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov
37.9 11–18 Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas
36.4 8–14 Canada Milos Raonic
35.3 12–22 France Gael Monfils
minimum 20 finals

Matches

[edit]
  • Active players in bold .
% W–L Match record
83.5 1124–222 Serbia Novak Djokovic
82.6 1080–228 Spain Rafael Nadal
82.0 1251–275 Switzerland Roger Federer
79.2 734–193 United States Pete Sampras
76.7 735–223 United States Andre Agassi
74.5 403–138 Germany Boris Becker
74.2 612–213 United States Andy Roddick
73.8 739–262 United Kingdom Andy Murray
73.3 423–154 Sweden Stefan Edberg
71.6 439–174 Argentina Juan Martín del Potro
minimum 400 wins
No. Matches won
1,251 Switzerland Roger Federer
1,124 Serbia Novak Djokovic
1,080 Spain Rafael Nadal
739 United Kingdom Andy Murray
735 United States Andre Agassi [f]
734 United States Pete Sampras [g]
Spain David Ferrer
640 Czech Republic Tomáš Berdych
616 Australia Lleyton Hewitt
612 United States Andy Roddick
No. Matches played
1,526 Switzerland Roger Federer
1,346 Serbia Novak Djokovic
1,308 Spain Rafael Nadal
1,111 Spain David Ferrer
1,009 France Richard Gasquet
1,006 Spain Fernando Verdasco
1,001 United Kingdom Andy Murray
996 Spain Feliciano López
982 Czech Republic Tomáš Berdych
956 United States Andre Agassi [h]

Other active players

[edit]
% W–L Match record
78.9 209–56 Spain Carlos Alcaraz
76.7 263–80 Italy Jannik Sinner
70.7 379–157 Russia Daniil Medvedev
70.0 463–198 Germany Alexander Zverev
67.6 345–165 Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas
67.5 383–184 Canada Milos Raonic
66.6 441–221 Japan Kei Nishikori
65.7 188–98 Italy Matteo Berrettini
64.8 258–140 Norway Casper Ruud
64.5 335–184 Russia Andrey Rublev
minimum 100 wins
No. Matches won
606 France Richard Gasquet
588 Croatia Marin Čilić
578 Switzerland Stan Wawrinka
565 France Gaël Monfils
463 Germany Alexander Zverev
459 Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov
441 Japan Kei Nishikori
426 Italy Fabio Fognini
417 Spain Roberto Bautista Agut
383 Canada Milos Raonic
No. Matches played
941 Switzerland Stan Wawrinka
925 Croatia Marin Čilić
900 France Gaël Monfils
815 Italy Fabio Fognini
750 Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov
684 Spain Roberto Bautista Agut
662 Japan Kei Nishikori
661 Germany Alexander Zverev
646 France Adrian Mannarino
612 Spain Albert Ramos Vinolas

Big Titles

[edit]

The 'Big Titles' are the Grand Slams, the ATP Masters, the ATP Finals and the Olympics.[2]

No. Big Titles
72 Serbia Novak Djokovic
59 Spain Rafael Nadal
54 Switzerland Roger Federer
30 United States Pete Sampras
27 United States Andre Agassi
No. Finals
106 Serbia Novak Djokovic
92 Switzerland Roger Federer
86 Spain Rafael Nadal
43 United States Pete Sampras
United States Andre Agassi
% W–L Finals record
69.8 30–13 United States Pete Sampras
68.6 59–27 Spain Rafael Nadal
67.9 72–34 Serbia Novak Djokovic
62.8 27–16 United States Andre Agassi
58.7 54–38 Switzerland Roger Federer
minimum 40 finals

Big Titles sweep

[edit]
  • The event at which the sweep was completed indicated in bold.
Player AU FR WB US YEC OG IW MIA MON MAD ROM CAN CIN SHA PAR
Serbia Novak Djokovic[3] 2008 2016 2011 2011 2008 2024 2008 2007 2013 2011 2008 2007 2018 2012 2009

ITF events

[edit]

Grand Slam tournaments

[edit]

Olympic games

[edit]

ATP Finals championship

[edit]
No. Titles
7 Serbia Novak Djokovic
6 Switzerland Roger Federer
5 United States Pete Sampras
2 Germany Boris Becker
Australia Lleyton Hewitt
Germany Alexander Zverev
No. Finals
10 Switzerland Roger Federer
9 Serbia Novak Djokovic
6 United States Pete Sampras
4 Germany Boris Becker
United States Andre Agassi
No. Consecutive titles Years
4 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2012–15
2 United States Pete Sampras 1996–97
Australia Lleyton Hewitt 2001–02
Switzerland Roger Federer 2003–04
Switzerland Roger Federer 2006–07
Switzerland Roger Federer 2010–11
Serbia Novak Djokovic 2022–23

ATP Masters tournaments

[edit]
No. Titles
40 Serbia Novak Djokovic
36 Spain Rafael Nadal
28 Switzerland Roger Federer
17 United States Andre Agassi
14 United Kingdom Andy Murray
11 United States Pete Sampras
8 Austria Thomas Muster
7 United States Michael Chang
Germany Alexander Zverev
6 Russia Daniil Medvedev
No. Finals
59 Serbia Novak Djokovic
53 Spain Rafael Nadal
50 Switzerland Roger Federer
22 United States Andre Agassi
21 United Kingdom Andy Murray
19 United States Pete Sampras
12 Germany Alexander Zverev
11 Germany Boris Becker
10 Austria Thomas Muster
Brazil Gustavo Kuerten
Russia Daniil Medvedev
No. Titles in a season Year
6 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2015
5 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2011
Spain Rafael Nadal 2013
4 Switzerland Roger Federer 2005
Spain Rafael Nadal
Switzerland Roger Federer 2006
Serbia Novak Djokovic 2014
Serbia Novak Djokovic 2016

Career Golden Masters

[edit]
  • The event at which the Golden Masters was completed indicated in bold.
Player IW MIA MON MAD ROM CAN CIN SHA PAR
Serbia Novak Djokovic[4] 2008 2007 2013 2011 2008 2007 2018 2012 2009
2011 2011 2015 2016 2011 2011 2020 2013 2013

ATP 500 tournaments

[edit]

This is the class of tournaments in which the winner earns 500 ATP ranking points. This format began in 2009.

No. Titles
24 Switzerland Roger Federer
23 Spain Rafael Nadal
15 Serbia Novak Djokovic
12 United States Pete Sampras
10 Spain David Ferrer
9 Germany Boris Becker
United Kingdom Andy Murray
Argentina Juan Martín del Potro
8 Sweden Stefan Edberg
7 Croatia Goran Ivanišević
No. Finals
31 Switzerland Roger Federer
29 Spain Rafael Nadal
19 Spain David Ferrer
18 Serbia Novak Djokovic
14 Germany Boris Becker
13 United States Pete Sampras
Argentina Juan Martín del Potro
12 Sweden Stefan Edberg
Croatia Goran Ivanišević
Japan Kei Nishikori
No. Titles in a season Year
4 Germany Boris Becker 1990
Sweden Stefan Edberg 1991
Argentina Juan Martín del Potro 2013
3 Czechoslovakia Ivan Lendl 1990
United States Pete Sampras 1996
Spain Rafael Nadal 2005
Serbia Novak Djokovic 2009
Spain David Ferrer 2015
Switzerland Roger Federer
United Kingdom Andy Murray 2016
Switzerland Roger Federer 2019
Austria Dominic Thiem
Russia Andrey Rublev 2020

ATP 250 tournaments

[edit]

This is the class of tournaments in which the winner earns 250 ATP ranking points. This format began in 2009.

  • The records include the equivalent former classes called the ATP World Series (1990–99) and ATP International Series (2000–08).
No. Titles
26 Austria Thomas Muster
25 Switzerland Roger Federer
22 Australia Lleyton Hewitt
21 United States Andy Roddick
20 United States Pete Sampras
19 United States Michael Chang
Russia Yevgeny Kafelnikov
United States Andre Agassi
17 United Kingdom Andy Murray
Croatia Marin Čilić
No. Finals
34 Switzerland Roger Federer
32 Austria Thomas Muster
United States Andy Roddick
30 United States Michael Chang
Australia Lleyton Hewitt
29 United States Pete Sampras
Russia Yevgeny Kafelnikov
28 Spain Carlos Moyá
France Richard Gasquet
27 United States Andre Agassi
Croatia Marin Čilić
No. Titles in a season Year
7 Austria Thomas Muster 1993
6 Spain Alberto Berasategui 1994
Austria Thomas Muster 1995
5 Spain Félix Mantilla 1997
United States Andy Roddick 2005
United States James Blake 2006
Norway Casper Ruud 2021

ATP rankings

[edit]
No. Weeks at No. 1
428 Serbia Novak Djokovic
310 Switzerland Roger Federer
286 United States Pete Sampras
209 Spain Rafael Nadal
101 United States Andre Agassi
80 Australia Lleyton Hewitt
72 Sweden Stefan Edberg
58 United States Jim Courier
43 Brazil Gustavo Kuerten
41 United Kingdom Andy Murray
minimum 40 weeks
No. Year-end No. 1
8 Serbia Novak Djokovic
6 United States Pete Sampras
5  Switzerland  Roger Federer
Spain Rafael Nadal
2 Sweden Stefan Edberg
Australia Lleyton Hewitt
1 United States Jim Courier
United States Andre Agassi
Brazil Gustavo Kuerten
United States Andy Roddick
United Kingdom Andy Murray
Spain Carlos Alcaraz
Italy Jannik Sinner

Miscellaneous

[edit]

Top 10 head-to-head record

[edit]
  • minimum 50 wins (correct as of 2024 ATP Finals )
vs. Top 10[5] Wins Played Win % W–L Played %
Serbia Novak Djokovic[6] 259 375 69.1 259–116 27.9%
Switzerland Roger Federer 224 347 64.6 224–123 22.7%
Spain Rafael Nadal 186 291 63.9 186–105 22.2%
United States Pete Sampras 122 189 64.6 122–67 20.4%
United States Andre Agassi 105 178 59.0 105–73 18.7%
United Kingdom Andy Murray 105 201 52.2 105–96 20.1%
Australia Lleyton Hewitt 65 138 47.1 65–73 15.7%
Germany Boris Becker 64 106 60.4 64–42 19.6%
Switzerland Stan Wawrinka[7] 63 165 38.2 63–102 17.6%
Croatia Goran Ivanišević 57 130 43.8 57–73 14.9%
vs. Top 5 Wins Played Win % W–L Played %
Serbia Novak Djokovic[8] 123 203 60.6 123–80 15.1%
Switzerland Roger Federer 104 179 58.1 104–75 11.7%
Spain Rafael Nadal 93 156 59.6 93–63 11.9%
United States Andre Agassi 62 106 58.5 62–44 11.1%
United States Pete Sampras 60 95 63.2 60–35 10.2%
United Kingdom Andy Murray 53 124 42.7 53–71 12.4%
Germany Boris Becker 39 65 60.0 39–26 12%
Australia Lleyton Hewitt 35 87 40.2 35–52 9.9%
Argentina Juan Martin Del Potro 31 89 34.8 31–58 14.5%
Croatia Goran Ivanišević 30 71 42.3 30–41 8.2%

Unbeaten streaks

[edit]
▲ indicates active streaks.
No. Best season start Year
41–0 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2011
26–0 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2020
20–0 Spain Rafael Nadal 2022
17–0 United States Pete Sampras 1997
Serbia Novak Djokovic 2013
Switzerland Roger Federer 2018
16-0 Italy Jannik Sinner 2024
No. Winning streak Years
43 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2010–11
41 Switzerland Roger Federer 2006–07
35 Austria Thomas Muster 1995
Switzerland Roger Federer 2005
32 Spain Rafael Nadal 2008
29 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2019–20

Titles per consecutive seasons

[edit]
Multiple titles Cons. years
Spain Rafael Nadal 18 2005–22
Serbia Novak Djokovic 2006–23
United States Pete Sampras 11 1990–00
Switzerland Roger Federer 2002–12
United Kingdom Andy Murray 10 2007–16
1+ title Cons. years
Spain Rafael Nadal 19 2004–22
Serbia Novak Djokovic 2006–24
Switzerland Roger Federer 15 2001–15
United States Andy Roddick 12 2001–12
United Kingdom Andy Murray 2006–17

Prize money

[edit]

Prize money has increased throughout the Open Era, in some cases greatly in a short time span. For example, the Australian Open winner received A$916,000 in 2004 and received A$3,150,000 in 2024.[9][10]

  • Career totals include doubles prize money and are not inflation-adjusted.[11]
Prize money Career Ending
$185,065,269 Serbia Novak Djokovic Active
$134,946,100 Spain Rafael Nadal 2024
$130,594,339 Switzerland Roger Federer 2022
$64,687,542 United Kingdom Andy Murray 2024
$47,543,924 Germany Alexander Zverev Active
$43,764,163 Russia Daniil Medvedev Active
$43,280,489 United States Pete Sampras 2002
$37,250,116 Switzerland Stan Wawrinka Active
$36,876,485 Spain Carlos Alcaraz Active
$33,989,984 Italy Jannik Sinner Active


Prize money Single season Year
$21,146,145 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2015
$16,946,149 Italy Jannik Sinner 2024
$16,349,701 United Kingdom Andy Murray 2016
$16,349,586 Spain Rafael Nadal 2019
$15,967,184 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2018
$15,952,044 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2023
$15,864,000 Spain Rafael Nadal 2017
$15,196,504 Spain Carlos Alcaraz 2023
$14,570,935 Spain Rafael Nadal 2013
$14,250,527 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2014
  • Correct as of 25 November 2024.

Youngest and oldest

[edit]
  • Since the introduction of the ATP Tour in 1990.

Longest matches

[edit]
Grand Slam match
2010 Wimbledon R128
11 hours and 5 minutes[12]
United States John Isner 6 3 67 77 70
France Nicolas Mahut 4 6 79 63 68
Grand Slam final
2012 Australian Open final
5 hours and 53 minutes[13]
Serbia Novak Djokovic 5 6 6 65 7
Spain Rafael Nadal 7 4 2 77 5

Best-of-three sets

[edit]
Match
2009 Madrid Open semifinal
4 hours and 2 minutes[14]
Spain Rafael Nadal 3 7 7
Serbia Novak Djokovic 6 65 69
Final
2023 Cincinnati Masters final
3 hours and 48 minutes[15]
Serbia Novak Djokovic 5 79 77
Spain Carlos Alcaraz 7 67 64
Match (no tiebreaker in final set)
2012 Olympics semifinal
4 hours and 26 minutes[16]
Switzerland Roger Federer 3 7 19
Argentina Juan Martín del Potro 6 65 17

Statistics leaders

[edit]
Correct as of 2024 Shanghai Masters .

Deciding sets

[edit]
% W–L Deciding set record[17][18]
72.2 151–58 Japan Kei Nishikori
72.0 216–84 Serbia Novak Djokovic
69.3 160–71 United States Pete Sampras
68.8 185–84 Spain Rafael Nadal
68.5 124–57 Austria Thomas Muster
67.5 189–91 United Kingdom Andy Murray
67.3 103–50 Germany Boris Becker
66.0 192–99 Russia Yevgeny Kafelnikov
65.2 129–69 United States Andy Roddick
64.7 235–128 Switzerland Roger Federer
minimum 100 wins
% W–L 5th set record[19][20]
78.4 40–11 Serbia Novak Djokovic
77.8 28–8 Japan Kei Nishikori
77.3 17–5 Spain Tommy Robredo
70.4 19–8 Germany Boris Becker
70.0 21–9 Czech Republic Tomáš Berdych
69.6 32–14 United States Pete Sampras
69.2 27–12 South Africa Wayne Ferreira
69.0 29–13 Sweden Jonas Björkman
68.3 28–13 Russia Marat Safin
68.2 15–7 Australia Mark Philippoussis
minimum 15 wins

Tiebreaks

[edit]
% W–L Tiebreak record Played
66.2 337–172 Serbia Novak Djokovic 509
65.4 466–247 Switzerland Roger Federer 713
63.2 316–184 United States Pete Sampras 500
62.1 303–185 United States Andy Roddick 488
60.6 264–172 Spain Rafael Nadal 436
60.2 505–334 United States John Isner 839
57.8 231–169 France Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 400
57.6 269–198 Croatia Goran Ivanišević 467
55.4 257–207 United Kingdom Greg Rusedski 464
54.6 219–182 South Africa Kevin Anderson 401
minimum 400 played

Aces

[edit]
No. Career aces[21][22]
14,470 United States John Isner
13,728 Croatia Ivo Karlović
11,478 Switzerland Roger Federer
10,261 Spain Feliciano López
10,237 Croatia Goran Ivanišević
9,074 United States Andy Roddick
8,879 United States Sam Querrey
8,858 United States Pete Sampras
8,445 Canada Milos Raonic
8,155 Croatia Marin Čilić
No. Aces in a season Year
1,477 Croatia Goran Ivanišević 1996
1,447 Croatia Ivo Karlović 2015
1,318 Croatia Ivo Karlović 2007
1,260 United States John Isner 2015
1,213 United States John Isner 2018
1,185 Croatia Ivo Karlović 2014
1,159 United States John Isner 2016
1,156 Croatia Goran Ivanišević 1994
1,131 Croatia Ivo Karlović 2016
1,123 United States John Isner 2017

Doubles

[edit]

All tournaments

[edit]

Titles and finals

[edit]
No. Titles
124 United States Mike Bryan
119 United States Bob Bryan
91 Canada Daniel Nestor
83 Australia Todd Woodbridge
63 Australia Mark Woodforde
55 The Bahamas Mark Knowles
54 Netherlands Paul Haarhuis
Sweden Jonas Björkman
India Leander Paes
Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
No. Finals
186 United States Mike Bryan
178 United States Bob Bryan
151 Canada Daniel Nestor
113 Australia Todd Woodbridge
99 The Bahamas Mark Knowles
97 Sweden Jonas Björkman
Belarus Max Mirnyi
India Leander Paes
96 India Mahesh Bhupathi
94 Netherlands Paul Haarhuis
No. Team titles
119 United States Mike Bryan United States Bob Bryan
61 Australia Todd Woodbridge Australia Mark Woodforde
44 Spain Emilio Sánchez Spain Sergio Casal
40 Canada Daniel Nestor The Bahamas Mark Knowles
39 Netherlands Paul Haarhuis Netherlands Jacco Eltingh

Matches

[edit]
No. Matches won
1,150 United States Mike Bryan
1,109 United States Bob Bryan
1,062 Canada Daniel Nestor
780 Belarus Max Mirnyi
770 India Leander Paes
768 [i] Australia Todd Woodbridge
744 The Bahamas Mark Knowles
712 Sweden Jonas Björkman
710 Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
687 India Mahesh Bhupathi
No. Matches played
1,550 Canada Daniel Nestor
1,523 United States Mike Bryan
1,468 United States Bob Bryan
1,227 India Leander Paes
1,225 Belarus Max Mirnyi
1,137 Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
1,125 The Bahamas Mark Knowles
1,117 [j] Czech Republic Cyril Suk
1,066 Brazil Marcelo Melo
1,051 India Mahesh Bhupathi

ATP Finals

[edit]
No. Titles
5 United States Mike Bryan
4 Canada Daniel Nestor
United States Bob Bryan
2 United States Rick Leach
Australia Todd Woodbridge
Australia Mark Woodforde
Belarus Max Mirnyi
Netherlands Jacco Eltingh
Netherlands Paul Haarhuis
Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
Sweden Jonas Björkman
Finland Henri Kontinen
Australia John Peers
France Pierre-Hugues Herbert
France Nicolas Mahut
No. Finals
7 United States Mike Bryan
6 Canada Daniel Nestor
United States Bob Bryan
4 Australia Todd Woodbridge
Australia Mark Woodforde
Belarus Max Mirnyi
No. Team titles
4 United States Mike Bryan United States Bob Bryan
2 Australia Todd Woodbridge Australia Mark Woodforde
Netherlands Jacco Eltingh Netherlands Paul Haarhuis
Canada Daniel Nestor Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
Finland Henri Kontinen Australia John Peers
France Pierre-Hugues Herbert France Nicolas Mahut

ATP Masters tournaments

[edit]
No. Titles
39 United States Bob Bryan
United States Mike Bryan
28 Canada Daniel Nestor
18 Australia Todd Woodbridge
17 The Bahamas Mark Knowles
No. Finals
59 United States Bob Bryan
United States Mike Bryan
47 Canada Daniel Nestor
30 India Mahesh Bhupathi
29 The Bahamas Mark Knowles
Belarus Max Mirnyi
No. Team titles
39 United States Mike Bryan United States Bob Bryan
15 Canada Daniel Nestor The Bahamas Mark Knowles
10 Canada Daniel Nestor Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
14 Australia Todd Woodbridge Australia Mark Woodforde
8 Netherlands Jacco Eltingh Netherlands Paul Haarhuis

500 series tournaments

[edit]
No. Titles
20 Canada Daniel Nestor
17 Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
15 The Bahamas Mark Knowles
14 United States Bob Bryan
United States Mike Bryan
No. Finals
31 Canada Daniel Nestor
26 United States Mike Bryan
25 Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
24 United States Bob Bryan
23 Brazil Marcelo Melo
No. Team titles
14 United States Mike Bryan United States Bob Bryan
11 Australia Todd Woodbridge Australia Mark Woodforde
9 Canada Daniel Nestor The Bahamas Mark Knowles
7 Brazil Marcelo Melo Poland Łukasz Kubot
6 Canada Daniel Nestor Serbia Nenad Zimonjić
Colombia Juan Sebastián Cabal Colombia Robert Farah

250 series tournaments

[edit]
No. Titles
47 United States Mike Bryan
45 United States Bob Bryan
34 Australia Todd Woodbridge
30 Canada Daniel Nestor
29 Netherlands Paul Haarhuis
No. Finals
61 United States Mike Bryan
58 United States Bob Bryan
49 Australia Todd Woodbridge
Canada Daniel Nestor
47 Sweden Jonas Björkman
No. Team titles
45 United States Mike Bryan United States Bob Bryan
22 Australia Todd Woodbridge Australia Mark Woodforde
19 Netherlands Jacco Eltingh Netherlands Paul Haarhuis
17 Spain Emilio Sánchez Spain Sergio Casal
13 Canada Daniel Nestor The Bahamas Mark Knowles
India Mahesh Bhupathi India Leander Paes

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ 8 titles before the ATP Tour era.
  2. ^ 5 titles before the ATP Tour era.
  3. ^ 3 titles before the ATP Tour era.
  4. ^ 11 finals before the ATP Tour era.
  5. ^ 4 finals before the ATP Tour era.
  6. ^ 137 match wins before the ATP Tour era.
  7. ^ 28 match wins before the ATP Tour era.
  8. ^ 190 matches played before the ATP Tour era.
  9. ^ 14 match wins and 35 matches played before the ATP Tour era.
  10. ^ 30 matches played before the ATP Tour era.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Performance Zone - ATP Tour - Tennis". ATP Tour. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  2. ^ "Djokovic extends big titles lead with Olympic gold". Association of Tennis Professionals. August 4, 2024. Retrieved August 5, 2024.
  3. ^ "Novak Djokovic Stands Alone With Big Titles Sweep". ATP. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
  4. ^ "Novak Completes Career Golden Masters". ATP. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  5. ^ "Versus Top 10".
  6. ^ "Tennis Top 10 wins". tennisabstract.com. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  7. ^ "Tennis Top 10 wins". tennisabstract.com. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  8. ^ "Tennis Top 5 wins". tennisabstract.com. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  9. ^ "Career Prize Money" (PDF). ATP.
  10. ^ "Australian Open Prize Money 2024". Perfect Tennis. Archived from the original on 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  11. ^ "Adjusted for inflation, the ATP's current elite are the best paid ever". ubitennis.net. 11 January 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  12. ^ 2010 Wimbledon R128
  13. ^ 2012 Australian Open Final
  14. ^ "Rafa Nadal vs Novak Djokovic EPIC! | Madrid 2009 Extended Tennis Highlights". Youtube.com. 10 May 2022. Archived from the original on 13 January 2021. Retrieved 22 May 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ @atptour (August 21, 2023). "The longest match in tournament history, @DjokerNole prevails 5-7 7-6(7) 7-6(4) in a classic we'll never forget!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  16. ^ "Roger Federer Wins Olympic Semi-Final v Juan Martin Del Potro | London 2012 Olympics". www.youtube.com. 4 August 2012. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  17. ^ "Top Performers". Ultimate Tennis Statistics. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
  18. ^ "Deciding Set &No.124; ATP Tour &No.124; Tennis".
  19. ^ "Top Performers". Ultimate Tennis Statistics. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
  20. ^ "5th Set Record". atptour.com. ATP. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  21. ^ "Isner breaks all time record for most aces in tennis". Tennis Majors. July 2022. Archived from the original on 1 September 2022.
  22. ^ "Individual Match Stats | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP Tour. Retrieved 2024-02-02.