The Open Era is the current era of professional tennis . It began in 1968 when the Grand Slam tournaments allowed professional players to compete with amateurs, ending the division that had persisted since the dawn of the sport in the 19th century. The first open tournament was the 1968 British Hard Court Championships held in April,[ 1] followed by the inaugural open Grand Slam tournament, the 1968 French Open , a month later.[ 2] Unless otherwise sourced, all records are based on data from the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP),[ 3] the International Tennis Federation (ITF),[ 4] and the official websites of the four Grand Slam tournaments. All rankings-related records are based on ATP rankings , which began in 1973. The names of active players appear in boldface .
Grand Slam tournaments [ edit ]
Updated as of 2024 US Open . Where there are multiple entries for the same record, entrants are ranked on the basis of who achieved the record in chronological order.
#
Finals
37
Novak Djokovic
31
Roger Federer
30
Rafael Nadal
19
Ivan Lendl
18
Pete Sampras
16
Björn Borg
15
Jimmy Connors
Andre Agassi
11
John McEnroe
Mats Wilander
Stefan Edberg
Andy Murray
#
Semifinals
49
Novak Djokovic
46
Roger Federer
38
Rafael Nadal
31
Jimmy Connors
28
Ivan Lendl
26
Andre Agassi
23
Pete Sampras
21
Andy Murray
19
John McEnroe
Stefan Edberg
#
Quarterfinals
60
Novak Djokovic
58
Roger Federer
47
Rafael Nadal
41
Jimmy Connors
36
Andre Agassi
34
Ivan Lendl
30
Andy Murray
29
Pete Sampras
26
John McEnroe
Stefan Edberg
#
Matches played
429
Roger Federer
428
Novak Djokovic
358
Rafael Nadal
282
Jimmy Connors
277
Andre Agassi
271
Ivan Lendl
257
Andy Murray
241
Pete Sampras
227
Stan Wawrinka
225
Stefan Edberg
minimum 200 matches
%
W–L
Match record
89.2
141–17
Björn Borg
88.1
377–51
Novak Djokovic
87.7
314–44
Rafael Nadal
86.0
369–60
Roger Federer
84.2
203–38
Pete Sampras
82.6
233–49
Jimmy Connors
81.9
222–49
Ivan Lendl
81.5
167–38
John McEnroe
80.9
224–53
Andre Agassi
80.3
163–40
Boris Becker
minimum 100 wins
%
W–L
Finals record
100
4–0
Carlos Alcaraz
83.3
5–1
Rod Laver
77.8
14–4
Pete Sampras
73.3
22–8
Rafael Nadal
71.4
5–2
John Newcombe
68.8
11–5
Björn Borg
64.9
24–13
Novak Djokovic
64.5
20–11
Roger Federer
63.6
7–4
John McEnroe
7–4
Mats Wilander
minimum 4 titles
Grand Slam tournament achievements [ edit ]
Non-Calendar Year Grand Slam [ edit ]
Minimum at each Grand Slam tournament totals [ edit ]
#
Semifinals
11
Novak Djokovic
8
Roger Federer
7
Rafael Nadal
5
Ivan Lendl
Andre Agassi
3
Andy Murray
2
Ken Rosewall
Jimmy Connors
Boris Becker
#
Quarterfinals
13
Novak Djokovic
12
Roger Federer
8
Rafael Nadal
7
Ivan Lendl
Andre Agassi
6
Andy Murray
4
John McEnroe
Stefan Edberg
Boris Becker
Pete Sampras
2+ titles
Novak Djokovic (7)
2011, 15–16, 18–19, 21, 23
Roger Federer (6)
2004–07, 09, 17
Rafael Nadal (6)
2008, 10, 13, 17, 19, 22
Pete Sampras (4)
1993–95, 97
Björn Borg (3)
1978–80
Jimmy Connors (2)
1974, 82
John McEnroe (2)
1981, 84
Ivan Lendl (2)
1986, 87
Rod Laver
1969
John Newcombe
1973
Guillermo Vilas
1977
Mats Wilander
1988
Boris Becker
1989
Jim Courier
1992
Andre Agassi
1999
Carlos Alcaraz
2024
Jannik Sinner
2024
4 finals
Roger Federer (3)
2006–07, 09
Novak Djokovic (3)
2015, 21, 23
Rod Laver
1969
Ivan Lendl *
1986
* No Australian Open in 1986. Ivan Lendl made all 3 available finals .
4 semifinals
Novak Djokovic (6)
2011–13, 15, 21, 23
Roger Federer (5)
2005–09
Rafael Nadal (2)
2008, 19
Ivan Lendl
1987
Rod Laver
1969
Tony Roche
Andy Murray
2011
Ivan Lendl *
1986
* No Australian Open in 1986. Ivan Lendl made all 3 available SFs .
4 quarterfinals
Roger Federer (8)
2005–12
Novak Djokovic (8)
2010–15, 21, 23
Rafael Nadal (5)
2008, 10–11, 18–19
Andy Murray (4)
2011–12, 14, 16
Ivan Lendl* (3)
1983, 87–88
Andre Agassi (2)
1995, 2001
David Ferrer (2)
2012–13
Rod Laver
1969
Tony Roche
John Newcombe
John McEnroe
1985
Mats Wilander
1988
Stefan Edberg
1991
Pete Sampras
1993
Stan Wawrinka
2015
Jannik Sinner
2024
Ivan Lendl *
1986
Boris Becker *
Henri Leconte *
Dominic Thiem *
2020
* No Australian Open in 1986; No Wimbledon in 2020. Players made all 3 available QFs .
Most seasons with at least one major title or final [ edit ]
1+ final
First–last
Novak Djokovic
16
2007–24
Roger Federer
15
2003–19
Rafael Nadal
2005–22
Pete Sampras
12
1990–02
Ivan Lendl
11
1981–91
Andre Agassi
1990–05
Björn Borg
8
1974–81
Stefan Edberg
1985–93
Boris Becker
1985–96
Jimmy Connors
7
1974–83
John McEnroe
1979–85
Andy Murray
2008–16
minimum 7 seasons
Consecutive seasons with at least one major title or final [ edit ]
1+ title
Consecutive
Rafael Nadal
10
2005–14
Björn Borg
8
1974–81
Pete Sampras
1993–00
Roger Federer
2003–10
Novak Djokovic
6
2011–16
Novak Djokovic (2)
2018–23
1+ final
Consecutive
Ivan Lendl
11
1981–91
Pete Sampras
1992–02
Roger Federer
10
2003–12
Rafael Nadal
2005–14
Björn Borg
8
1974–81
Novak Djokovic
7
2010–16
Novak Djokovic (2)
2018–24 ▲
Per Grand Slam tournament [ edit ]
Titles per tournament [ edit ]
#
US Open
5
Jimmy Connors
Pete Sampras
Roger Federer
4
John McEnroe
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic
3
Ivan Lendl
2
Stefan Edberg
Andre Agassi
Patrick Rafter
Finals per tournament [ edit ]
#
French Open
Record
14
Rafael Nadal
14–0
7
Novak Djokovic
3–4
6
Björn Borg
6–0
5
Ivan Lendl
3–2
Mats Wilander
3–2
Roger Federer
1–4
4
Guillermo Vilas
1–3
3
Gustavo Kuerten
3–0
Jim Courier
2–1
Sergi Bruguera
2–1
Andre Agassi
1–2
#
Wimbledon
Record
12
Roger Federer
8–4
10
Novak Djokovic
7–3
7
Pete Sampras
7–0
Boris Becker
3–4
6
Björn Borg
5–1
Jimmy Connors
2–4
5
John McEnroe
3–2
Rafael Nadal
2–3
4
Goran Ivanišević
1–3
3
John Newcombe
2–1
Stefan Edberg
2–1
Andy Murray
2–1
Andy Roddick
0–3
Match record per tournament [ edit ]
%
W–L
French Open
96.6
112–4
Rafael Nadal
96.1
49–2
Björn Borg
85.7
96–16
Novak Djokovic
83.9
47–9
Mats Wilander
81.8
36–8
Gustavo Kuerten
81.6
40–9
Jim Courier
81.5
53–12
Ivan Lendl
81.1
73–17
Roger Federer
79.1
34–9
Alexander Zverev
78.0
39–11
Jan Kodeš
%
W–L
Wimbledon
92.7
51–4
Björn Borg
90.0
63–7
Pete Sampras
89.0
97–12
Novak Djokovic
88.2
105–14
Roger Federer
86.5
32–5
John Newcombe
85.5
71–12
Boris Becker
84.3
59–11
John McEnroe
82.9
58–12
Rafael Nadal
82.43
61–13
Andy Murray
82.35
84–18
Jimmy Connors
%
W–L
US Open
88.8
71–9
Pete Sampras
86.5
90–14
Novak Djokovic
86.4
89–14
Roger Federer
85.2
98–17
Jimmy Connors
84.9
73–13
Ivan Lendl
84.8
67–12
Rafael Nadal
84.4
65–12
John McEnroe
83.3
30–6
Ken Rosewall
82.5
33–7
Daniil Medvedev
81.6
40–9
Björn Borg
80.9
38–9
Arthur Ashe
Match wins per tournament [ edit ]
#
US Open
98
Jimmy Connors
90
Novak Djokovic
89
Roger Federer
79
Andre Agassi
73
Ivan Lendl
71
Pete Sampras
67
Rafael Nadal
65
John McEnroe
49
Andy Murray
47
Lleyton Hewitt
Events won with no sets dropped [ edit ]
^ Fewest games (32) lost winning a tournament.
▲ indicates an active streak
Spanning consecutive tournaments [ edit ]
#
Finals
Years
10
Roger Federer
2005–07
8
Roger Federer (2)
2008–10
6
Novak Djokovic
2015–16
5
Rafael Nadal
2011–12
Novak Djokovic (2)
2020–21
4
Rod Laver
1969
Andre Agassi
1999–2000
Novak Djokovic (3)
2011–12
Novak Djokovic (4)
2023
#
Semifinals
Years
23
Roger Federer
2004–10
14
Novak Djokovic
2010–13
10
Ivan Lendl
1985–88
9
Novak Djokovic (2)
2014–16
7
Rafael Nadal
2018–19
6
Ivan Lendl
1983–84
#
Quarterfinals
Years
36
Roger Federer
2004–13
28
Novak Djokovic
2009–16
14
Ivan Lendl
1985–89
11
Rafael Nadal
2009–12
Rafael Nadal (2)
2017–20
10
Pete Sampras
1992–94
David Ferrer
2012–14
#
Matches
Years
30
Novak Djokovic
2015–16
27
Roger Federer
2005–06
Roger Federer (2)
2006–07
Novak Djokovic (2)
2011–12
Novak Djokovic (3)
2021
Novak Djokovic (4)
2022–23
26
Rod Laver
1969
Novak Djokovic (5)
2018–19
25
Pete Sampras
1993–94
Rafael Nadal
2010–11
Spanning non-consecutive tournaments [ edit ]
#
Semifinals won
Years
16
Rafael Nadal
2010–18
14
Björn Borg
1976–81
12
Novak Djokovic
2019–23
11
Jimmy Connors
1974–78
10
Roger Federer
2005–07
Novak Djokovic (2)
2015–19
#
Quarterfinals won
Years
25
Roger Federer
2003–10
17
Ivan Lendl
1983–88
14
Novak Djokovic
2010–13
11
Jimmy Connors
1976–80
Novak Djokovic (2)
2018–21
Consecutive titles per tournament [ edit ]
#
US Open
Years
5
Roger Federer
2004–08
3
John McEnroe
1979–81
Ivan Lendl
1985–87
2
Jimmy Connors
1982–83
Stefan Edberg
1991–92
Pete Sampras
1995–96
Pat Rafter
1997–98
Consecutive match wins per tournament [ edit ]
#
Wimbledon
Years
41
Björn Borg
1976–81
40
Roger Federer
2003–08
34
Novak Djokovic
2018–23
31
Pete Sampras
1997–2001
25
Pete Sampras (2)
1993–96
#
US Open
Years
40
Roger Federer
2004–09
27
Ivan Lendl
1985–88
25
John McEnroe
1979–82
19
Jimmy Connors
1982–84
17
Pete Sampras
1995–97
%
W–L
Grass
90.0
63–7
Pete Sampras
89.0
97–12
Novak Djokovic
88.2
105–14
Roger Federer
87.5
56–8
Björn Borg
84.6
44–8
Rod Laver
83.7
77–15
Boris Becker
83.5
66–13
John McEnroe
83.2
89–18
John Newcombe
82.9
58–12
Rafael Nadal
82.4
61–13
Andy Murray
Year-end championships [ edit ]
There have been three prominent Year-end Championships in the Open Era , each involving only the top performers for the given year. Those championships have been the most coveted titles after the four Grand Slams during the Open Era.
(1970–present) This is a combination of the YECs (Year-end Championships) for two separate tours: the ITF Grand Prix that ran until 1989 and the ATP Tour that replaced it. For record-keeping purposes, the ATP has incorporated the entire history of the ITF "Masters Grand Prix" alongside its ATP Finals tournament; thus they are both listed as "ATP" here. In total, these YECs have been held at numerous venues around the globe and played on several surfaces (indoor hard since 2006).
(1971–89) The WCT Finals , as the YEC for the World Championship Tennis tour, was held in Dallas, Texas and played on indoor carpet courts.
(1990–99) The Grand Slam Cup (GSC) was an ITF tournament for the top performers in the year's Grand Slam tournaments. It was held in Munich, Germany and played on indoor carpet courts.
Ordered by most titles won at one year-end championship (correct as of 2023 ATP Finals ).
Titles
ATP Finals
WCT Finals
Slam Cup
Events
Novak Djokovic
7
—
—
2008 , 2012 , 2013 , 2014 , 2015 , 2022 , 2023
Roger Federer
6
—
—
2003 , 2004 , 2006 , 2007 , 2010 , 2011
John McEnroe
3
5
—
1978 , 1979WCT , 1981WCT , 1983 , 1983WCT , 1984 , 1984WCT , 1989WCT
Ivan Lendl
5
2
—
1981 , 1982 , 1982WCT , 1985 , 1985WCT , 1986 , 1987
Pete Sampras
5
—
2
1990GSC , 1991 , 1994 , 1996 , 1997 , 1997GSC , 1999
Ilie Năstase
4
—
—
1971 , 1972 , 1973 , 1975
Boris Becker
3
1
1
1988 , 1988WCT , 1992 , 1995 , 1996GSC
Ken Rosewall
—
2
—
1971WCT , 1972WCT
Jimmy Connors
1
2
—
1977 , 1977WCT , 1980WCT
Björn Borg
2
—
—
1976WCT , 1979 , 1980
Lleyton Hewitt
2
—
—
2001 , 2002
Alexander Zverev
2
—
—
2018 , 2021
Stan Smith
1
1
—
1970 , 1973WCT
Michael Stich
1
—
1
1992GSC , 1993
#
Finals
10
Roger Federer
9
Ivan Lendl
Novak Djokovic
8
Boris Becker
6
Pete Sampras
4
Ilie Năstase
Björn Borg
John McEnroe
Andre Agassi
3
Lleyton Hewitt
minimum 3 finals
#
Appearances
17
Roger Federer
16
Novak Djokovic
13
Andre Agassi
12
Ivan Lendl
11
Jimmy Connors
Boris Becker
Pete Sampras
Rafael Nadal
9
John McEnroe
Stefan Edberg
8
Guillermo Vilas
Andy Murray
minimum 8 appearances
#
Match wins
59
Roger Federer
50
Novak Djokovic
39
Ivan Lendl
36
Boris Becker
35
Pete Sampras
22
Ilie Năstase
Andre Agassi
21
Rafael Nadal
minimum 20 wins
%
W–L
Match record
88.0
22–3
Ilie Năstase
79.6
39–10
Ivan Lendl
77.6
59–17
Roger Federer
73.53
50–18
Novak Djokovic
73.47
36–13
Boris Becker
71.4
35–14
Pete Sampras
63.3
19–11
John McEnroe
59.3
16–11
Guillermo Vilas
16–11
Andy Murray
56.3
18–14
Stefan Edberg
53.8
21–18
Rafael Nadal
52.4
22–20
Andre Agassi
51.4
18–17
Jimmy Connors
minimum 25 matches
Not losing a set
Events
Ivan Lendl
3
1982, 85–86
John McEnroe
1
1983
#
Semifinals
9
John McEnroe
5
Björn Borg
Jimmy Connors
Ivan Lendl
4
Rod Laver
Arthur Ashe
Vitas Gerulaitis
#
Appearances
9
John McEnroe
6
Arthur Ashe
5
Rod Laver
Björn Borg
Vitas Gerulaitis
Jimmy Connors
Ivan Lendl
#
Match wins
21
John McEnroe
10
Björn Borg
Jimmy Connors
Ivan Lendl
7
Ken Rosewall
Arthur Ashe
Vitas Gerulaitis
%
W–L
Match record
87.5
7–1
Ken Rosewall
84.0
21–4
John McEnroe
83.3
5–1
Boris Becker
76.9
10–3
Björn Borg
10–3
Jimmy Connors
10–3
Ivan Lendl
minimum 5 wins
Not losing a set
Events
John McEnroe
2
1981, 84
Masters tournaments [ edit ]
(1970–1989)
Before the ATP took control of the men's professional tour in 1990, the Grand Prix Super Series was the highest class of events after the Grand Slams and the Year-end Championships but unlike the Masters series, the participation of the top players was not mandatory.
(1990–present)
The Masters is an annual series of nine top-level tournaments featuring the top professional men players. The Masters events along with the Grand Slam tournaments and Year-end Championships constitute the most coveted titles on the annual ATP Tour calendar.
Correct as of 2024 Shanghai Masters
#
Finals
59
Novak Djokovic
53
Rafael Nadal
50
Roger Federer
22
Andre Agassi
21
Andy Murray
19
Pete Sampras
11
Boris Becker
Alexander Zverev
10
Gustavo Kuerten
Thomas Muster
Daniil Medvedev
9
Stefan Edberg
Michael Chang
Andy Roddick
#
Not losing a set
11
Novak Djokovic
8
Rafael Nadal
7
Roger Federer
4
Andy Murray
2
Pete Sampras
Marcelo Ríos
1
Stefanos Tsitsipas
Daniil Medvedev
Alexander Zverev
Grigor Dimitrov
Carlos Alcaraz
Carlos Moyá
Andre Agassi
Patrick Rafter
Petr Korda
Thomas Enqvist
Emilio Sánchez
Stefan Edberg
Boris Becker
#
Titles in a season
6
Novak Djokovic
5
Novak Djokovic
Rafael Nadal
4
Novak Djokovic
Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
3
Rafael Nadal
Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic
Andre Agassi
Andy Murray
Marcelo Ríos
Thomas Muster
Pete Sampras
Stefan Edberg
Jannik Sinner
#
Match wins
410
Rafael Nadal
409
Novak Djokovic
381
Roger Federer
230
Andy Murray
209
Andre Agassi
191
Tomáš Berdych
190
Pete Sampras
189
David Ferrer
166
Stan Wawrinka
157
Andy Roddick
%
W–L
Match record
82.00
410–90
Rafael Nadal
81.96
409–90
Novak Djokovic
77.91
381–108
Roger Federer
74.11
209–73
Andre Agassi
73.08
190–70
Pete Sampras
72.00
108–42
Stefan Edberg
69.50
139–61
Alexander Zverev
69.49
230–101
Andy Murray
69.18
101–45
Thomas Muster
69.16
157–70
Andy Roddick
minimum 100 wins
Career Golden Masters [ edit ]
Match stats correct (as of 2024 Paris Masters ).
#
Matches played
375
Novak Djokovic
347
Roger Federer
290
Rafael Nadal
258
Ivan Lendl
241
Jimmy Connors
222
John McEnroe
212
Stefan Edberg
201
Andy Murray
199
Andre Agassi
195
Pete Sampras
%
W–L
Match record
71.1
113–46[ 7]
Björn Borg
69.1
259–116
Novak Djokovic
65.1
121–65
Boris Becker
64.6
224–123
Roger Federer
64.3
166–92
Ivan Lendl
63.9
186–105
Rafael Nadal
63.6
124–71
Pete Sampras
57.7
128–94
John McEnroe
54.8
109–90
Andre Agassi
54.4
131–110
Jimmy Connors
minimum 100 wins
#
In a season
Year
31
Novak Djokovic
2015
24
John McEnroe
1984
Novak Djokovic (2)
2012
Rafael Nadal
2013
Novak Djokovic (3)
22
Ivan Lendl
1985
21
Björn Borg
1978
Novak Djokovic (4)
2011
Novak Djokovic (5)
2016
20
Björn Borg
1979
#
Match wins
Year
134
Guillermo Vilas
1977
125
Ilie Năstase
1973
120
Ilie Năstase (2)
1972
110
Ivan Lendl
1980
109
Brian Gottfried
1977
106
Ivan Lendl (2)
1982
102
Arthur Ashe
1975
97
Rod Laver
1969
Jimmy Connors
1976
96
John McEnroe
1979
Ivan Lendl (3)
1981
%
W–L
Match record
Year
96.5
82–3
John McEnroe
1984
95.9
94–4
Jimmy Connors
1974
95.3
81–4
Roger Federer
2005
94.8
92–5
Roger Federer
2006
93.3
84–6
Björn Borg
1979
93.2
82–6
Novak Djokovic
2015
92.5
74–6
Ivan Lendl
1986
74–6
Roger Federer
2004
92.3
84–7
Ivan Lendl
1985
92.2
106–9
Ivan Lendl
1982
minimum 70 wins
Grand Slam tournaments in bold .
#
Finals
Tournament
First–last
15
Roger Federer
Basel
2000–19
14
Rafael Nadal
French Open
2005–22
13
Roger Federer (2)
Halle
2003–19
12
Rafael Nadal (4)
Monte-Carlo
2005–18
Barcelona
2005–21
Rome
2005–21
Roger Federer (3)
Wimbledon
2003–19
Novak Djokovic
Rome
2008–22
10
Guillermo Vilas
Buenos Aires
1972–82
Roger Federer (5)
ATP Finals
2003–15
Dubai
2003–19
Novak Djokovic (4)
Australian Open
2008–23
US Open
2007–23
Wimbledon
2011–24
9
Ivan Lendl (2)
ATP Finals
1980–88
Canada
1980–92
Roger Federer (6)
Indian Wells
2004–19
Novak Djokovic (6)
Paris
2009–23
ATP Finals
2008–23
John Isner
Atlanta
2010–21
8
John McEnroe
WCT Finals
1979–89
Ivan Lendl (3)
US Open
1982–89
Boris Becker
ATP Finals
1985–96
Pete Sampras
US Open
1990–2002
Andre Agassi (2)
Miami
1990–2003
San Jose
1990–2003
Rafael Nadal (5)
Madrid
2005–17
Roger Federer (7)
Cincinnati
2005–18
Novak Djokovic (7)
Cincinnati
2008–23
▲ indicates an active streak
#
Finals
Years
18
Ivan Lendl
1981–82
17
Roger Federer
2005–06
Novak Djokovic
2015–16
13
Guillermo Vilas
1977
Björn Borg
1979–80
11
John McEnroe
1983–84
9
Ilie Năstase
1973
Jimmy Connors
1974
Rafael Nadal
2013
8
Rod Laver
1968–69
Jimmy Connors (2)
1973
John McEnroe (2)
1984–85
Ivan Lendl (2)
1985
Roger Federer (2)
2007
#
Matches
Years
49
Björn Borg[ a]
1978
48
Björn Borg (2) [ a]
1979–80
46
Guillermo Vilas
1977
44
Ivan Lendl
1981–82
43
Novak Djokovic
2010–11
42
John McEnroe
1984
41
Roger Federer
2006–07
36
Jimmy Connors
1975
35
Jimmy Connors (2)
1974
Thomas Muster
1995
Roger Federer (2)
2005
#
vs. Top 10
Years
24
Roger Federer
2003–05
17
Roger Federer (2)
2006–07
Novak Djokovic
2015–16
16
Björn Borg
1978
15
Björn Borg (2)
1979–80
14
Novak Djokovic (2)
2012–13
Rafael Nadal
2012–13
Novak Djokovic (3)
2018
13
John McEnroe
1983–84
Rafael Nadal (2)
2005–06
Novak Djokovic (4)
2011
Rafael Nadal (3)
2013
Novak Djokovic (5)
2013
Winning streaks per court type
#
Grass
Years
65
Roger Federer
2003–08
41
Björn Borg
1976–81
34
Novak Djokovic
2018–23
24
Rod Laver
1969–70
23
John McEnroe
1980–82
Pete Sampras
1994–96
Pete Sampras
1998–00
#
Carpet[ b]
Years
65
John McEnroe
1983–85
51
Ivan Lendl
1981–83
30
Jimmy Connors
1974–75
Ivan Lendl
1985–86
27
Arthur Ashe
1975
#
Outdoor
Years
51
Björn Borg
1977–78
46
Guillermo Vilas
1977
43
Novak Djokovic
2010–11
42
Roger Federer
2005–06
39
Pete Sampras
1994
#
Indoor
Years
66
Ivan Lendl
1981–83
53
John McEnroe
1983–84
38
Novak Djokovic
2012–15
35
Ivan Lendl
1985–86
33
Jimmy Connors
1974–75
Active surface
Defunct surface
Match stats correct (as of 2024 US Open ).
#
Carpet[ b]
45
Jimmy Connors
43
John McEnroe
32
Ivan Lendl
26
Boris Becker
23
Rod Laver
22
Björn Borg
Arthur Ashe
19
Stan Smith
Ilie Năstase
16
Pete Sampras
#
Outdoor
90
Rafael Nadal
80
Novak Djokovic
77
Roger Federer
56
Jimmy Connors
53
Guillermo Vilas
52
Ivan Lendl
48
Andre Agassi
44
Rod Laver
43
Thomas Muster
42
Björn Borg
#
Indoor
53
Jimmy Connors
52
John McEnroe
42
Ivan Lendl
30
Boris Becker
28
Rod Laver
26
Ilie Năstase
Stan Smith
Roger Federer
25
Arthur Ashe
24
Björn Borg
%
W–L
Grass
86.9
192–29
Roger Federer
85.8
121–20
John McEnroe
85.7
120–20
Novak Djokovic
84.8
95–17
Rod Laver
83.5
101–20
Pete Sampras
83.0
185–38
Jimmy Connors
82.3
116–25
Boris Becker
81.8
72–16
Björn Borg
81.5
119–27
Alex Metreveli
79.9
119–30
Andy Murray
minimum 50 wins
%
W–L
Carpet[ b]
84.3
349–65
John McEnroe
82.7
259–54
Ivan Lendl
82.5
392–83
Jimmy Connors
81.2
181–42
Björn Borg
80.1
258–64
Boris Becker
78.2
208–58
Rod Laver
76.9
286–86
Arthur Ashe
75.9
142–45
Pete Sampras
73.5
166–60
Yevgeny Kafelnikov
71.4
205–82
Stan Smith
minimum 100 wins
%
W–L
Outdoor
84.34
926–172
Novak Djokovic
84.33
985–183
Rafael Nadal
83.3
430–86
Björn Borg
82.3
953–205
Roger Federer
82.0
787–173
Jimmy Connors
80.9
727–172
Ivan Lendl
80.8
345–82
Rod Laver
78.6
460–125
John McEnroe
77.74
702–201
Andre Agassi
77.67
814–234
Guillermo Vilas
minimum 200 wins
%
W–L
Indoor
85.3
423–73
John McEnroe
83.0
341–70
Ivan Lendl
81.6
487–110
Jimmy Connors
81.0
298–70
Roger Federer
80.6
224–54
Björn Borg
79.8
297–75
Boris Becker
79.8
198–50
Novak Djokovic
78.3
231–64
Rod Laver
77.7
213–61
Pete Sampras
74.2
155–54
Andy Murray
minimum 100 wins
#
Outdoor
985
Rafael Nadal
953
Roger Federer
926
Novak Djokovic
814
Guillermo Vilas
787
Jimmy Connors
727
Ivan Lendl
702
Andre Agassi
638
Manuel Orantes
628
David Ferrer
584
Ilie Năstase
Andy Murray
#
Indoor
487
Jimmy Connors
423
John McEnroe
341
Ivan Lendl
339
Arthur Ashe
309
Ilie Năstase
307
Brian Gottfried
303
Stan Smith
298
Roger Federer
297
Boris Becker
257
Stefan Edberg
5+ titles
Years
Novak Djokovic
12
2007–23
Jimmy Connors
11
1972–84
Roger Federer
10
2003–17
Ivan Lendl
9
1980–90
Rafael Nadal
2005–18
Rod Laver
8
1968–75
John McEnroe
1978–85
Björn Borg
7
1974–80
Pete Sampras
1992–99
Ilie Năstase
6
1971–76
Guillermo Vilas
1974–82
Boris Becker
1986–96
Andre Agassi
1988–2002
1+ title
Years
Rafael Nadal
19
2004–22
Novak Djokovic
2006–24
Andre Agassi
18
1987–2005
Roger Federer
2001–19
Jimmy Connors
15
1972–89
Ivan Lendl
14
1980–93
Andy Murray
13
2006–19
John McEnroe
1978–91
Stefan Edberg
12
1984–95
Boris Becker
1985–96
Andy Roddick
2001–12
Pete Sampras
1990–2002
Michael Chang
1988–2000
Per consecutive seasons [ edit ]
2+ titles
Cons. years
Rafael Nadal
18
2005–22
Novak Djokovic
2006–23 ▲
Jimmy Connors
13
1972–84
Ivan Lendl
12
1980–91
Boris Becker
1985–96
Pete Sampras
11
1990–00
Roger Federer
2002–12
Andy Murray
10
2007–16
Guillermo Vilas
1974–83
Stefan Edberg
9
1984–92
1+ title
Cons. years
Rafael Nadal
19
2004–22
Novak Djokovic
2006–24 ▲
Roger Federer
15
2001–15
Ivan Lendl
14
1980–93
Jimmy Connors
13
1972–84
Stefan Edberg
12
1984–95
Boris Becker
1985–96
Andy Roddick
2001–12
Andy Murray
2006–17
Guillermo Vilas
11
1973–83
Pete Sampras
1990–00
1+ final
Cons. years
Roger Federer
20
2000–19
Jimmy Connors
19
1971–89
Rafael Nadal
2004–22
Gaël Monfils
2005–23 ▲
Novak Djokovic
2006–24 ▲
/ Ivan Lendl
16
1979–94
Manuel Orantes
15
1969–83
John McEnroe
14
1978–91
Carlos Moyá
1995–08
Tomáš Berdych
2004–17
(1990–present) The Grand Slam tournaments, the Masters events and the ATP Finals are the Big Titles of the annual ATP Tour calendar, in addition to the quadrennial Summer Olympics . Between 1970 and 1989, the biggest titles were the four majors and the Year-end Championships (ATP Finals, WCT Finals and Grand Slam Cup ), in addition to the Grand Prix Super Series events.
Top 10 leaders with active players and records in bold
Olympic tournaments [ edit ]
Tennis was reinstated as an official Olympic sport in 1988. There have been ten tournaments in the Open Era.
%
W–L
Match record
92.3
12–1
Andy Murray
90.0
9–1
Alexander Zverev
88.9
8–1
Marc Rosset
83.3
10–2
Fernando González
Juan Martín del Potro
Top 5 (minimum 2 tournaments)
ATP rankings achievements [ edit ]
ATP rankings began in 1973. These weekly rankings determine tournament eligibility and seedings. At the end of each year they also become the official ATP season rankings.
Correct as of 4 November 2024[update] with (▲) indicating active streaks. [ 15]
#
Top 2
599
Novak Djokovic
596
Rafael Nadal
528
Roger Federer
387
Jimmy Connors
376
Ivan Lendl
Pete Sampras
#
Top 3
756
Novak Djokovic
750
Roger Federer
686
Rafael Nadal
592
Jimmy Connors
499
Ivan Lendl
#
Top 4
804
Roger Federer
796
Novak Djokovic
756
Rafael Nadal
669
Jimmy Connors
540
Ivan Lendl
#
Top 5
859
Roger Federer
837
Rafael Nadal
818
Novak Djokovic ▲
705
Jimmy Connors
563
Ivan Lendl
#
Top 10
968
Roger Federer
912
Rafael Nadal
863
Novak Djokovic ▲
817
Jimmy Connors
747
Andre Agassi
Consecutive weeks
#
Cons. No. 1
Years
237
Roger Federer
2004–08
160
Jimmy Connors
1974–77
157
Ivan Lendl
1985–88
122
Novak Djokovic
2014–16
102
Pete Sampras
1996–98
#
Cons. top 2
346
Roger Federer
325
Novak Djokovic
282
Jimmy Connors
280
Ivan Lendl
212
Rafael Nadal
#
Cons. top 3
465
Ivan Lendl
432
Roger Federer
399
Novak Djokovic
391
Pete Sampras
377
Jimmy Connors
#
Cons. top 4
651
Jimmy Connors
525
Novak Djokovic
523
Ivan Lendl
522
Roger Federer
403
Pete Sampras
#
Cons. top 5
659
Jimmy Connors
558
Ivan Lendl
548
Roger Federer
535
Novak Djokovic
522
Rafael Nadal
#
Cons. top 10
912
Rafael Nadal
788
Jimmy Connors
734
Roger Federer
619
Ivan Lendl
565
Pete Sampras
#
Top 2
13
Rafael Nadal
11
Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic ▲
8
Jimmy Connors
7
Ivan Lendl
#
Top 3
15
Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic ▲
14
Rafael Nadal
12
Jimmy Connors
10
Ivan Lendl
#
Top 4
15
Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic ▲
14
Jimmy Connors
10
Ivan Lendl
#
Top 5
16
Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic ▲
14
Jimmy Connors
11
Ivan Lendl
#
Top 10
18
Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
16
Jimmy Connors
Andre Agassi
Novak Djokovic ▲
Consecutive years
#
Cons. No. 1
Years
6
Pete Sampras
1993–98
5
Jimmy Connors
1974–78
4
John McEnroe
1981–84
Roger Federer
2004–07
3
Ivan Lendl
1985–87
#
Cons. Top 2
8
Roger Federer
7
Rafael Nadal
6
Jimmy Connors
John McEnroe
Pete Sampras
Novak Djokovic
#
Cons. Top 3
12
Jimmy Connors
10
Ivan Lendl
Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic
9
Pete Sampras
#
Cons. Top 4
13
Jimmy Connors
10
Ivan Lendl
Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic
9
Pete Sampras
#
Cons. Top 5
13
Jimmy Connors
11
Ivan Lendl
Rafael Nadal
10
Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic
#
Cons. Top 10
18
Rafael Nadal
16
Jimmy Connors
14
Roger Federer
13
Ivan Lendl
12
Pete Sampras
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 .[ 17] [ 18]
Career totals include doubles prize money and are not inflation-adjusted.[ 19]
Prize money
Career
Ending
$185,065,269
Novak Djokovic
Active
$134,946,100
Rafael Nadal
Active[ 5]
$130,594,339
Roger Federer
2022
$64,687,542
Andy Murray
2024
$44,937,889
Alexander Zverev
Active
$43,280,489
Pete Sampras
2002
$42,990,314
Daniil Medvedev
Active
$37,161,525
Stan Wawrinka
Active
$36,062,555
Carlos Alcaraz
Active
$31,891,704
Stefanos Tsitsipas
Active
Prize money
Single season
Year
$21,146,145
Novak Djokovic
2015
$16,349,701
Andy Murray
2016
$16,349,586
Rafael Nadal
2019
$15,967,184
Novak Djokovic
2018
$15,952,044
Novak Djokovic
2023
$15,864,000
Rafael Nadal
2017
$15,196,504
Carlos Alcaraz
2023
$14,570,935
Rafael Nadal
2013
$14,250,527
Novak Djokovic
2014
$14,138,824
Novak Djokovic
2016
Youngest and oldest [ edit ]
Grand Slam tournaments [ edit ]
Youngest
No. 1
19 years, 130 days
Carlos Alcaraz
2022
Year-end No. 1
19 years, 240 days
Carlos Alcaraz
2022
Top 10
17 years, 11 days
Aaron Krickstein
1984
Year-end Top 10
17 years, 312 days
Michael Chang
1989
Oldest
No. 1
37 years, 18 days
Novak Djokovic
2024
Year-end No. 1
36 years, 223 days
Novak Djokovic
2023
Top 10
41 years, 267 days
Ken Rosewall
1976
Year-end Top 10
41 years, 59 days
Ken Rosewall
1975
minimum 25 matches (M/Y is average number of matches per year during the streak)
80%+
Years
M/Y
Roger Federer
15
2003–19
77.7
Rafael Nadal
2005–22
69.5
Novak Djokovic
14
2009–23
68.0
Jimmy Connors
13
1973–88
95.0
John McEnroe
10
1978–89
79.9
Ivan Lendl
9
1981–90
85.4
Björn Borg
7
1975–81
79.6
Rod Laver
6
1969–75
87
Guillermo Vilas
1974–82
105.5
Pete Sampras
1993–99
78.2
90%+
Years
M/Y
Björn Borg
4
1977–80
84.3
Jimmy Connors
3
1974–76
95.0
Ivan Lendl
1985–87
84.0
Roger Federer
2004–06
87.3
80%+
Years
M/Y
Novak Djokovic
13
2011–23 ▲
65.8
Jimmy Connors
12
1973–84
85.5
Roger Federer
10
2003–12
82.5
Rafael Nadal
2005–14
77.2
John McEnroe
9
1978–86
82.3
Björn Borg
7
1975–81
79.6
Ivan Lendl
6
1985–90
75.5
Set and game winning percentages [ edit ]
%
W–L
Game record
60.1
11494–7638
Björn Borg
59.69
21906–14796
Jimmy Connors
59.64
18711–12661
Rafael Nadal
59.52
15467–10520
John McEnroe
59.51
18940–12888
Ivan Lendl
59.3
20013–13738
Novak Djokovic
58.1
22755–16433
Roger Federer
58.04
10840–7836
Rod Laver
57.97
16750–12145 [ 31]
Guillermo Vilas
57.7
16231–11902
Andre Agassi
minimum 10,000 games
Correct as of 2024 Summer Olympics .
Consecutive sets won [ edit ]
#
All tournaments
Years
44
Jimmy Connors
1974
43
Ivan Lendl
1985
39
Jimmy Connors (2)
1976
Björn Borg
1980
37
John McEnroe
1982
35
John McEnroe (2)
1984
34
Jimmy Connors (3)
1975
Björn Borg (2)
1979
32
Ivan Lendl (2)
1986
Guillermo Coria
2003
Roger Federer
2017
#
Grand Slams
Years
36
Roger Federer
2006–07
35
John McEnroe
1984
Rafael Nadal
2020–21
29
Rafael Nadal (2)
2017
Novak Djokovic
2023
28
Björn Borg
1980
Rafael Nadal (3)
2010
26
Stefan Edberg
1991–92
25
Novak Djokovic (2)
2019
Consecutive sets won per court type
#
Hard
Years
34
Novak Djokovic
2016
33
Roger Federer
2005–06
31
Roger Federer (2)
2006–07
#
Clay
Years
50
Rafael Nadal
2017–18
35
Guillermo Coria
2003–04
34
Ilie Năstase
1973
#
Grass
Years
36
Roger Federer
2003–04
30
Roger Federer (2)
2017
29
Roger Federer (3)
2007–08
#
Carpet[ b]
Years
49
John McEnroe
1984
44
Jimmy Connors
1974
36
Ivan Lendl
1982–83
^ a b Borg withdrew prior to a scheduled match in the midst of both streaks,[ 10] [ 11] which the ITF does not consider as ending the streak. Likewise, a 1980 news article considered them valid streaks,[ 12] but Sports Illustrated lists Borg's win streaks at 35 and 41.[ 13]
^ a b c d e Carpet courts are no longer in use on the professional tour since 2009.
^ 5 of Becker's 14 Big Titles were won before the ATP Tour era.