List of male tennis players
| This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2011) |
This is a list of top international male tennis players, both past and present.
To keep the list at a reasonable length, it includes only players who have been officially ranked among the top 25 singles players in the world during the "Open Era"; been ranked in the top five prior to the Open Era; have been a singles quarter-finalist or better at a Grand Slam tournament; have reached the finals of the Masters Grand Prix/ATP Tour World Championships/Tennis Masters Cup/ATP World Tour Finals; have been singles medalists at the Olympics; have won a Grand Slam or Olympic doubles title; or have been ranked World No. 1 in doubles.
Please note: Drawsheets for many pre-World War Two Grand Slam tournaments and complete ATP rankings prior to 1983 are both unavailable, so this list may remain incomplete.
Players who have won more than one Grand Slam singles title or have been ranked World No.1 in singles, and singles Grand Slam and Olympic championships, have been put in bold font. Players who still play on the tour have been put in italics.
[edit] List
| Player Name | Birth | Death | Country | Criteria for inclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| José Acasuso | 1982 | – | ranked World No. 20 in 2006 | |
| David Adams | 1970 | – | winner of 2 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1999 Australian Open champion, partnering Mariaan de Swardt • 2000 French Open champion, partnering de Swardt | |
| Andre Agassi | 1970 | – | winner of 8 grand slam singles titles and 1 Olympic singles gold medal → 1992 Wimbledon champion, 1999 runner-up, 1995 and 2001 semi-finalist, 1991 and 1993 quarter-finalist • 1994 and 1999 U.S. Open champion, 1990, 1995, 2002 and 2005 runner-up, 1988 and 1989 semi-finalist, 1992, 2001 and 2004 quarter-finalist • 1995, 2000, 2001 and 2003 Australian Open champion • 1999 French Open champion, 1990 and 1991 runner-up, 1988 and 1992 semi-finalist, 1995, 2001, 2002 and 2003 quarter-finalist • 1996 Olympic gold medalist • 1990 ATP Tour World champion, 1999 runner-up; 2000 and 2003 Tennis Masters Cup runner-up • ranked World No. 1 for 101 weeks → 12 weeks in 2003, 38 in 2000, 19 in 1999, 2 in 1996 and 30 in 1995 | |
| Ronald Agénor | 1964 | – | 1989 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 1989 | |
| Juan Aguilera | 1962 | – | ranked World No. 7 in 1984 | |
| Karim Alami | 1973 | – | ranked World No. 25 in 2000 | |
| Pieter Aldrich | 1965 | – | winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1990 Australian Open champion, partnering Danie Visser • 1990 U.S. Open champion, partnering Visser • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 19 weeks → 17 weeks in 1990 and 2 in 1991 | |
| Fred Alexander | 1880 | 1969 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1908 Australasian champion (results most likely incomplete as U.S. National drawsheets for time unavailable) - winner of 6 grand slam doubles title → 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910 and 1917 United States champion, partnering Harold Hackett for the first four and then Harold Throckmorton • 1908 Australasian Champion, parterning Alfred Dunlop | |
| John Alexander | 1951 | – | 1977 (December) Australian Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 8 in 1975 | |
| Wilmer Allison, Jr. | 1904 | 1977 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1935 United States champion, 1934 finalist (Grand Slam drawsheets for prior to 1934 not available) • ranked amateur World No. 4 in 1932 and 1935 | |
| Nicolás Almagro | 1985 | – | 2008 and 2010 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 9 in 2011 | |
| Manuel Alonso | 1895 | 1984 | 1921 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1927 United States quarter-finalist • rated World No. 5 in 1927 | |
| Victor Amaya | 1954 | – | ranked World No. 15 in 1980 – winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1980 French Open doubles champion, partnering Hank Pfister | |
| Vijay Amritraj | 1953 | – | 1973 and 1981 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1973 and 1974 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 16 in 1980 | |
| Mario Ančić | 1984 | – | 2004 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2006 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 2006 - 2004 Olympic Games doubles bronze medalist, partnering Ivan Ljubičić | |
| James Anderson | 1894 | 1973 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1922, 1924 and 1925 Australasian champion, 1919 1926 semi-finalist, 1920 quarter-finalist(?) (list perhaps incomplete - a few results appear unavailable) • rated World No. 3 in 1924 and 1925 - winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1922 Wimbledon champion, partnering Randolph Lycett • 1925 Australasian champion, partnering Norman Brookes | |
| Mal Anderson | 1935 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1957 United States champion, 1958 runner-up • 1958 and 1972 Australian (Open) runner-up, 1957 semi-finalist, 1956 quarter-finalist • 1956 and 1958 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • rated amateur World No. 2 in 1957 and 1958 — winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1957 French champion, partnering Ashley Cooper • 1973 Austrlian Open doubles champion, parterning John Newcombe | |
| Igor Andreev | 1983 | – | 2007 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 18 in 2008 | |
| John Andrews | 1952 | – | 1975 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Matt Anger | 1963 | – | ranked World No. 23 in 1986 | |
| Paul Annacone | 1963 | – | 1984 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 12 in 1986 — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1985 Australian Open champion, partnering Christo van Rensburg | |
| Hicham Arazi | 1973 | – | 1997 and 1998 French Open quarter-finalist • 2000 and 2004 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 2001 | |
| Jimmy Arias | 1964 | – | 1983 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 1984 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 1984 | |
| Jordi Arrese | 1964 | – | 1992 Olympic silver medalist • ranked World No. 23 in 1991 | |
| József Asbóth | 1917 | 1986 | winner of 1 grand slam title → 1947 French champion • 1948 Wimbledon semi-finalist | |
| Arthur Ashe | 1943 | 1993 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1968 U.S. Open champion, 1972 finalist, 1969 and 1971 semi-finalist, 1970 and 1974 quarter-finalist; 1965 U.S. National semi-finalist • 1970 Australian Open champion, 1971 finalist, 1978 semi-finalist, 1977 (January) quarter-finalist; 1966 and 1967 Australian Championships finalist • 1975 Wimbledon champion, 1968 and 1969 semi-finalist • 1970 and 1971 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 2 in 1975 | |
| Bunny Austin | 1906 | 2000 | 1932 and 1938 Wimbledon finalist, 1936 and 1937 semi-finalist, 1931, 1933, 1934 and 1935 quarter-finalist • 1937 French finalist, 1935 semi-finalist, 1934 and 1936 quarter-finalist • 1929 Australian quarter-finalist (U.S. National drawsheets prior to 1933 unavailable) • rated World No. 4 in 1938 | |
| Luis Ayala | 1932 | – | 1958 and 1960 French finalist, 1959 semi-finalist • 1957 and 1959 United States quarter-finalist • 1959 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Herbert Baddeley | 1872 | 1931 | winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1891, 1894, 1895 and 1896 Wimbledon champion, partnering Wilfred Baddeley | |
| Wilfred Baddeley | 1872 | 1929 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1891, 1892 and 1895 Wimbledon champion, 1893, 1894 and 1896 runner-up • rated World No. 1 for 4 years jointly for 1891, 1892, 1895 and for solely 1896 - winner of 4 grand slam doubles → 1891, 1894, 1895 and 1896 Wimbledon champion, partnering Herbert Baddeley | |
| Marcos Baghdatis | 1985 | – | 2006 Australian Open finalist • 2006 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2007 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 8 in 2006 | |
| Corrado Barazzutti | 1953 | – | 1977 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 1978 French Open semi-finalist • 1980 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 1978 | |
| Pierre Barthès | 1941 | – | ranked a World Top-20 player for 1971 — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1970 French Open champion, partnering Nikola Pilić | |
| Jeremy Bates | 1962 | – | winner of 2 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1987 Wimbledon champion, partnering Jo Durie • 1991 Australian Open champion, partnering Durie | |
| Boris Becker | 1967 | – | winner of 6 grand slam singles titles → 1985, 1986 and 1989 Wimbledon champion, 1988, 1990, 1991 and 1995 finalist • 1989 U.S. Open champion • 1991 and 1996 Australian Open champion, 1984 quarter-finalist • 1987, 1989 and 1991 French Open semi-finalist • 1988 Masters Grand Prix champion, 1989 runner-up; 1992 and 1995 ATP Tour World champion, 1994 and 1996 runner-up • ranked World No. 1 for 12 weeks in 1991 — winner of 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 1992 Barcelona gold medalist, partnering Michael Stich | |
| Mike Belkin | 1945 | – | 1968 Australian Championships quarter-finalist | |
| Eduardo Bengoechea | 1959 | – | ranked World No. 21 in 1987 | |
| Julien Benneteau | 1981 | – | 2006 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Alberto Berasategui | 1973 | – | 1994 French Open finalist • 1998 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 1994 | |
| Tomáš Berdych | 1985 | – | 2010 French Open semi-finalist • 2010 Wimbledon finalist • ranked World No. 6 in 2010 | |
| Lennart Bergelin | 1925 | – | 1946, 1948 and 1951 Wimbledon quarter-finalist – winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1948 French champion, partnering Jaroslav Drobný | |
| Jay Berger | 1966 | – | 1989 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 1989 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 1990 | |
| Christian Bergström | 1967 | – | 1993 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Paolo Bertolucci | 1954 | – | 1973 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 12 in 1973 | |
| Mahesh Bhupathi | 1974 | – | winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1999 and 2001 French Open champion, both partnering Leander Paes) • 1999 Wimbledon champion, parterning Paes • 2002 U.S. Open champion, partnering Max Mirnyi • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 4 weeks, in 1999 — winner of 7 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1997 French Open champion, partnering Rika Hiraki • 1999 and 2005 U.S. Open champion, partnering Ai Sugiyama and Daniela Hantuchová respectively • 2002 and 2005 Wimbledon champion, partnering Likhovtseva and Mary Pierce respectively • 2006 and 2009 Australian Open, partnering Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza respectively | |
| Jonas Björkman | 1972 | – | 1997 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 2006 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2003 quarter-finalist • 1998 and 2002 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1997 — winner of 8 grand slam doubles titles → 1998, 1999 and 2001 Australian Open champion, partnering Jacco Eltingh, Patrick Rafter, Todd Woodbridge respectively • 2004 and 2005 French Open champion, both partnering Max Mirnyi • 2002, 2003 and 2004 Wimbledon champion, all partnering Woodbridge • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 74 weeks → for 43 weeks in 2004 and 31 in 2005 | |
| Byron Black | 1969 | – | 1995 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2000 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 1996 — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1994 French Open champion, partnering Jonathan Stark • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 8 weeks, in 1994 | |
| Wayne Black | 1973 | – | winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 2001 U.S. Open champion, partnering Kevin Ullyett • 2005 Australian Open champion, partnering Ullyett | |
| James Blake | 1979 | – | 2005 and 2006 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2006 Tennis Masters Cup runner-up • ranked World No. 4 in 2006 | |
| Galo Blanco | 1976 | – | 1997 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Arnaud Boetsch | 1968 | – | ranked World No. 12 in 1996 | |
| Björn Borg | 1956 | – | winner of 11 grand slam singles titles → 1974, 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980 and 1981 French Open champion, 1976 quarter-finalist • 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979 and 1980 Wimbledon champion, 1981 finalist, 1973 and 1975 quarter-finalist • 1976, 1978, 1980 and 1981 U.S. Open finalist, 1975 semi-finalist, 1979 quarter-finalist • 1979 and 1980 Masters Grand Prix champion, 1975 and 1977 runner-up • ranked World No. 1 for 109 weeks → for 1 week in 1977, 32 in 1979, 49 in 1980 and 27 in 1981 | |
| Jean Borotra | 1898 | 1994 | winner of 5 grand slam singles titles → 1924 and 1931 French champion, 1925 and 1929 finalist • 1924 and 1926 Wimbledon champion, 1925, 1927 and 1929 finalist • 1928 Australian champion • 1926 United States finalist (other tournament drawsheets unavailable) • rated World No. 2 for 1926 — winner of 10 grand slam doubles titles → 1925, 1928, 1929, 1934 and 1936 French champion, partnering René Lacoste, Jacques Brugnon, Lacoste, Brugnon and Marcel Bernard respectively • 1925, 1932 and 1933 Wimbledon champion, Lacoste, Brugnon and Brugnon respectively • 1928 Australian champion, partnering Brugnon — winner of 5 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1925 Wimbledon champion, partnering Suzanne Lenglen • 1926 United States champion, partnering Elizabeth Ryan • 1927 and 1934 French champion, partnering Marguerite Brocquedis and Colette Rosambert respectively • 1928 Australian champion, partnering Daphne Akhurst | |
| Jeff Borowiak | 1949 | – | ranked World No. 25 in 1977 | |
| William Bowrey | 1943 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1968 Australian champion, 1967 finalist, 1965 and 1966 quarter-finalist; 1969 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1966 U.S. National quarter-finalist | |
| John Bromwich | 1918 | 1999 | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1939 and 1946 Australian champion, 1937, 1938, 1940, 1947, 1948 and 1949 finalist, 1940 semi-finalist, 1936, 1950 and 1951 quarter-finalist • 1948 Wimbledon finalist, 1949 semi-finalist • 1939 United States semi-finalist • 1950 French quarter-finalist — winner of 13 grand slam doubles titles → 1938, 1939, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1950 Australian champion, all partnering Adrian Quist • 1939, 1949 and 1959 U.S. National champion, partnering Quist, Bill Sidwell and Frank Sedgman respectively • 1948 and 1950 Wimbledon champion, partnering Sedgman and Quist respectively — winner of 4 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1938 Australian champion, partnering Margaret Wilson • 1947 and 1948 Wimbledon champion, partnering both partnering Louise Brough • 1948 U.S. National champion, partnering Brough | |
| Norman Brookes | 1877 | 1967 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1907 and 1914 Wimbledon champion, 1905, 1909 and 1919 finalist (drawsheets for 1910 through 1921 unavailable) • 1911 Australasian champion • rated World No. 1 for two years 1907 and jointly for 1911 — winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1907 and 1914 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Anthony Wilding • 1919 United States champion, partnering Gerald Patterson • 1924 Australian champion, partnering James Anderson — winner of at least 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1907 Wimbledon mixed doubles champion[citation needed] | |
| Geoff Brown | 1924 | – | 1946 Wimbledon finalist, 1947 quarter-finalist • rated World No. 3 amateur in 1946 | |
| Tom Brown | 1922 | 2011 | 1946 United States finalist • 1947 Wimbledon finalist, 1946 semi-finalist, 1948 quarter-finalist | |
| Jacques Brugnon | 1895 | 1978 | (singles results most likely missing as drawsheets are unavailable) - winner of 10 grand slam doubles titles → 1926, 1928, 1932 and 1933 Wimbledon champion, partnering Henri Cochet for the first two and Jean Borotra for the latter two • 1927, 1928, 1930, 1932 and 1934 French champion, partnering Cochet for the first three and Borotra for the last two • 1928 Australian champion, partnering Borotra — winner of 2 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1925 and 1926 French champion, both partnering Suzanne Lenglen | |
| Sergi Bruguera | 1971 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1993 and 1994 French Open champion, 1997 finalist, 1995 semi-finalist • ranked World No. 3 in 1994 | |
| Bob Bryan | 1978 | – | winner of 10 grand slam doubles titles, all partnering Mike Bryan) → 2003 French Open champion • 2005 and 2008 U.S. Open champion • 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010 and 2011 Australian Open champion • 2006 Wimbledon champion • 2003 and 2004 Master's champions, both partnering Mike • with Mike co-ranked doubles World No. 1 for 274 weeks (and counting) → for 6 weeks in 2003, 18 in 2004, 8 in 2005, 52 in 2006, 41 in 2007, 45 in 2008, 33 in 2009, 27 in 2010, 46 weeks in 2011 (and counting) — winner of 5 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 2003, 2004 and 2006 U.S. Open champion, partnering Katarina Srebotnik, Vera Zvonareva and Martina Navratilova respectively • 2008 French Open champion, partnering Victoria Azarenka • 2008 Wimbledon champion, partnering Samantha Stosur | |
| Mike Bryan | 1978 | – | winner of 10 grand slam doubles titles, all partnering Bob Bryan → 2003 French Open champion • 2005 and 2008 U.S. Open champion • 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010 and 2011 Australian Open champion • 2006 Wimbledon champion • 2003 and 2004 Masters champion, both partnering Bob • with Bob co-ranked doubles World No. 1 for 274 weeks (and counting) → for 6 weeks in 2003, 18 in 2004, 8 in 2005, 52 in 2006, 41 in 2007, 45 in 2008, 33 in 2009, 27 in 2010, 46 weeks in 2011 (and counting) — winner of 2 grand slam mixed doubles → 2002 U.S. Open champion, partnering Lisa Raymond • 2003 French Open champion, partnering Raymond | |
| Butch Buchholz | 1940 | – | 1960 U.S. National semi-finalist; 1969 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 1960 and 1969 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1969 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 5 amateur in 1960 | |
| Don Budge | 1915 | 2000 | winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles → 1937 and 1938 Wimbledon champion, 1935 and 1936 semi-finalist • 1937 and 1938 United States champion, 1936 finalist, 1935 quarter-finalist • 1938 French champion • 1938 Australian champion • rated amateur World No. 1 for 4 years, 1937 through 1940 | |
| Darren Cahill | 1965 | – | 1988 U.S. Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 1989 | |
| Oliver Campbell | 1871 | 1953 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1890, 1891 and 1892 United States champion (drawsheets for other years unavailable) — winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1888, 1891 and 1892 United States champion, partnering Valentine G. Hall, Bob Huntington and Huntington again respectively | |
| Agustín Calleri | 1976 | – | ranked World No. 16 in 2003 | |
| Omar Camporese | 1968 | – | ranked World No. 18 in 1992 | |
| Francesco Cancellotti | 1963 | – | ranked World No. 21 in 1985 | |
| Guillermo Cañas | 1977 | – | 2002, 2005 and 2007 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 8 in 2005 | |
| Cristiano Caratti | 1970 | – | 1991 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Tomas Carbonell | 1968 | – | ranked World No. 22 in 1995 — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 2001 French Open champion, partnering Virginia Ruano Pascual | |
| Kent Carlsson | 1968 | – | ranked World No. 6 in 1988 | |
| Ross Case | 1951 | – | 1973 and 1977[Jan] Australian Open semi-finalist | |
| Pat Cash | 1965 | – | winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1987 Wimbledon champion, 1984 semi-finalist, 1982, 1986 and 1988 quarter-finalist • 1987 and 1988 Australian Open finalist, 1984 quarter-finalist • 1984 U.S. Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1988 | |
| Malcolm Chace | 1875 | 1955 | 1894 United States semi-finalist (drawsheets for other years unavailable) — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1894 United States champion, partnering Robert Wrenn | |
| Thierry Champion | 1966 | – | 1990 French Open quarter-finalist • 1991 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Michael Chang | 1972 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1989 French Open champion, 1995 finalist • 1996 Australian Open finalist • 1996 U.S. Open finalist • ranked World No. 2 in 1996 | |
| Juan Ignacio Chela | 1979 | – | 2004 French Open quarter-finalist • 2007 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 15 in 2004 | |
| Andrei Cherkasov | 1970 | – | 1990 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1990 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 13 in 1991 | |
| Andrei Chesnokov | 1966 | – | 1989 French Open semi-finalist, 1986 and 1988 quarter-finalist • 1988 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 9 in 1991 | |
| Marin Čilić | 1988 | – | 2010 Australian Open semi-finalist • 2009 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 9 in 2010 | |
| Francisco Clavet | 1968 | – | ranked World No. 18 in 1992 | |
| Arnaud Clément | 1977 | – | 2001 Australian Open finalist • 2008 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 10 in 2001 | |
| Jose-Luis Clerc | 1958 | – | 1981 and 1982 French Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1981 | |
| William Clothier | 1881 | 1962 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1906 United States champion, 1904 and 1909 finalist (results likely incomplete as drawsheets are unavailable) | |
| Henri Cochet | 1901 | 1987 | winner of 7 grand slam singles titles → 1922, 1926, 1928, 1930 and 1932 French champion, 1933 finalist, 1927 and 1929 semi-finalist, 1925 quarter-finalist (drawsheets for before 1925 unavailable) • 1927 and 1929 Wimbledon champion, 1928 finalist, 1925 and 1933 semi-finalist, 1930 quarter-finalist • 1928 United States champion, 1932 finalist (drawsheets before 1933 unavailable) • rated World No. 1 amateur for 3 years, 1928 through 1930 — winner of 5 grand slam doubles titles, all partnering Jacques Brugnon → 1927, 1930 and 1932 French champion • 1926 and 1928 Wimbledon champion – winner of 5 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1922, 1923, 1928 and 1929 French Champions, partnering Suzanne Lenglen for the first two and Eileen Bennett Whittingstall for the latter two • 1927 United States champion, partnering Bennett Whittingstall | |
| Grant Connell | 1965 | – | 1995 ATP Tour World Championships doubles champion, partnering Patrick Galbraith • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 17 weeks → 7 weeks in 1993 and 10 in 1994 | |
| Jimmy Connors | 1952 | – | winner of 8 grand slam singles titles → 1974 Australian Open champion, 1975 finalist • 1974 and 1982 Wimbledon champion, 1975, 1977, 1978 and 1984 finalis; 1979, 1980, 1981, 1985 and 1987 semi-finalist; 1972, 1973 and 1975 quarter-finalist • 1974, 1976, 1978, 1982 and 1983 U.S. Open champion, 1975, 1977 finalist; 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1987 and 1991 semi-finalist; • 1979, 1980, 1984 and 1985 French Open semi-finalist; 1981, 1982, 1983 and 1987 quarter-finalist • 1977 Masters Grand Prix champion • ranked World No. 1 for 268 weeks → 22 weeks in 1974, 52 weeks in 1975, 52 weeks in 1976, 51 weeks in 1977, 52 weeks in 1978, 22 weeks in 1979, 8 weeks in 1982 and 9 weeks in 1983 — winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1973 Wimbledon champion, partnering Ilie Năstase • 1975 U.S. Open champion, partnering Năstase | |
| Elwood Cooke | 1913 | 2004 | 1939 Wimbledon finalist • 1939 French semi-finalist • 1945 United States semi-finalist, 1940 and 1943 quarter-finalist – winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1939 Wimbledon champion, partnering Bobby Riggs — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1939 United States champion, partnering Sarah Palfrey Cooke | |
| Ashley Cooper | 1936 | – | winner of 4 grand slam singles titles → 1957 and 1958 Australian champion, 1954, 1955 and 1956 quarter-finalist • 1958 Wimbledon champion, 1957 finalist • 1958 United States champion, 1957 finalist, 1956 quarter-finalist • 1956, 1957 and 1958 French Championship semi-finalist - winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1957 and 1958 French champion, parterning Mal Anderson and Neale Fraser respectively • 1957 United States champion, partnering Fraser • 1958 Australian champion, partnering Fraser | |
| John Cooper | 1946 | – | 1971 and 1972 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Patricio Cornejo | 1944 | – | 1974 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Guillermo Coria | 1982 | – | 2004 French Open finalist, 2003 semi-finalist • 2003 and 2005 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 3 in 2004 | |
| Àlex Corretja | 1974 | – | 1998 and 2001 French Open finalist, 2002 semi-finalist • 1998 Masters champion • ranked World No. 2 in 1999 | |
| Albert Costa | 1975 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 2002 French Open champion • 1997 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 6 in 2002 | |
| Carlos Costa | 1968 | – | ranked World No. 10 in 1992 | |
| Jim Courier | 1970 | – | winner of 4 grand slam singles titles → 1991 and 1992 French Open champion, 1993 finalist, 1994 semi-finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 1992 and 1993 Australian Open champion, 1994 semi-finalist, 1995 and 1996 quarter-finalist • 1991 U.S. Open finalist, 1992 and 1995 semi-finalist • 1993 Wimbledon finalist, 1991 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 58 weeks in 1992 | |
| Mark Cox | 1943 | – | 1971 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 13 in 1977 | |
| Jack Crawford | 1908 | 1991 | winner of 6 grand slam singles titles → 1931, 1932, 1933 and 1935 Australian champion, 1931 and 1940 finalist, 1928, 1930, 1936, 1937 and 1939 semi-finalist, 1927 and 1929 quarter-finalist • 1933 French champion, 1934 finalist, 1935 semi-finalist, 1928 quarter-finalist • 1933 Wimbledon champion • 1933 United States finalist • rated World No. 1 amateur for 1 year, 1933 — winner of 6 grand slam doubles titles → 1929, 1930, 1932 and 1935 Australian champion, the first two partnering Harry Hopman, the third with Edgar Moon, and the fourth with Vivian McGrath • 1935 French champion, partnering Adrian Quist • 1935 Wimbledon champion, partnering Quist | |
| Dick Crealy | 1944 | – | 1970 Australian Open finalist, 1975 semi-finalist, 1972 and 1976 quarter-finalist; 1968 Australian Championship quarter-finalist - winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1968 Australian champion, partnering Allan Stone • 1974 French Open, partnering Onny Parun - winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1968 Australian champion, partnering Billie Jean King | |
| Kevin Curren | 1958 | – | 1984 Australian Open finalist • 1985 Wimbledon finalist, 1983 semi-finalist, 1990 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 1985 - winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1982 champion, partnering Steve Denton - winner of 3 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1981 and 1982 U.S. Open champion, both partnering Anne Smith • 1982 Wimbledon champion, partnering Smith | |
| Pablo Cuevas | 1986 | – | ranked World No. 14 in 2009 - winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2008 French Open champion, partnering Luis Horna | |
| Sven Davidson | 1928 | 2008 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1957 French champion, 1955 and 1956 finalist, 1953 quarter-finalist • 1957 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1953, 1955 and 1958 quarter-finalist • 1957 United States semi-finalist, 1953 quarter-finalist - winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1958 Wimbledon champion, partnering Ulf Schmidt | |
| Dwight Davis | 1879 | 1945 | 1898 United States finalist - winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1899, 1900 and 1901 United States champion, partnering Holcombe Ward | |
| Scott Davis | 1962 | – | 1984 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 11 in 1985 - winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1991 Australian Open, partnering David Pate | |
| Franco Davín | 1970 | – | 1991 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Nikolay Davydenko | 1981 | – | 2005 and 2007 French Open semi-finalist, 2006 and 2009 quarter-finalist • 2007 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2010 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2009 ATP Tour Finals champion • ranked World No. 3 in 2006 | |
| Juan Martín del Potro | 1988 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 2009 U.S. Open champion, 2008 quarter-finalist • 2009 French Open semi-finalist • 2009 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 2010 | |
| Phil Dent | 1950 | – | 1974 Australian Open finalist, 1977(Jan) and 1979 quarter-finalist; 1968 Australian Championships quarter-finalist • 1977 French Open semi-finalist • 1977 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 17 in 1977 | |
| Taylor Dent | 1981 | – | ranked World No. 21 in 2005 | |
| Steve Denton | 1956 | – | 1981 and 1982 Australian Open finalist • ranked World No. 12 in 1983 | |
| Filip Dewulf | 1972 | – | 1997 French Open semi-finalist, 1998 quarter-finalist | |
| Colin Dibley | 1944 | – | 1979 Australia Open semi-finalist, 1973 quarter-finalist • 1971 and 1972 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Eddie Dibbs | 1951 | – | 1975 and 1976 French Open semi-finalist, 1978 and 1979 quarter-finalist • 1975, 1976 and 1979 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 1978 | |
| Mark Dickson | 1965 | – | 1983 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Keith Diepraam | 1942 | – | 1965 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Arnaud di Pasquale | 1979 | – | 2000 Olympic bronze medalist | |
| Novak Djoković | 1987 | – | winner of 5 grand slam singles titles → 2008, 2011 and 2012 Australian Open champion, 2009 and 2010 quarter-finalist • 2011 Wimbledon champion, 2007 and 2010 semi-finalist, 2009 quarter-finalist • 2011 U.S. Open champion, 2007 and 2010 finalist, 2008 and 2009 semi-finalist • 2007, 2008 and 2011 French Open semi-finalist, 2006 2010 quarter-finalist • 2008 Tennis Masters Cup champion • 2008 Olympic Singles bronze medalist • ranked World No. 1 for 27 weeks (and counting) in 2011 | |
| Laurence Doherty | 1875 | 1919 | winner of 6 grand slam singles titles and 1 Olympic singles gold medal → 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905 and 1906 Wimbledon champion, 1898 runner-up • 1903 United States champion • 1900 Olympic gold medalist • rated World No. 1 for 5 years; jointly for 1902, 1903, 1904 and 1905, and solely for 1906 - winner of 10 grand slam doubles titles and 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904 and 1905 Wimbledon champion, all partnering Reginald Doherty • 1902 and 1903 United States champion, both partnering Doherty • 1900 Olympic gold medalist, partnering Doherty | |
| Reginald Doherty | 1872 | 1910 | winner of 4 grand slam titles → 1897, 1898, 1899 and 1900 Wimbledon champion, 1901 runner-up • 1902 United States runner-up - winner of 10 grand slam doubles titles and 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904 and 1905 Wimbledon champion, all partnering Laurence Doherty • 1902 and 1903 United States champion, both partnering Doherty • 1900 Olympic gold medalist, partnering Doherty | |
| Alexandr Dolgopolov | 1988 | – | 2011 Australian Open quarter-finalist • World No. 16 in 2011 | |
| Sláva Doseděl | 1970 | – | 1999 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Scott Draper | 1974 | – | winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles champion → 2005 Australian Open champion, partnering Samantha Stosur | |
| Hendrik Dreekmann | 1975 | – | 1994 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Brad Drewett | 1958 | – | 1975 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Jaroslav Drobný | 1921 | 2001 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1951 and 1952 French champion, 1946, 1948 and 1950 finalist, 1953 semi-finalist • 1954 Wimbledon champion, 1949 and 1952 finalist, 1946 semi-finalist, 1947 quarter-finalist — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1948 French champion, partnering Lennart Bergelin — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1948 French champion, partnering Patricia Canning Todd | |
| Cliff Drysdale | 1941 | – | 1968 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 1969 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1971 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 13 in 1974 — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1972 U.S. Open champion, partnering Roger Taylor | |
| Robin Drysdale | 1952 | – | 1977 (December) Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Pat Du Pré | 1954 | – | 1979 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1979 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 14 in 1980 | |
| Stefan Edberg | 1966 | – | winner of 6 grand slam singles titles → 1985 and 1987 Australian Open champion, 1990, 1992 and 1993 finalist, 1988, 1991 and 1994 semi-finalist, 1984 and 1989 quarter-finalist • 1988 and 1990 Wimbledon champion, 1989 finalist, 1987, 1991 and 1993 semi-finalist, 1992 quarter-finalist • 1991 and 1992 U.S. Open champion, 1986 and 1987 semi-finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 1989 French Open finalist, 1985, 1991 and 1993 quarter-finalist • 1989 Masters Grand Prix champion • ranked World No. 1 for 72 weeks → 21 weeks in 1990, 40 in 1991 and 11 in 1992 — winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1987 and 1996 Australian Open champion, partnering Anders Järryd and Petr Korda respectively • 1987 U.S. Open champion, partnering Järryd • | |
| Mark Edmondson | 1954 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1976 Australian Open champion • ranked World No. 15 in 1982 — winner of 5 grand slam doubles titles → 1980, 1981, 1983 and 1984 Australian Open champion, partnering Kim Warwick for the first two, Paul McNamee, and Sherwood Stewart respectively • 1985 French Open champion, partnerning Warwick | |
| Younes El Aynaoui | 1971 | – | 2000 and 2003 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2002 and 2003 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 14 in 2003 | |
| Ismail El Shafei | 1947 | – | 1974 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Jacco Eltingh | 1970 | – | winner of 6 grand slam doubles titles → 1994 and 1998 Australian Open champion, partnering Paul Haarhuis and Jonas Björkman respectively • 1994 U.S. Open champion, partnering Haarhuis • 1995 and 1998 French Open champion, both partnering Haarhuis • 1998 Wimbledon champion, partnering Haarhuis • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 18 weeks, in 1995 | |
| Roy Emerson | 1936 | – | winner of 12 grand slam singles titles → 1961, 1963, 1965, 1966 and 1967 Australian champion, 1962 finalist, 1960 semi-finalist, 1958 and 1959 quarter-finalist • 1961 and 1964 United States champion, 1962 finalist, 1966 semi-finalist, 1956, 1959 , 1965, 1967 and 1969 quarter-finalist • 1963 and 1967 French champion, 1962 finalist, 1965 semi-finalist, 1959, 1961, 1964, 1966 and 1968 quarter-finalist • 1964 and 1965 Wimbledon champion, 1959 semi-finalist, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1966 and 1970 quarter-finalist • rated World No. 1 amateur for two years, 1964 and 1965 — winner of 16 grand slam doubles titles → 1959, 1961 and 1971 Wimbledon champion, partnering Neale Fraser for the first two and Rod Laver for the third • 1959, 1960, 1965 and 1966 United States champion, partnering Fraser for the first two and Fred Stolle for the latter two • 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964 and 1965 French champion, partnering Fraser for the first two, then Laver, then Manolo Santana, then Ken Fletcher, and then with Stolle for the final one • 1962, 1966 and 1969 Australian (Open) champion, partnering Fraser, Stolle, and Laver respectively | |
| Thomas Enqvist | 1974 | – | 1999 Australian Open finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 2001 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1999 | |
| Jonathan Erlich | 1977 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2008 Australian Open champion, partnering Andy Ram | |
| Nicolas Escudé | 1976 | – | 1998 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1999 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2001 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 17 in 2000 | |
| L. R. Erskine | ? | ? | ? | 1878 Wimbledon All Comers finalist |
| Kelly Evernden | 1962 | – | 1987 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Brian Fairlie | 1948 | – | ranked World No. 24 in 1973 | |
| Robert Falkenburg | 1926 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1948 Wimbledon champion, 1947 and 1949 quarter-finalist • 1946 United States semi-finalist, 1944, 1945, 1947 and 1948 quarter-finalist — winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1944 United States doubles champion, partnering Don McNeill • 1947 Wimbledon doubles champion, partnering Jack Kramer | |
| Roger Federer | 1981 | – | winner of 16 grand slam singles titles → 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009 Wimbledon champion, 2008 finalist, 2001, 2010 and 2011 quarter-finalist • 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2010 Australian Open champion, 2009 finalist, 2005, 2008 and 2011 semi-finalist • 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008 U.S. Open champion, 2009 finalist, 2010 and 2011 quarter-finalist • 2009 French Open champion, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2011 finalist, 2005 semi-finalist, 2001 and 2010 quarter-finalist • 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2007 Tennis Master Cup champion, 2010 and 2011 ATP World Tour Finals champion • ranked World No. 1 for 285 weeks → 48 weeks in 2004, 52 in 2005, 52 in 2006, 52 in 2007, 32 in 2008, 25 in 2009 and 22 in 2010 — winner of 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 2008 gold medalist, partnering Stanislas Wawrinka | |
| Peter Feigl | 1951 | – | 1978 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Wayne Ferreira | 1971 | – | 1992 and 2003 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1992 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 1994 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1992 Olympic silver medalists • ranked World No. 6 in 1995 | |
| David Ferrer | 1982 | – | 2007 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 2005 and 2008 French Open quarter-finalist • 2011 Australian Open semi-finalist, 2008 quarter-finalist • 2007 Tennis Masters Cup finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 2008 | |
| Juan Carlos Ferrero | 1980 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 2003 French Open champion, 2002 finalist, 2001 semi-finalist • 2003 U.S. Open finalist • 2007 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 2002 Tennis Masters Cup finalist • winner of 4 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 1 for 8 weeks, in 2003 | |
| Wojtek Fibak | 1952 | – | 1977 and 1980 French Open quarter-finalist • 1980 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1980 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Marcelo Filippini | 1967 | – | 1999 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Jaime Fillol | 1946 | – | 1975 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 14 in 1974 | |
| Mardy Fish | 1981 | – | 2007 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2008 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2011 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 2011 | |
| John Fitzgerald | 1960 | – | ranked World No. 25 in 1988 — winner of 7 grand slam doubles titles → 1982 Australian Open champion, partnering John Alexander • 1984 and 1991 U.S. Open champion, partnering Tomáš Šmíd and Anders Järryd respectively • 1986 and 1991 French Open champion, partnering Šmíd and Järryd respectively • 1989 and 1991 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Järryd • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 40 weeks → 27 weeks in 1991 and 13 in 1992 | |
| Ken Flach | 1963 | – | winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1985 and 1993 U.S. Open champion • 1987 and 1988 Wimbledon champion • ranked World No. 1 for 5 weeks → 2 weeks in 1985 and 3 in 1986 | |
| Herbie Flam | 1928 | 1980 | 1950 United States finalist • 1951 and 1952 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1957 French finalist • rated World No. 5 in 1957 | |
| Peter Fleming | 1955 | – | 1980 Wimbledon quarter-finalist — winner of 7 grand slam doubles titles, all partnering John McEnroe → 1979, 1981, 1983 and 1984 Wimbledon champion, • 1979, 1981 and 1983 U.S. Open champion • ranked World No. 1 for 17 weeks → 3 weeks in 1982 and 14 in 1984 | |
| Fabio Fognini | 1987 | – | 2011 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Gordon Forbes | 1934 | – | 1962 United States quarter-finalist | |
| Guy Forget | 1965 | – | 1991 and 1993 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1991, 1992 and 1994 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Željko Franulović | 1947 | – | 1970 French Open finalist, 1971 semi-finalist | |
| Neale Fraser | 1933 | – | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1959 and 1960 United States champion, 1956 and 1958 semi-finalist • 1960 Wimbledon champion, 1958 finalist, 1957 and 1962 semi-finalist, 1959 quarter-finalist • 1957, 1959 and 1960 Australian Championships finalist, 1956, 1958 and 1962 semi-finalist • 1959 and 1962 French semi-finalist, 1957, 1958 and 1960 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 1 amateur for two years, 1959 and 1960 - winner of 11 grand grand slam doubles titles → 1957, 1958 and 1962 Austrlian champion, partnering Lew Hoad, Ashley Cooper and Roy Emerson respectively • 1957, 1959 and 1960 United States champion, partnering Cooper and then Emerson twice • 1958, 1960 and 1962 French champion, partnering Cooper and then Emerson twice • 1959 and 1961 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Emerson - winner of 5 mixed doubles grand slam titles → 1956 Australian champion, partnering Beryl Penrose Collier • 1958, 1959 and 1960 United States champion, all partnering Margaret Osborne duPont • 1962 Wimbledon champion, partnering Osborne duPont | |
| Rod Frawley | 1952 | – | 1979 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Frank Froehling | 1942 | – | 1971 French Open semi-finalist • 1971 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Richard Fromberg | 1970 | – | ranked World No. 24 in 1990 | |
| Renzo Furlan | 1970 | – | 1995 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 19 in 1996 | |
| Patrick Galbraith | 1967 | – | 1995 ATP Tour World champion, partnering Grant Connell• ranked doubles World No. 1 for 4 weeks → 3 weeks in 1993 and 1 in 1994 - winner of 2 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1994 and 1996 U.S. Open champion, partnering Elna Reinach and Lisa Raymond respectively | |
| Jan-Michael Gambill | 1977 | – | 2004 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • World No. 14 in 2001 | |
| Richard Gasquet | 1986 | – | 2007 Wimbledon semi-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 2007 — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 2004 French Open champion, partnering Tatiana Golovin | |
| Andrea Gaudenzi | 1973 | – | ranked World No. 18 in 1995 | |
| Gastón Gaudio | 1978 | – | winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2004 French Open champion • ranked World No. 5 in 2005 | |
| Vitas Gerulaitis | 1954 | 1994 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1977(December) Australian Open champion • 1979 U.S. Open finalist, 1978 and 1981 semi-finalist • 1980 French Open finalist, 1979 semi-finalist, 1982 quarter-finalist • 1977 and 1978 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1976 and 1982 quarter-finalist • 1979 and 1981 Masters Grand Prix finalist • ranked World No. 3 in 1978 - winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1975 Wimbledon champion, partnering Gene Mayer | |
| Sam Giammalva | 1934 | – | 1955 U.S. Championships quarter-finalist | |
| Sammy Giammalva, Jr. | 1963 | – | 1982 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Bob Giltinan | 1949 | – | 1977(December) Australian Open semi-finalist | |
| Robby Ginepri | 1982 | – | 2005 U.S. Open semi-finalist – ranked World No. 15 in 2005 | |
| Juan Gisbert, Sr. | 1942 | – | 1968 Australian Championships finalist - 1975 Masters Grand Prix champion, partnering Manuel Orantes | |
| Drew Gitlin | 1958 | – | 1982 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Brad Gilbert | 1961 | – | 1987 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 1990 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1990 | |
| Hans Gildemeister | 1956 | – | 1978, 1979 and 1980 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 12 in 1980 | |
| Shlomo Glickstein | 1958 | – | 1981 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 1982 | |
| Dan Goldie | 1963 | – | 1989 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Jérôme Golmard | 1973 | – | ranked World No. 22 in 1999 | |
| Andrés Gómez | 1960 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1990 French Open champion, 1984, 1986 and 1987 quarter-finalist • 1984 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1984 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1990 | |
| Pancho Gonzales | 1928 | 1995 | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1948 and 1949 United States champion • 1968 French Open semi-finalist • 1968 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • rated World No. 1 for 8 years, 1952, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959 and (as co-No.1) 1960 | |
| Fernando González | 1980 | – | 2007 Australian Open finalist • 2009 French Open semi-finalist, 2003 and 2008 quarter-finalist • 2002 and 2009 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2005 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 2008 Olympic silver medalist, 2004 bronze medalist • ranked World No. 5 in 2007 — winner of 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 2004 gold medalist, partnering Nicolás Massú | |
| Vere St. Leger Goold | 1853 | 1909 | 1879 Wimbledon finalist | |
| Spencer Gore | 1850 | 1906 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1877 Wimbledon champion, 1878 finalist | |
| Tom Gorman | 1946 | – | 1971 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1972 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 1973 French Open semi-finalist • rated World No. 8 in 193 | |
| Brian Gottfried | 1952 | – | 1977 French Open finalist • 1980 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1978 quarter-finalist • 1977 and 1978 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 3 in 1977 - winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1975 and 1977 French Open champion, both partnering Raúl Ramírez • 1976 Wimbledon champion, partnering Ramírez | |
| Georges Goven | 1948 | – | 1970 French Open semi-finalist | |
| Jim Grabb | 1964 | – | ranked World No. 25 in 1985 – ranked doubles World No. 1 for 13 weeks → 1 week in 1989 and 6 in 1992, and 6 in 1993 | |
| Clark Graebner | 1943 | – | 1967 United States finalist, 1966 quarter-finalist; 1968 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 1971 quarter-finalist • 1966 Australian quarter-finalist • 1968 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1969 and 1970 quarter-finalist • rated World No. 7 for 1968 - winner of 1 doubles grand slam title → 1966 French champion, partnering Dennis Ralston | |
| Seymour Greenberg | 1920 | 2006 | 1942, 1943, 1944, and 1945 U.S. National Championships quarter-finalist | |
| Sébastien Grosjean | 1978 | – | 2001 Australian Open semi-finalist, 2003, 2004 and 2006 quarter-finalist • 2001 French Open semi-finalist, 2002 quarter-finalist • 2003 and 2004 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2005 quarter-finalist • 2001 Tennis Masters Cup finalist • winner of 1 ATP Masters Series event • ranked World No. 4 in 2002 | |
| Ernests Gulbis | 1988 | – | 2008 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 21 in 2011 | |
| Tim Gullikson | 1951 | 1996 | 1979 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 15 in 1979 | |
| Tom Gullikson | 1951 | – | 1982 U.S. Open quarter-finalist - winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1984 U.S. Open champion, partnering Manuela Maleeva | |
| István Gulyás | 1931 | – | 1966 French finalist, 1971 quarter-finalist | |
| Jan Gunnarsson | 1962 | – | 1989 Australian Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 25 in 1985 | |
| Heinz Günthardt | 1959 | – | 1985 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1985 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 1986 | |
| Magnus Gustafsson | 1967 | – | 1994 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 10 in 1991 | |
| Paul Haarhuis | 1966 | – | 1991 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 18 in 1995 — winner of 6 grand slam doubles titles → 1994 Australian Open champion, partnering Jacco Eltingh • 1994 U.S. Open champion, partnering Eltingh • 1995, 1998 and 2002 French Open champion, partnering Eltingh twice and then Yevgeny Kafelnikov • 1998 Wimbledon champion, partnering Eltingh • 1993 and 1998 ATP Tour World Championships titlist, both partnering Eltingh • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 70 weeks → 27 weeks in 1994, 27 weeks in 1995 and 16 weeks in 1999 | |
| Tommy Haas | 1978 | – | 2000 Olympic silver medalist • 1999, 2002 and 2007 Australian Open semi-finalist • 2009 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 2004, 2006 and 2007 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 2 in 2002 | |
| Harold Hackett | 1878 | 1937 | 1906 United States quarter-finalist - winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1907, 1908, 1909 and 1910 United States champion, partnering Fred Alexander | |
| Frank Hadow | 1855 | 1946 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1878 Wimbledon champion, 1879 runner-up • rated World No. 1 for 1 year, 1878 | |
| Willoughby Hamilton | 1864 | 1943 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1890 Wimbledon champion, 1889 semi-finalist • rated co-World No. 1 for 2 years, 1889 and 1890 | |
| Victor Hănescu | 1981 | – | 2005 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Rodney Harmon | 1961 | – | 1982 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| John Hartley | 1849 | 1935 | winner of 2 grand slam singles title → 1879 and 1880 Wimbledon champion, 1881 runner-up • rated World No. 1 for 2 years, 1879 and 1880 | |
| Charles Heathcote | 1841 | 1915 | 1877 Wimbledon All-Comers semi-finalist | |
| Tim Henman | 1974 | – | 1998, 1999, 2001 and 2002 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1996, 1997, 2003 and 2004 quarter-finalist • 2004 French Open semi-finalist • 2004 U.S. Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 2002 | |
| John Hennessey | 1900 | 1981 | rated World No. 8 in 1927 and 1928 – winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1928 U.S. champion, partnering George Lott | |
| Bob Hewitt | 1940 | – | 1960, 1962 and 1963 Australian semi-finalist • 1962, 1964 and 1966 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1967 United States quarter-finalist - winner of 9 grand slam doubles titles → 1962, 1964, 1967, 1972 and 1978 Wimbledon champion, partnering for the first two Fred Stolle and for the final three Frew McMillan • 1963 and 1964 Australian champion, partnering Stolle • 1972 French Open champion, partnering McMillan • 1977 U.S. Open champion, partnering McMillan • 1977 Masters Grand Prix champion, partnering McMillan • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 6 weeks, in 1976 - winner of 6 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1961 Australian champion, partnering Jan Lehane • 1970 and 1979 French Open champion, partnering Billie Jean King and Wendy Turnbull respectively • 1977 and 1979 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Greer Stevens • 1979 U.S. Open champion, partnering Stevens | |
| Lleyton Hewitt | 1981 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 2001 U.S. Open champion, 2004 finalist, 2000, 2002 and 2005 semi-finalist, 2003 quarter-finalist • 2002 Wimbledon champion, 2005 semi-finalist, 2004 and 2006 quarter-finalist • 2005 Australian Open finalist • 2001 and 2004 French Open quarter-finalist • 2001 and 2002 Tennis Masters Cup champion, 2004 finalist • winner of 2 ATP Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 1 for 80 weeks → 5 weeks in 2001, 52 in 2002 and 23 in 2003 — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2000 U.S. Open champion, partnering Max Mirnyi | |
| José Higueras | 1953 | – | 1982 and 1983 French Open semi-finalist, 1977 and 1979 quarter-finalist - ranked World No. 8 in 1983 | |
| Jakob Hlasek | 1964 | – | 1991 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 1985 — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1992 French Open champion, partnering Marc Rosset | |
| Lew Hoad | 1934 | 1994 | winner of 4 grand slam singles titles → 1956 and 1957 Wimbledon champion, 1953, 1954 and 1955 quarter-finalist • 1956 French champion, 1953 quarter-finalist • 1956 Australian champion, 1955 finalist, 1957 semi-finalist • 1956 United States finalist, 1953 and 1955 semi-finalist, 1951 and 1954 quarter-finalist • rated World No. 1 amateur for 1 year, 1956 - winner of 8 grand slam doubles titles → 1953, 1956 and 1957 Wimbledon champion, partnering Ken Rosewall, Rex Hartwig, and Rosewall respectively • 1953 and 1956 Australian champion, partnering Rosewell for the first two and then Neale Fraser • 1953 French champion, partnering Rosewell • 1956 United States champion, partnering Rosewell - winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1954 French champion, partnering Maureen Connolly | |
| Henrik Holm | 1968 | – | ranked World No. 17 in 1993 | |
| Greg Holmes | 1963 | – | ranked World No. 22 in 1985 | |
| Chip Hooper | 1958 | – | ranked World No. 17 in 1982 | |
| Luis Horna | 1980 | – | ranked World No. 16 in 2008 - winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2008 French Open champion, partnering Pablo Cuevas | |
| Fred Hovey | 1868 | 1945 | 1895 United States champion, 1896 finalist (results likely incomplete as drawsheets for other years unavailable) | |
| Dominik Hrbatý | 1978 | – | 1999 French Open semi-finalist • 2001 and 2005 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2004 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 12 in 2004 | |
| Jiří Hřebec | 1950 | – | ranked World No. 25 in 1974 | |
| Joe Hunt | 1919 | 1944 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1943 U.S. champion | |
| Frank Hunter | 1894 | 1981 | 1923 Wimbledon finalist • 1928 and 1929 United States finalist | |
| Stephen Huss | 1975 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2005 Wimbledon champion, partnering Wesley Moodie | |
| Goran Ivanišević | 1971 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 2001 Wimbledon champion, 1992, 1994 and 1998 finalist • 1989, 1994 and 1997 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1990, 1992 and 1994 French Open quarter-finalist • 1996 U.S. Open semi-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 2 in 1994 | |
| John Isner | 1984 | – | 2011 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 18 in 2010 | |
| Martin Jaite | 1964 | – | 1985 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 10 in 1990 | |
| François Jauffret | 1942 | – | 1974 French Open semi-finalist, 1970 quarter-finalist; 1966 French Championships semi-finalist • ranked World No. 20 in 1974 | |
| Anders Järryd | 1961 | – | 1987 and 1988 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1985 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1985 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 1985 - winner of 8 grand slam doubles titles → 1983, 1987 and 1991 French Open champion, partnering Hans Simonsson, Robert Seguso and John Fitzgerald respectively • 1987 and 1991 U.S. Open champion, partnering Stefan Edberg and Fitzgerald respectively • 1989 and 1991 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Fitzgerald • 1987 Australian Open champion, partnering Edberg • 1985 and 1986 Masters Grand Prix champion, both partnering Edberg; 1991 ATP Tour World Championships titlist, partnering Fitzgerald • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 107 weeks → 6 weeks in 1985, 5 in 1986, 45 in 1988, 31 in 1989, 4 in 1990 and 16 in 1992 | |
| Joachim Johansson | 1982 | – | 2004 U.S. Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 9 in 2005 | |
| Thomas Johansson | 1975 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 2002 Australian Open champion • 2005 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1998 and 2000 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 7 in 2002 | |
| Donald Johnson | 1968 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2001 Wimbledon champion, partnering Jared Palmer | |
| Bill Johnston | 1894 | 1946 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1915 and 1919 United States champion • 1923 Wimbledon champion (results incomplete as tournament drawsheets unavailable) • co-rated World No. 1 for 1919 - winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1915, 1916 and 1920 United States champion, partnering Clarence Griffin - winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1921 United States champion, partnering Mary Browne | |
| Kelly Jones | 1964 | – | ranked doubles World No. 1 for 1 week, in 1992 | |
| Boro Jovanovic | 1939 | – | 1968 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Yevgeny Kafelnikov | 1974 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles and 1 Olympic gold medal → 1996 French Open champion, 1995 semi-finalist, 1997, 2000 and 2001 quarter-finalist • 1999 Australian Open champion, 2000 finalist, 1995, 1996 and 2001 quarter-finalist • 1999 and 2001 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 1995 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 2000 Olympic gold medalist • ranked World No. 1 for 6 weeks, in 1999 — winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1996, 1997 and 2002 French Open champion, partnering Daniel Vacek for the first two and Paul Haarhuis for the third • 1997 U.S. Open champion, partnering Vacek | |
| Bernd Karbacher | 1968 | – | ranked World No. 22 in 1995 | |
| Ivo Karlović | 1979 | – | 2009 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 14 in 2008 | |
| Nicolas Kiefer | 1977 | – | 1998 and 2000 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1997 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 2000 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2006 Australian Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 2000 | |
| Billy Knight | 1935 | – | 1959 French quarter-finalist | |
| Julian Knowle | 1974 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2007 U.S. Open champion, partnering Simon Aspelin | |
| Mark Knowles | 1971 | – | winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 2002 Australian Open champion, partnering Daniel Nestor • 2004 U.S. Open champion, partnering Nestor • 2007 French Open champion, partnering Nestor • 2007 Tennis Masters Cup champion, partnering Nestor • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 65 weeks → 16 weeks in 2002, 23 in 2003, 13 in 2004 and 13 in 2005 — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 2009 Wimbledon champion, partnering Anna-Lena Grönefeld | |
| Thomaz Koch | 1945 | – | 1969 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 24 in 1974 — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1975 French Open champion, partnering Fiorella Bonicelli | |
| Jan Kodeš | 1946 | – | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1970 and 1971 French Open champion, 1972 and 1973 quarter-finalist • 1973 Wimbledon champion, 1972 semi-finalist, 1974 quarter-finalist • 1971 and 1973 U.S. Open finalist, 1976 quarter-finalist | |
| Philipp Kohlschreiber | 1983 | – | ranked World No. 22 in 2009 | |
| Petr Korda | 1968 | – | winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1998 Australian Open champion, 1993 quarter-finalist • 1992 French Open finalist • 1998 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1995 and 1997 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 2 in 1998 | |
| Stefan Koubek | 1977 | – | 2002 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 20 in 2000 | |
| Jan Koželuh | 1904 | 1973 | 1926 and 1927 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Karel Koželuh | 1895 | 1950 | rated professionial World No. 1 for four years, 1926, 1927, 1928 and 1929 | |
| Richard Krajicek | 1971 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1996 Wimbledon champion, 1998 semi-finalist • 1992 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1993 French Open semi-finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 1997, 1999 and 2000 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 4 in 1999 | |
| Jack Kramer | 1921 | 2009 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1946 and 1947 United States champion, 1943 finalist, 1941 quarter-finalist • 1947 Wimbledon champion • rated World No. 1 for 5 years → 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950 and 1951 — winner of 6 grand slam doubles titles → 1940, 1941, 1943, 1947 United States champion, all partnering Ted Schroeder • 1946 and 1947 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Schroeder — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1941 United States champion, partnering Sarah Palfrey Cooke | |
| Aaron Krickstein | 1967 | – | 1989 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 1988 and 1990 quarter-finalist • 1995 Australian Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 6 in 1990 | |
| Johan Kriek | 1958 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1981 and 1982 Australian Open champion, 1984 semi-finalist, 1983 and 1985 quarter-finalist • 1986 French Open semi-finalist • 1981 and 1982 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1980 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 1978 and 1979 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 1984 | |
| Ramanathan Krishnan | 1937 | – | 1960 and 1961 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1962 French quarter-finalist | |
| Ramesh Krishnan | 1961 | – | 1981 and 1987 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 1986 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • World No. 23 in 1985 | |
| Paul Kronk | 1954 | – | 1978 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Gustavo Kuerten | 1976 | – | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1997, 2000 and 2001 French Open champion • 1999 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1999 and 2001 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2000 Tennis Masters Cup champion • winner of 5 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 1 for 43 weeks → 4 weeks in 2000 and 39 in 2001 | |
| Karol Kučera | 1974 | – | 1998 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1998 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 6 in 1998 | |
| Nicklas Kulti | 1971 | – | 1992 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| René Lacoste | 1904 | 1996 | winner of 7 grand slam singles titles → 1925, 1927 and 1929 French champion, 1926 and 1928 finalist • 1925 and 1928 Wimbledon champion, 1924 finalist, 1927 semi-finalist • 1926 and 1927 United States champion • rated World No. 1 for 2 years — winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1925 and 1929 French champion, both partnering Jean Borotra • 1925 Wimbledon champion, partnering Borotra | |
| Nicolás Lapentti | 1976 | – | 1999 Australian Open semi-finalist • 2002 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 6 in 1999 | |
| Sébastien Lareau | 1973 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title and 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 1999 U.S. Open doubles champion, partnering Alex O’Brien • 2000 Olympic doubles gold medalist, partnering Daniel Nestor • 1999 Tennis Masters Cup champion, partnering O’Brien | |
| William Larned | 1872 | 1926 | winner of 7 grand slam singles titles → 1901, 1902, 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910 and 1911 United States champion, 1900 and 1903 finalist • rated World No. 1 for 5 years → 1901 and 1902 (co-rated), 1908, 1909 and 1910 | |
| Art Larsen | 1925 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1950 United States champion, 1954 finalist | |
| Magnus Larsson | 1970 | – | 1994 French Open semi-finalist • 1993, 1997 and 1998 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 10 in 1995 | |
| Rod Laver | 1938 | – | winner of 11 grand slam titles → 1960 and 1962 Australian champion, 1961 finalist; 1969 Australian Open champion • 1962 French champion, 1961 semi-finalist; 1969 French Open champion, 1968 finalist • 1961, 1962, 1968 and 1969 Wimbledon champion, 1959 and 1960 finalist, 1971 quarter-finalist • 1962 United States champion, 1960 and 1961 finalist, 1959 quarter-finalist; 1969 U.S. Open champion • 1970 Masters Grand Prix finalist • rated World No. 1 for 7 years → 1964 (co-rated), 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969 and 1970 (co-rated) - winner of 6 grand slam doubles titles → 1959, 1960 and 1961 Australian champion, partnering Bob Mark; 1969 Australian Open champion, partnering Roy Emerson • 1961 French champion, partnering Emerson • 1971 Wimbledon champion, partnering Emerson - winner of 3 mixed doubles grand slam titles → 1959 and 1960 Wimbledon champion, partnering Darlene Hard • 1961 French champion, partnering Hard | |
| Herbert Lawford | 1851 | 1925 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1887 Wimbledon champion, 1880, 1884, 1885, 1886 and 1888 finalist, 1878, 1881 and 1882 and All-Comers semi-finalist | |
| Rick Leach | 1964 | – | winner of 5 grand slam doubles titles → 1988, 1989 and 2000 Australian Open champion, partnering Jim Pugh for the first two and Ellis Ferreira for the last one • 1990 Wimbledon champion, partnering Pugh • 1993 U.S. Open champion, partnering Ken Flach • 1988 Masters Grand Prix champion, partnering Pugh; 1997 ATP Tour World Championships titlist, partnering Jonathan Stark; 2001 ATP World Doubles Challenge Cup champion, partnering Ferreira • ranked doubles World No. 1 for 9 weeks, in 1990 - winner of 4 mixed doubles titles → 1995 and 1997 Australian Open champion, Natasha Zvereva and Manon Bollegraf respectively • 1990 Wimbledon champion, partnering Zina Garrison • 1997 U.S. Open champion, partnering Bollegraf | |
| Henri Leconte | 1963 | – | 1988 French Open finalist, 1986 semi-finalist, 1985 and 1990 quarter-finalist • 1986 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1985 and 1987 quarter-finalist • 1986 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 1986 - winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1984 French Open champion, partnering Yannick Noah | |
| Ivan Lendl | 1960 | – | winner of 8 Grand Slam singles titles → 1984, 1986 and 1987 French Open champion, 1981 and 1985 finalist, 1983 and 1988 quarter-finalist • 1985, 1986 and 1987 U.S. Open champion, 1982, 1983 and 1984 finalist, 1991 semi-finalist, 1980, 1990 and 1992 quarter-finalist • 1989 and 1990 Australian Open champion, 1983 and 1991 finalist, 1985, 1987 and 1988 semi-finalist, 1992 quarter-finalist • 1986 and 1987 Wimbledon finalist, 1983, 1984, 1988, 1989 and 1990 semi-finalist • 1981, 1982, 1985, 1986 and 1987 Masters Grand Prix champion • ranked World No. 1 for 270 weeks → 17 weeks in 1983, 15 in 1984, 17 in 1985, 52 in 1986, 52 in 1987, 37 in 1988, 48 in 1989 and 32 in 1990 | |
| Chris Lewis | 1957 | – | 1983 Wimbledon finalist • ranked World No. 19 in 1979 | |
| Ivan Ljubičić | 1979 | – | 2006 French Open semi-finalist • 2006 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 3 in 2006 - 2004 Olympic Games doubles bronze medalist | |
| Michaël Llodra | 1980 | – | winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 2003 and 2004 Australian Open champion, both partnering Fabrice Santoro • 2007 Wimbledon champion, partnering Arnaud Clément | |
| John Lloyd | 1954 | – | 1977 (December) Australian Open finalist, 1985 quarter-finalist • 1984 U.S. Open quarter-finalist - winner of 3 mixed doubles grand slam titles → 1983 and 1984 Wimbledon champion, partnering Wendy Turnbull • 1982 French Open champion, partnering Turnbull | |
| Feliciano López | 1981 | – | 2005 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 20 in 2005 | |
| George Lott | 1906 | 1991 | 1931 United States finalist (likely incomplete as drawsheets prior to 1933 are unavailable) - winner of 8 doubles grand slam titles → 1928, 1929, 1930, 1933 and 1934 United States champion, partnering John Hennessey, John Doeg, Doeg again, Lester Stoefen and Stoefen again, respectively • 1931 and 1934 Wimbledon champion, partnering John Van Ryn and Stoefen respectively • 1931 French champion, partnering Van Ryn - winner of 4 mixed doubles grand slam titles → 1929, 1931 and 1934 United States champion, partnering Betty Nuthall, Nuthall again, and Helen Jacobs, respectively • 1931 Wimbledon champion, partnering Anna McCune Harper | |
| Peter Lundgren | 1965 | – | ranked World No. 25 in 1987 | |
| Bob Lutz | 1949 | – | 1970 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1969 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1980 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • rated World No. 7 in 1972 - winner of 5 doubles grand slam titles → 1968, 1974, 1978 and 1980 U.S. Open champion, all partnering Stan Smith • 1970 Australian Open champion, partnering Smith | |
| Barry MacKay | 1935 | – | 1959 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1958 and 1960 quarter-finalist • 1959 Australian semi-finalist • 1959 United States quarter-finalist | |
| Gene Mako | 1916 | – | 1938 United States finalist • 1938 Australian quarter-finalist • rated World No. 9 in 1938 – winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1936 and 1938 United States champion, both partnering Don Budge • 1937 and 1938 Wimbledon champion, partnering Budge – winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1936 U.S. mixed doubles champion, partnering Alice Marble | |
| Xavier Malisse | 1980 | – | 2002 Wimbledon semi-finalist • ranked World No. 19 in 2002 — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2004 French Open champion, partnering Olivier Rochus | |
| Amos Mansdorf | 1965 | – | 1992 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 18 in 1987 | |
| Alberto Mancini | 1969 | – | 1989 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 8 in 1989 | |
| Bruce Manson | 1956 | – | 1981 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Félix Mantilla | 1974 | – | 1997 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1998 French Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 10 in 1998 | |
| John Marks | 1952 | – | 1978 Australian Open finalist | |
| William Marshall | 1849 | ? | 1877 Wimbledon runner-up | |
| Billy Martin | 1956 | – | 1977 Wimbledon quarter-finalist - winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1980 U.S. Open champion, partnering Anne Smith | |
| Todd Martin | 1970 | – | 1994 Australian Open finalist, 1999 and 2001 quarter-finalist • 1999 U.S. Open finalist, 1994 and 2000 semi-finalist • 1994 and 1996 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1993 and 1999 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1999 | |
| Nicolás Massú | 1979 | – | 2004 Olympic gold medalist • ranked World No. 9 in 2004 — winner of 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 2004 gold medalist, partnering Fernando González | |
| Geoff Masters | 1950 | – | 1974 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Wally Masur | 1963 | – | 1987 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1983 quarter-finalist • 1993 U.S. Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 15 in 1993 | |
| Paul-Henri Mathieu | 1982 | – | ranked World No. 12 in 2008 | |
| Shuzo Matsuoka | 1967 | – | 1995 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Andreas Maurer | 1958 | – | ranked World No. 24 in 1986 | |
| Florian Mayer | 1983 | – | 2004 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 18 in 2011 | |
| Gene Mayer | 1956 | – | 1980 and 1982 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1982 and 1984 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1980 — winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1978 and 1979 French Open champion, partnering Hank Pfister and Sandy Mayer respectively | |
| Sandy Mayer | 1952 | – | 1973 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1978 and 1983 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 1982 — winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1975 Wimbledon champion, partnering Vitas Gerulaitis • 1979 French Open champion, partnering Gene Mayer | |
| Tim Mayotte | 1960 | – | 1983 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1981 quarter-finalist • 1982 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1981, 1983, 1986, 1988 and 1989 quarter-finalist • 1989 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 1988 | |
| John McEnroe | 1959 | – | winner of 7 grand slam singles titles → 1979, 1980, 1981 and 1984 U.S. Open champion, 1985 finalist, 1978, 1982 and 1990 semi-finalist, 1987 quarter-finalist • 1981, 1983 and 1984 Wimbledon champion, 1980 and 1982 finalist, 1977, 1989 and 1992 semi-finalist, 1985 quarter-finalist • 1984 French Open finalist, 1985 semi-finalist, 1981 and 1983 quarter-finalist • 1983 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1985, 1989 and 1992 quarter-finalist • 1978, 1983 and 1984 Masters Grand Prix champion, 1982 finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 170 weeks → 4 weeks in 1980, 23 in 1981, 45 in 1982, 26 in 1983, 37 in 1984, 35 in 1985 — winner of 9 grand slam doubles titles → 1979, 1981, 1983, 1984 and 1992 Wimbledon champion, the first four partnering Peter Fleming and the fifth partnering Michael Stich • 1979, 1981, 1983 and 1989 U.S. Open champion, the first three partnering Fleming and the fourth partnering Mark Woodforde • 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983 and 1984 Masters Grand Prix doubles champion, all partnering Fleming • ranked World No. 1 for 267 weeks → 37 weeks in 1979, 52 in 1980, 41 in 1981, 48 in 1982, 52 in 1983, 37 in 1984 - winner of 1 mixed grand slam doubles title → 1977 French Open champion, partnering Mary Carillo | |
| Patrick McEnroe | 1966 | – | 1991 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1995 U.S. Open quarter-finalist — winner of 1 grand slam doubles titles → 1989 French Open champion, partnering Jim Grabb | |
| Ken McGregor | 1929 | – | winner of 1 grand slam title → 1952 Australian champion, 1950 and 1951 finalist • 1951 Wimbledon finalist, 1952 quarter-finalist - winner of 7 grand slam doubles titles, all partnering Frank Sedgman → 1951 and 1952 French champion • 1951 and 1952 Wimbledon champion • 1951 and 1952 Australian champion • 1951 United States champion - winner of one grand slam mixed doubles champion → 1950 United States champion, partnering Margaret Osborne duPont | |
| Chuck McKinley | 1941 | 1986 | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1963 Wimbledon champion, 1961 finalist, 1964 semi-finalist • 1962, 1963 and 1964 United States semi-finalist, 1960 quarter-finalist - winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1961, 1963 and 1964 United States champion, all partnering Dennis Ralston | |
| Maurice McLoughlin | 1890 | 1957 | winner of 2 grand slam titles → 1912 and 1913 United States champion, 1911, 1914 and 1915 finalist • 1913 Wimbledon finalist (results likely incomplete as most drawsheets are unavailable) • rated World No. 1 for 1 year, 1914 - winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1912, 1913 and 1914 United States champion, all partnering Tom Bundy | |
| Peter McNamara | 1955 | – | • 1980 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1981 quarter-finalist • 1981 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1982 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 1983 (may be higher as rankings before 1983 are incomplete) - winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1980 and 1982 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Paul McNamee • 1979 Australian Open champion, partnering McNamee | |
| Paul McNamee | 1954 | – | • ranked World No. 24 in 1986 | |
| Don McNeill | 1918 | 1996 | ||
| Frew McMillan | 1942 | – | ||
| Miloslav Mečíř | 1964 | – | 1988 Olympic gold medalist • 1986 US Open finalist, 1987 quarter-finalist • 1989 Australian Open finalist, 1987 quarter-finalist • 1987 French Open semi-finalist • 1988 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1986 quarter-finalist | |
| Andrei Medvedev | 1974 | – | 1999 French Open finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1994 | |
| Karl Meiler | 1949 | – | ranked World No. 20 in 1973 | |
| Fernando Meligeni | 1971 | – | 1999 French Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 25 in 1999 | |
| Jurgen Melzer | 1981 | – | 2010 French Open semi-finalist • winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2010 Wimbledon champion (with Philipp Petzschner) • ranked World No. 9 in 2011 | |
| Alex Metreveli | 1944 | – | 1973 Wimbledon finalist, 1972/1974 quarter-finalist • 1972 French Open semi-finalist • 1972 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1973/1975 quarter-finalist • 1974 US Open quarter-finalist | |
| Max Mirnyi | 1977 | – | 2002 US Open quarter-finalist • World No. 18 in 2003 — winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 2000/2002 US Open champion (the first with L. Hewitt, and the second with Bhupathi) • 2005/2006 French Open champion (both with Björkman) — winner of 3 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1998 Wimbledon champion (with S. Williams) • 1998/2007 US Open (the first with S. Williams, and the second with Azarenka) | |
| Juan Mónaco | 1984 | – | ranked World No. 19 in 2007 | |
| Gaël Monfils | 1986 | – | 2008 French Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 2011 | |
| Albert Montañés | 1980 | – | ranked World No. 22 in 2010 | |
| Wesley Moodie | 1979 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2005 Wimbledon champion (with Huss) • 2009 French Open doubles finalist (with D. Norman) | |
| Raymond Moore | 1946 | – | 1977 US Open quarter-finalist | |
| Buster Mottram | 1955 | – | • ranked World No. 15 in 1983 | |
| Carlos Moyà | 1976 | – | winner of 1 grand slam title → 1998 French Open champion, 2003/2004/2007 quarter-finalist • 1997 Australian Open finalist, 2001 quarter-finalist • 1998 US Open semi-finalist, 2007 quarter-finalist • 2002 Masters semi-finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 2 weeks | |
| Marty Mulligan | 1940 | – | 1962 Wimbledon finalist; 1970 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Gardnar Mulloy | 1913 | – | 1952 U.S. finalist, 1942/1946/1950 semi-finalist, 1947/1949/1951/1953 quarter-finalist • 1947 Australian semi-finalist • 1948 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1950 quarter-finalist • 1952/1953/1954 French quarter-finalist — winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1942/1945/1946/1948 U.S. champion, partnering Bill Talbert | |
| Gilles Müller | 1983 | – | 2008 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Andy Murray | 1987 | – | 2008 U.S. Open finalist • 2010/2011 Australian Open finalist • 2009/2010/2011 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2008 quarter-finalist • 2011 French Open semi finalist, 2009 quarter-finalist • 2008/2010 Masters Cup semi-finalist • winner of 7 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 2 in 2009 | |
| Robert Murray | 1892 | 1970 | 1917/1918 U.S. champion | |
| Thomas Muster | 1967 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1995 French Open champion, 1990 semi-finalist • 1989/1997 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1994 quarter-finalist • 1993/1994/1996 US Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 6 weeks | |
| Rafael Nadal | 1986 | – | winner of 10 grand slam singles titles and 1 Olympic gold medal → 2005 (first appearance) /2006/2007/2008/2010/2011 French Open champion • 2008/2010 Wimbledon champion, 2006/2007 finalist • 2010 US Open champion, 2008/2009 semi-finalist, 2006 quarter-finalist • 2009 Australian Open champion, 2012 finalist, 2008 semi-finalist, 2007/2010 quarter-finalist • 2010 Tennis Masters Cup / ATP World Tour Finals finalist, 2006/2007 semi-finalist • Winner of 18 Masters Series titles (Record) • 2008 Olympic gold medalist • ranked World No. 1 for 46 weeks in 2008/2009 | |
| David Nalbandian | 1982 | – | 2002 Wimbledon finalist • 2003 US Open semi-finalist, 2005 quarter-finalist • 2004/2006 French Open semi-finalist • 2006 Australian Open semi-finalist, 2003/2004/2005 quarter-finalist • 2005 Masters champion, 2006 semi-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 3 in 2006 | |
| Ilie Năstase | 1946 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1972 US Open champion, 1976 semi-finalist, 1975 quarter-finalist • 1973 French Open champion, 1971 finalist, 1970/1974/1977 quarter-finalist • 1972/1976 Wimbledon finalist, 1977/1978 quarter-finalist • 1971/1972/1973/1975 Masters champion, 1974 finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 40 weeks and for 1973 | |
| Daniel Nestor | 1972 | – | winner of 5 grand slam doubles titles → 2002 Australian Open champion, partnering Mark Knowles • 2004 US Open champion, partnering Knowles • 2007 French Open champion, partnering Knowles • 2008/2009 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Nenad Zimonjić • 2000 Olympic gold medal, partnering Sébastien Lareau • 2007/2008 Masters champion, the first partnering Knowles, the second with Zimonjić • ranked World No. 1 in 2002/2009 | |
| John Newcombe | 1944 | – | winner of 7 grand slam singles titles → 1967/1970/1971 Wimbledon champion, 1969 finalist, 1974 quarter-finalist • 1967/1973 US Open champion, 1969/1970/1974 semi-finalist, 1968 quarter-finalist • 1973/1975 Australian Open champion, 1976 finalist, 1969/1970/1972/1974/1977[Dec] quarter-finalist • 1969 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 1 — one of the "Handsome Eight" | |
| Kurt Nielsen | 1930 | – | 1953/1955 Wimbledon finalist • French quarter-finalist (twice) • U.S. quarter-finalist — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1957 U.S. champion, partnering Althea Gibson | |
| Jarkko Nieminen | 1981 | – | 2005 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2006 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 2008 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 13 in 2006 | |
| Kei Nishikori | 1989 | – | 2012 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 18 in 2012 | |
| Yannick Noah | 1960 | – | winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1983 French Open champion • 1990 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1983/1985/1989 US Open quarter-finalist | |
| Magnus Norman | 1976 | – | 2000 French Open finalist • 2000 Australian Open semi-finalist | |
| Karel Nováček | 1965 | – | 1994 US Open semi-finalist • 1987/1993 French Open quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title | |
| Jiří Novák | 1975 | – | 2002 Australian Open semi-finalist | |
| Hans Nüsslein | 1910 | 1991 | ||
| Joakim Nyström | 1963 | – | ranked World No. 7 in 1986 | |
| Alex O’Brien | 1970 | – | doubles specialist | |
| Tom Okker | 1944 | – | 1968 US Open finalist, 1971 semi-finalist • 1969 French Open semi-finalist, 1973 quarter-finalist • 1971 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1970 quarter-finalist • 1978 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1968/1969/1975/1979 quarter-finalist | |
| Alex Olmedo | 1936 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1959 Australian champion • 1959 Wimbledon champion • 1959 U.S. finalist — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1958 U.S. champion, partnering Ham Richardson — inducted in the ITHF in 1987. | |
| Manuel Orantes | 1949 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1975 US Open champion, 1976/1977 quarter-finalist • 1974 French Open finalist, 1972 semi-finalist, 1976/1978 quarter-finalist • 1972 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1968 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1976 Masters champion | |
| Jim Osborne | 1945 | – | 1971 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Rafael Osuna | 1938 | 1969 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1963 U.S. Open champion, winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1960/1963 Wimbledon champion • 1962 US Open champion, ranked World No. 1 in 1963 | |
| Leander Paes | 1973 | – | 1996 Olympic bronze medalist — winner of 6 grand slam doubles titles → 1999/2001 French Open champion, both partnering Mahesh Bhupathi • 1999 Wimbledon champion, partnering Bhupathi • 2006 US Open champion, partnering Martin Damm • 2009 French open, US Open champion both parternering Mark Knowles • ranked World No. 1 in doubles for 33 weeks — winner of 6 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1999/2003 Wimbledon champion, partnering Lisa Raymond and Martina Navratilova respectively • 2003 Australian Open champion, partnering Navratilova • 2010 Australian Open, Wimbledon Champion | |
| Dinny Pails | 1921 | 1986 | winner of 1 grand slam title → 1946 Australian champion, 1947 finalist • 1947 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1946 quarter-finalist | |
| Antonio Palafox | 1936 | – | winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1962 U.S. National champion • 1963 Wimbledon champion | |
| Jared Palmer | 1971 | – | winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1995 Australian Open champion, partnering Richey Reneberg • 2001 Wimbledon champion, partnering Donald Johnson • ranked World No. 1 in doubles for 16 weeks | |
| Adriano Panatta | 1950 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1976 French Open champion, 1973/1975 semi-finalist, 1972/1977 quarter-finalist • 1979 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1976 Davis Cup champion • ranked World No. 4 in 1976 | |
| C. F. Parr | ? | ? | ? | 1879 Wimbledon All-Comers semi-finalist |
| Onny Parun | 1947 | – | 1973 Australian Open finalist • 1975 French Open quarter-finalist • 1971/1972 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1973 US Open quarter-finalist | |
| Charlie Pasarell | 1944 | – | 1965 U.S. quarter-finalist • 1976 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| David Pate | 1962 | – | • ranked World No. 18 in 1987 | |
| Gerald Patterson | 1895 | 1967 | a co-World No. 1 in 1919 with "Little Bill" Johnston | |
| Andrew Pattison | 1949 | – | ranked World No. 24 in 1974 | |
| Budge Patty | 1924 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1950 French champion • 1950 Wimbledon champion, 1949 finalist, 1947 semi-finalist — winner of 1 grand slam doubles titles → 1957 Wimbledon champion — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 1946 French champion | |
| Andrei Pavel | 1974 | – | 2002 French Open quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title | |
| Victor Pecci | 1955 | – | ranked World No. 9 in 1980 | |
| Pierre Pellizza | 1917 | 1946 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | ||
| Guillermo Pérez Roldán | 1969 | – | • ranked World No. 13 in 1988 | |
| Mikael Pernfors | 1963 | – | 1986 French Open finalist • 1990 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 10 in 1986 | |
| Fred Perry | 1909 | 1995 | winner of 8 grand slam singles titles, including a Career Slam → 1933/1934/1936 U.S. champion • 1934/1935/1936 Wimbledon champion • 1934 Australian champion, 1935 finalist • 1935 French champion, 1936 finalist • World No. 1 for 5 years | |
| Yvon Petra | 1916 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1946 Wimbledon champion, 1947 quarter-finalist | |
| Hank Pfister | 1953 | – | 1978/1981/1982 Australian Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 19 in 1983 | |
| Mark Philippoussis | 1976 | – | 1998 US Open finalist • 2003 Wimbledon finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 8 in 1999 | |
| Barry Phillips | 1937 | – | 1968 Australian Championships semi-finalist • 1971 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Nicola Pietrangeli | 1933 | – | ||
| Nikola Pilić | 1939 | – | 1973 French Open singles finalist • 1970 U.S. Open doubles champion | |
| Libor Pimek | 1963 | – | ranked World No. 21 in 1985 | |
| Ulrich Pinner | 1954 | – | ranked World No. 23 in 1979 | |
| Cédric Pioline | 1969 | – | 1993 US Open finalist • 1997 Wimbledon finalist • 1998 French Open semi-finalist | |
| Hans-Jürgen Pohmann | 1947 | – | 1974 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Alexander Popp | 1976 | – | 2000/2003 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Goran Prpić | 1964 | – | 1992 Olympic doubles bronze medalist | |
| Patrick Proisy | 1949 | – | ranked World No. 23 in 1973 • 1973 French Open finalist | |
| Mariano Puerta | 1978 | – | 2005 French Open finalist | |
| Jim Pugh | 1964 | – | doubles specialist | |
| Franjo Puncec | 1913 | 1985 | 1946 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Mel Purcell | 1959 | – | ranked World No. 21 in 1980 | |
| Sam Querrey | 1987 | – | ranked World No. 19 in 2010 | |
| Adrian Quist | 1913 | 1991 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1936/1940/1948 Australian champion — winner of 10 grand slam doubles titles → 1936/1937/1938/1939/1940/1946/1947/1948/1949/1950 Australian champion, the first two partnering Don Turnbull, the last eight with John Bromwich | |
| Patrick Rafter | 1972 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1997/1998 U.S. Open champion • 2000/2001 Wimbledon finalist, 1999 semi-finalist • 1997 French Open semi-finalist • 2001 Australian Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 1 week | |
| Dennis Ralston | 1942 | – | 1966 Wimbledon finalist | |
| Andy Ram | 1980 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2008 Australian Open champion — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2006 Wimbledon champion, partnering Vera Zvonareva | |
| Raúl Ramírez | 1953 | – | ranked World No. 4 in 1976 – winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1975/1977 French Open champion • 1976 Wimbledon champion • 1980 Masters champion | |
| Richey Reneberg | 1965 | – | ranked World No. 20 in 1991 – winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1992 US Open champion • 1995 Australian Open champion • ranked World No. 1 in doubles | |
| Peter Rennert | 1958 | – | 1980 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Ernest Renshaw | 1861 | 1899 | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1888 Wimbledon champion • ranked World No. 1 in 1887/1888 — winner of 7 grand slam doubles titles → 1980/1881/1884/1885/1886/1888/1889 Wimbledon champion, all partnering twin brother William Renshaw | |
| William Renshaw | 1861 | 1904 | winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1881/1882/1883/1884/1885/1886/1889 Wimbledon champion, 1890 finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 7 years (including 6 consecutive) — winner of 7 grand slam doubles titles → 1980/1881/1884/1885/1886/1888/1889 Wimbledon champion, partnering twin brother /Ernest Renshaw | |
| George E. Richards | c.1921 | 1942 U.S. National Championships quarter-finalist | ||
| Vinnie Richards | 1903 | 1959 | 1924 Olympic gold medalist | |
| Cliff Richey | 1946 | – | 1970 French Open semi-finalist • 1970/1972 US Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 16 in 1973 | |
| Bobby Riggs | 1918 | 1995 | ranked World No. 1 for 3 years | |
| Marty Riessen | 1941 | – | 1971 Australian Open quarter-finalist; 1971 doubles finalist • 1971 US Open quarter-finalist; 1976 doubles champion, 1975/1978 finalist • 1971 French Open doubles champion (w/Ashe) • 1969 Wimbledon doubles finalist • ranked World No. 11 in 1974 | |
| Marcelo Ríos | 1975 | – | 1998 Australian Open finalist; 1998/1999 French Open quarter-finalist • 1997 US Open quarter-finalist • winner of 5 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 1 | |
| Tommy Robredo | 1982 | – | 2003/2005/2007 French Open quarter-finalist • 2004 US Open doubles semi-finalist • 2007 Australian Open quarter-finalist, 2003 doubles quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 7 in 2006 | |
| Tony Roche | 1945 | – | 1966 French champion, 1965/1967 finalist • 1968 Wimbledon finalist • 1969/1970 U.S. Open finalist • 1964 Australian Championships quarter-finalist | |
| Olivier Rochus | 1981 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 2004 French Open champion, partnering Xavier Malisse • ranked World No. 24 in 2005 | |
| Andy Roddick | 1982 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 2003 US Open champion, 2006 finalist, 2001/2002/2004/2007 quarter-finalist • 2004/2005/2009 Wimbledon finalist, 2003 semi-finalist, 2007 quarter-finalist • 2003/2005/2007/2009 Australian Open semi-finalist, 2004/2010 quarter-finalist • 2003/2004/2007 Masters semi-finalist • winner of 4 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 1 for 13 weeks | |
| Christophe Roger-Vasselin | 1957 | – | 1983 French Open semi-finalist | |
| Ken Rosewall | 1934 | – | winner of 8 grand slam singles titles → 1953/1955/1971(O)/1972(O) Australian (Open) champion; 1953/1956/1972(O) doubles champion • 1953/1968(O) French (Open) champion • 1956/1970(O) US (Open) champion; 1956/1969(O) doubles champion • 1954/1956/1970(Open)/1974(O) Wimbledon finalist; 1953/1956 doubles champion • ranked World No.1 in 1961, 1962 and 1963 | |
| Marc Rosset | 1970 | – | 1992 Olympic gold medalist • 1996 French Open semi-finalist • 1999 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 9 in 1995 | |
| Derrick Rostagno | 1965 | – | 1988 US Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 13 in 1991 | |
| Ray Ruffels | 1946 | – | 1969/1975 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1970/1977(December) quarter-finalist • 1968 Australian Championships quarter-finalist | |
| Greg Rusedski | 1973 | – | 1997 US Open finalist • 1997 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 4 in 1997 | |
| Alejo Russell | 1916 | 1977 | 1942 and 1945 U.S. National Championships quarter-finalist | |
| André Sá | 1978 | – | 2002 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| John Sadri | 1956 | – | ranked World No. 14 in 1980 | |
| Marat Safin | 1980 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 2000 US Open champion, 2001 semi-finalist • 2005 Australian Open champion, 2002/2004 finalist • 2002 French Open semi-finalist, 2000 quarter-finalist • 2008 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2001 quarter-finalist • 2000/2004 Masters semi-finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 9 weeks | |
| Pete Sampras | 1971 | – | winner of 14 grand slam singles titles → 1990/1993/1995/1996/2002 US Open champion, 1992/2000/2001 finalist, 1998 semi-finalist, 1991 quarter-finalist • 1993/1994/1995/1997/1998/1999/2000 Wimbledon champion (record), 1992 semi-finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 1994/1997 Australian Open champion, 1995 finalist, 1993/2000 semi-finalist, 1998 quarter-finalist • 1996 French Open semi-finalist, 1992/1993/1994 quarter-finalist • 1991/1994/1996/1997/1999 Masters champion (record; shared with Ivan Lendl), 1993 finalist, 1992/1995/1998/2000 semi-finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 286 weeks (record) | |
| Emilio Sánchez | 1965 | – | 1988 French Open quarter-finalist • 1988 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Javier Sánchez | 1968 | – | 1991/1996 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Manuel Santana | 1938 | – | winner of 4 grand slam singles titles → 1961/1964 French champion • 1965 U.S. champion • 1966 Wimbledon champion • ranked World No. 1 amateur in 1966 • winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1963 French champion | |
| Fabrice Santoro | 1972 | – | 2006 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 17 in 2001 — winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 2003/2004 Australian Open champion, both partnering Michaël Llodra — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 2005 French Open champion, partnering Daniela Hantuchová | |
| Jiro Sato | 1908 | 1934 | 1931/1933 French championship semi-finalist • 1932 Australian championship semi-finalist • 1932/1933 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1931 quarter-finalist | |
| Dick Savitt | 1927 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1951 Wimbledon champion • 1951 Australian champion • 1950/1951 U.S. semi-finalist, 1956 quarter-finalist – ranked World No. 2 | |
| Bill Scanlon | 1956 | – | ranked World No. 9 in 1984 | |
| Sjeng Schalken | 1976 | – | 2002 US Open semi-finalist • 2002/2003/2004 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 11 in 2003 | |
| Michiel Schapers | 1959 | – | 1985/1988 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 25 in 1988 | |
| Ted Schroeder | 1921 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1942 U.S. champion, 1949 finalist • 1949 Wimbledon champion — winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1940/1941/1947 U.S. champion, all partnering Jack Kramer | |
| Rainer Schüttler | 1976 | – | 2003 Australian Open finalist • 2008 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 2003 Masters semi-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 2003 | |
| Frank Sedgman | 1927 | – | winner of 5 grand slam singles titles → 1949/1950 Australian champion, 1952 finalist • 1951/1952 U.S. champion • 1952 Wimbledon champion • 1952 French championships finalist — winner of 9 grand slam doubles titles and a calendar year grand slam (1951) → 1948/1951/1952 Wimbledon champion • 1950/1951 U.S. champion • 1951/1952 Australian champion • 1951/1952 French champion — winner of 8 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1949/1950 Australian champion • 1951/1952 French champion • 1951/1952 Wimbledon champion • 1951/1952 U.S. champion • considered World No. 1 amateur for 1952 | |
| Pancho Segura | 1921 | – | 1942/1943/1944/1945/1946/1947 U.S. semi-finalist • considered World No. 1 professional for 1950 and 1952 | |
| Robert Seguso | 1963 | – | winner of 4 grand slam doubles titles → 1985 US Open champion • 1987/1988 Wimbledon champion • 1987 French Open champion | |
| Zenzo Shimizu | 1891 | 1977 | 1920 Wimbledon (challenge round) finalist | |
| Jan Siemerink | 1970 | – | 1998 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 14 in 1998 | |
| Gilles Simon | 1984 | – | 2009 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2008 Masters semi-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 2008 | |
| Dick Skeen | 1906 | 1994 | ranked No. 2 in Professional Tennis in 1941 | |
| Horst Skoff | 1968 | 2008 | ranked World No. 18 in 1990 | |
| Henry Slocum | 1862 | 1949 | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1888/1889 U.S. champion, 1887/1890 finalist — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1889 U.S. champion | |
| Pavel Složil | 1955 | – | ranked World No. 12 in 1984 | |
| Tomáš Šmíd | 1956 | – | ranked World No. 11 in 1984 | |
| Stan Smith | 1946 | – | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1971 US Open champion • 1972 Wimbledon champion • 1971/1972 French Open quarter-finalist • 1970 Masters champion • ranked World No. 1 for 1972 (year-end) | |
| Robin Söderling | 1984 | – | 2009/2010 French Open finalist • 2009 Masters semi-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 4 in 2010 | |
| Harold Solomon | 1952 | – | ranked World No. 5 in 1980 | |
| Vince Spadea | 1974 | – | 1999 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 18 in 2005 | |
| Franco Squillari | 1975 | – | 2000 French Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 11 in 2000 | |
| Milan Šrejber | 1963 | – | 1986 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 23 in 1986 | |
| Paradorn Srichaphan | 1979 | – | ranked World No. 9 in 2003 | |
| Jonathan Stark | 1971 | – | doubles specialist | |
| Carl-Uwe Steeb | 1967 | – | ranked World No. 14 in 1990 | |
| Ulf Stenlund | 1967 | – | ranked World No. 23 in 1987 | |
| Radek Štěpánek | 1978 | – | 2006 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 8 in 2006 | |
| Brett Steven | 1969 | – | 1993 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Sherwood Stewart | 1946 | – | winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1976/1982 French Open champion • 1984 Australian Open champion | |
| Michael Stich | 1968 | – | winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1991 Wimbledon champion, 1997 semi-finalist, 1992/1993 quarter-finalist • 1994 U.S. Open finalist, 1991 quarter-finalist • 1996 French Open finalist, 1991 semi-finalist • 1993 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1992 quarter-finalist • 1993 Masters champion • winner of 2 Masters Series titles | |
| Dick Stockton | 1951 | – | 1974 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1976/1977 US Open quarter-finalist | |
| Les Stoefen | 1911 | 1970 | 1934 U.S. Championships semi-finalist, 1934 and 1935 doubles winner | |
| Fred Stolle | 1938 | – | 1969 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1969 French Open quarter-finalist • 1969/1972 US Open quarter-finalist | |
| Sandon Stolle | 1970 | – | doubles specialist | |
| Jason Stoltenberg | 1970 | – | 1996 Wimbledon semi-finalist • ranked World No. 19 in 1994 | |
| Allan Stone | 1945 | – | 1971 Australian Open semi-finalist — winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 1968/1977[Dec] Australian Open champion | |
| Eric Sturgess | 1920 | 2004 | ||
| Cyril Suk | 1967 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1998 U.S. Open champion, partnering Sandon Stolle — winner of 4 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1991 French Open champion, partnering sister Helena Suková • 1992/1996/1997 Wimbledon champion, the first partnering Larisa Neiland, the other two with Suková | |
| Henrik Sundström | 1964 | – | 1984 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Jonas Svensson | 1966 | – | 1988 French Open semi-finalist • 1989 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Roscoe Tanner | 1951 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1977[Jan] Australian Open champion, 1979 Wimbledon finalist, 1975/1976 semi-finalist, 1980/1983 quarter-finalist • 1974/1979 US Open semi-finalist, 1972/1980/1981 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 1979 | |
| Balázs Taróczy | 1954 | – | 1976/1981 French Open quarter-finalist; ranked World No. 13 in 1982 | |
| Roger Taylor | 1941 | – | ranked World No. 11 in 1973 | |
| Brian Teacher | 1954 | – | winner of 1 grand slam singles title → 1980 Australian Open champion, 1982 quarter-finalist • 1982 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 1981 | |
| Eliot Teltscher | 1959 | – | ranked World No. 6 in 1982 | |
| Ben Testerman | 1962 | – | ranked World No. 22 in 1984 | |
| Bill Tilden | 1893 | 1953 | winner of 10 grand slam singles titles → 1920/1921/1922/1923/1924/1925/1929 U.S. champion • 1920/1921/1930 Wimbledon champion • 7 times World No. 1 | |
| Mikael Tillström | 1972 | – | 1996 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Janko Tipsarević | 1984 | – | 2011 US Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 9 in 2011 | |
| Ion Ţiriac | 1939 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1970 French Open champion, partnering Ilie Năstase | |
| Tony Trabert | 1930 | – | winner of 5 grand slam singles titles → 1953/1955 U.S. champion • 1954/1955 French champion • 1955 Wimbledon champion — winner of 5 grand slam doubles titles → 1950/1954/1955 French champion, the first partnering Bill Talbert, the other two with Vic Seixas • 1954 U.S. champion, partnering Seixas • 1995 Australian champion, partnering Seixas | |
| Viktor Troicki | 1986 | – | ranked World No. 12 in 2011 | |
| Jo-Wilfried Tsonga | 1985 | – | 2008 Australian Open finalist, 2010 semi-finalist, 2009 quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 6 in 2008 | |
| Thierry Tulasne | 1963 | – | ranked World No. 10 in 1986 | |
| Dmitry Tursunov | 1982 | – | ranked World No. 20 in 2006 | |
| Kevin Ullyett | 1972 | – | winner of 2 grand slam doubles titles → 2001 US Open champion (with Wayne Black) • 2005 Australian Open champion (with W. Black) • 2008 Wimbledon finalist (with Jonas Björkman) — winner of 1 grand slam mixed doubles title → 2002 Australian Open champion (with Daniela Hantuchová) | |
| Christo van Rensburg | 1962 | – | ranked World No. 19 in 1988 — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1985 Australian Open champion, partnering Paul Annacone | |
| Robert Van’t Hof | 1959 | – | ranked World No. 25 in 1983 | |
| Fernando Verdasco | 1983 | – | 2009 Australian Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 2009 | |
| Martin Verkerk | 1978 | – | 2003 French Open finalist • ranked World No. 14 in 2003 | |
| Armando Vieira | – | – | 1951 Wimbledon quarter-finalist | |
| Guillermo Vilas | 1952 | – | winner of 4 grand slam singles titles → 1977 French Open champion, 1975/1978/1982 finalist, 1976/1979/1980/1983/1986 quarter-finalist • 1977 US Open champion, 1975/1976/1982 semi-finalist • 1978/1979 Australian Open champion, 1977[Jan] finalist, 1980 semi-finalist • 1975/1976 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1974 Masters champion, 1975/1976/1977/1982 semi-finalist | |
| Ellsworth Vines | 1911 | 1994 | winner of 3 grand slam singles titles → 1931/1932 U.S. Champion • 1932 Wimbledon Champion, 1933 finalist • World No 1 for 4 years (1932/1935/1936/1937) • a candidate for greatest player of all time | |
| Danie Visser | 1961 | – | winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 1990/1993 Australian Open champion, the first partnering Pieter Aldrich, the second with Laurie Warder • 1990 US Open champion, partnering Aldrich | |
| Adrian Voinea | 1974 | – | 1995 French Open quarter-finalist | |
| Filippo Volandri | 1981 | – | ranked World No. 25 in 2007 | |
| Alexander Volkov | 1967 | – | 1993 US Open semi-finalist, 1992 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 14 in 1994 | |
| Gottfried von Cramm | 1909 | 1976 | winner of 2 grand slam singles titles → 1934/1936 French champion, 1935 finalist • 1935/1936/1937 Wimbledon finalist • 1937 U.S. finalist | |
| Butch Walts | 1955 | – | 1978 U.S. Open quarter-finalist | |
| Laurie Warder | 1962 | – | winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1993 Australian Open champion (with Visser), 1987 finalist (with Doohan) | |
| Kim Warwick | 1952 | – | 1980 Australian Open finalist • ranked World No.15 in 1981 | |
| MaliVai Washington | 1969 | – | 1996 Wimbledon finalist • 1994 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 11 in 1992 | |
| Stanislas Wawrinka | 1985 | – | ranked World No. 9 in 2008 — winner of 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 2008 gold medalist (with Roger Federer) | |
| David Wheaton | 1969 | – | 1991 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1990 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1990 US Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 12 in 1992 | |
| Mats Wilander | 1964 | – | winner of 7 grand slam singles titles → 1982 (first appearance) /1985/1988 French Open champion, 1983/1987 finalist, 1984 semi-finalist, 1989 quarter-finalist • 1983/1984/1988 Australian Open champion, 1985 finalist, 1990 semi-finalist • 1988 US Open champion, 1987 finalist, 1985 semi-finalist, 1983/1984 quarter-finalist • 1987/1988/1989 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1987 Masters finalist • ranked World No. 1 for 20 weeks — winner of 1 grand slam doubles title → 1986 Wimbledon champion (with Nyström) • 1984 Australian Open finalist (with Nyström) • 1986 US Open finalist (with Nyström) | |
| Tony Wilding | 1883 | 1915 | winner of 6 grand slam singles titles → 1906/1909 Australian champion, 1910/1911/1912/1913 Wimbledon champion | |
| Tim Wilkison | 1959 | – | 1986 US Open quarter-finalist • World No. 23 in 1986 | |
| Bobby Wilson | 1935 | – | 1958, 1959, 1961 and 1963 Wimbledon quarter-finalist, 1960 and 1963 U.S. National quarter-finalist, and 1963 French Championships quarter-finalist | |
| Todd Witsken | 1963 | 1998 | 1988 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Todd Woodbridge | 1971 | – | ranked World No. 19 in 1997 — winner of 16 grand slam doubles titles (record) → 1995/1996/2003 US Open champion (the first two with Woodforde, the third with Björkman) • 1992/1997/2001 Australian Open champion (the first two with Woodforde, the third with Björkman) • 1993/1994/1995/1996/1997/2000/2002/2003/2004 Wimbledon champion (the first six with Woodforde, the last three with Björkman) • 2000 French Open champion (with Woodforde) • 1996 Olympic gold medal (with Woodforde) • 1992/1996 Masters champion (with Woodforde) — winner of 6 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1990/1993/2001 US Open champion (the first with Sayers, the second with Suková, and the third with Stubbs) • 1993 Australian Open champion (with Sánchez) • 1994 Wimbledon champion (with Suková) • 1995 French Open champion (with Savchenko) | |
| Mark Woodforde | 1965 | – | ranked World No. 19 in 1996 — winner of 12 grand slam doubles titles → 1989/1995/1996 US Open champion, the first partnering John McEnroe, the second and third with Todd Woodbridge • 1992/1997 Australian Open champion, both partnering Woodbridge • 1993/1994/1995/1996/1997/2000 Wimbledon champion, all partnering Woodbridge • 2000 French Open champion, partnering Woodbridge • 1996 Olympic gold medal, partnering Woodbridge • 1992/1996 Masters champion, partnering Woodbridge — winner of 5 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1992/1996 Australian Open champion, both partnering Nicole Provis • 1992 French Open champion, partnering Arantxa Sánchez • 1992 US Open champion, partnering Provis • 1993 Wimbledon champion, partnering Martina Navrátilová | |
| Chris Woodruff | 1973 | – | 2000 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Mikhail Youzhny | 1982 | – | 2006 US Open semi-finalist • 2008 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 8 in 2008 | |
| Jaime Yzaga | 1967 | – | 1991 Australian Open quarter-finalist (first appearance) • 1994 US Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 18 in 1989 | |
| Mariano Zabaleta | 1978 | – | 2001 US Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 20 in 2000 | |
| Vladimir Zedník | 1947 | – | 1973 Australian Open quarter-finalist | |
| Nenad Zimonjić | 1976 | – | winner of 3 grand slam doubles titles → 2008/2009 Wimbledon champion (partnering Daniel Nestor); 2010 French Open champion (with Nestor); 2010 Australian Open finalist, partnering Nestor • winner of 4 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 2004/2008 Australian Open champion (the first with Elena Bovina, the second with Tiantian Sun) • 2006/2010 French Open champion (both with Katarina Srebotnik) • ranked World No. 1 | |
| Slobodan Živojinović | 1963 | – | 1985 Australian Open semi-finalist (first appearance) • 1986 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1987 quarter-finalist |
[edit] See also
|
|||||||||||||||||