The Association of Tennis Professionals , or ATP, was formed in September 1972. The men's professional tour, known as the Grand Prix tennis circuit from 1970 to 1989, was administered by the Men's International Professional Tennis Council (MIPTC) from 1974–1989, which was a sub-committee of ATP, International Tennis Federation (ITF) and tournament representatives.[ 1] [ 2] The ATP became the only governing body for men's tennis from 1990.
These are some of the important ATP records since the inception of the ATP in 1972. They may or may not include ITF events such as Davis Cup, since the ATP is not consistent in what they include as "official." For a complete list of Open Era records (1968–present) see the article Tennis records of the Open Era – Men's Singles .
Singles (1972 – present)
Grand Slam tournament records
Player totals
Active players in boldface
Consecutive streaks
Active streaks in boldface
Finals
#
1.
Roger Federer
10
2.
Roger Federer (2)
8
3.
Rafael Nadal
5
4.
Andre Agassi
4
Novak Djokovic
6.
Three in a row has been accomplished 15 times
3
Semifinals
#
1.
Roger Federer
23
2.
Novak Djokovic
14
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
10
4.
/ Ivan Lendl (2)
6
5.
Boris Becker
5
Novak Djokovic (2)
Rafael Nadal
Andy Murray
Rafael Nadal (2)
10.
John McEnroe
4
Jim Courier
Andre Agassi
Roger Federer (2)
Novak Djokovic (3)
Quarterfinals
#
1.
Roger Federer
36
2.
Novak Djokovic
23
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
14
4.
Rafael Nadal
11
5.
Pete Sampras
10
David Ferrer
7.
Andy Murray
9
8.
Ivan Lendl (2)
7
Andy Murray
Mats Wilander
Match wins
#
1.
Roger Federer
27
Roger Federer (2)
Novak Djokovic
4.
Jimmy Connors
25
Pete Sampras
Rafael Nadal
7.
Björn Borg
20
Björn Borg (2)
John McEnroe
Roger Federer (3)
Consecutive streaks in non-consecutive tournaments
Player skipped one or more Grand Slam tournaments during his streak
Quarterfinals
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
27
2.
Andy Murray
16
3.
Björn Borg
12
4.
Pete Sampras
11
5.
John McEnroe
9
6.
Guillermo Vilas
8
/ Ivan Lendl
John McEnroe
9.
Björn Borg
7
Jimmy Connors
Titles per tournament
US Open
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
5
Pete Sampras
Roger Federer
4.
John McEnroe
4
5.
Ivan Lendl
3
Consecutive titles per tournament
Finals per tournament
US Open
#
1.
/ Ivan Lendl
8
Pete Sampras
3.
Jimmy Connors
7
4.
Andre Agassi
6
Roger Federer
Consecutive finals per tournament
US Open
#
1.
/ Ivan Lendl
8
2.
Roger Federer
6
3.
Jimmy Connors
5
4.
Novak Djokovic
4
Semifinals per tournament
Consecutive semifinals per tournament
Match wins per tournament
Winning percentage per tournament
Match win streaks per tournament
#
US Open
Years
40
Roger Federer
2004–09
27
/ Ivan Lendl
1985–88
25
John McEnroe
1979–82
Consecutive sets won per tournament
#
US Open
Years
26
/ Ivan Lendl
1985–86
25
/ Ivan Lendl
1986–87
24
Stefan Edberg
1991–92
22
Roger Federer
2007–08
Match wins per court type
Winning percentage per court type
Career match/finals winning
Winning title without losing a set
Reaching final without losing a set
#
Player
Majors
5
Rafael Nadal
2007 French Open, 2008 French Open, 2010 French Open, 2010 US Open, 2012 French Open
4
Björn Borg
1976 Wimbledon, 1978 French Open, 1980 French Open, 1981 French Open
3
/ Ivan Lendl
1983 US Open, 1985 French Open, 1987 US Open
Jimmy Connors
1975 Wimbledon, 1976 US Open, 1977 US Open
Roger Federer
2006 Wimbledon, 2007 Australian Open, 2008 Wimbledon
2
Jim Courier
1991 US Open, 1993 Australian Open
Guillermo Vilas
1977 US Open, 1982 French Open
Ilie Năstase
1973 French Open, 1976 Wimbledon
John Newcombe
1973 Australian Open, 1976 Australian Open
1
Novak Djokovic
2008 Australian Open
David Ferrer
2013 French Open
Lleyton Hewitt
2004 US Open
Andre Agassi
1995 Australian Open
Michael Chang
1996 Australian Open
Alberto Berasategui
1994 French Open
Career Golden Slam
Player
Tournaments (in completion order)
Andre Agassi
1992 Wimbledon, 1994 US Open, 1995 Australian Open, 1996 Olympics, 1999 French Open
Rafael Nadal
2005 French Open, 2008 Wimbledon, 2008 Olympics, 2009 Australian Open, 2010 US Open
Career Grand Slam
Player
Tournaments (in completion order)
Andre Agassi
1992 Wimbledon, 1994 US Open, 1995 Australian Open, 1999 French Open
Roger Federer
2003 Wimbledon, 2004 Australian Open, 2004 US Open, 2009 French Open
Rafael Nadal
2005 French Open, 2008 Wimbledon, 2009 Australian Open, 2010 US Open
Calendar year achievements
Four Majors
2 Slam wins & 2 finals
Year
Roger Federer
2009
Three Majors
Consecutive titles
Three
French Open/Wimbledon/US Open
Year
Rafael Nadal
2010
Two
Wimbledon/US Open
Year
Jimmy Connors
1974
John McEnroe
1981
Jimmy Connors
1982
Boris Becker
1989
Pete Sampras
1993
Pete Sampras (2)
1995
Roger Federer
2004
Roger Federer (2)
2005
Roger Federer (3)
2006
Roger Federer (4)
2007
Rafael Nadal
2010
Novak Djokovic
2011
French Open/Wimbledon
Year
Björn Borg
1978
Björn Borg (2)
1979
Björn Borg (3)
1980
Rafael Nadal
2008
Roger Federer
2009
Rafael Nadal (2)
2010
Australian Open/French Open
Year
Mats Wilander
1988
Jim Courier
1992
Non-consecutive titles
Three
Australian/Wimbledon/US Open
Year
Jimmy Connors
1974
Roger Federer
2004
Roger Federer (2)
2006
Roger Federer (3)
2007
Novak Djokovic
2011
Australian/French/US Open
Year
Mats Wilander
1988
Two
Australian & Wimbledon
Year
Jimmy Connors*
1974
Pete Sampras
1994
Pete Sampras (2)
1997
Roger Federer*
2004
Roger Federer* (2)
2006
Roger Federer* (3)
2007
Novak Djokovic*
2011
Australian & US Open
Year
John Newcombe
1973
Jimmy Connors*
1974
Roger Federer*
2004
Roger Federer* (2)
2006
Roger Federer* (3)
2007
Novak Djokovic*
2011
French Open & US Open
Year
Guillermo Vilas
1977
Ivan Lendl
1986
Ivan Lendl (2)
1987
Mats Wilander*
1988
Andre Agassi
1999
Rafael Nadal
2013
* indicates that the player won more than two grand slam tournament titles during that calendar year
Match winning percentage
Match winning
%*
W–L
Year
1.
Jimmy Connors
100
20–0
1974
2.
Roger Federer
96.43
27–1
2006
Roger Federer
96.43
27–1
2007
4.
Mats Wilander
96.15
25–1
1988
Rafael Nadal
96.15
25–1
2010
Novak Djokovic
96.15
25–1
2011
7.
Roger Federer
95.83
23–1
2004
8.
Björn Borg
95.24
20–1
1978
Björn Borg
95.24
20–1
1980
John McEnroe
95.24
20–1
1984
/ Ivan Lendl
95.24
20–1
1986
*minimum 20 wins
Other selected achievements
#
Cons. 3+ titles seasons
Years
2
Roger Federer
2006–07
#
Cons. 2+ titles seasons
Years
4
Roger Federer
2004–07
3
Björn Borg
1978–80
Pete Sampras
1993–95
2
/ Ivan Lendl
1986-87
#
Cons. 1+ titles seasons
Years
10
Rafael Nadal
2005–14
8
Björn Borg
1974–81
Pete Sampras
1993–00
Roger Federer
2003–10
#
Cons. 1+ finals seasons
Years
11
/ Ivan Lendl
1981–91
Pete Sampras
1992–02
10
Roger Federer
2003–12
Rafael Nadal
2005–14
8
Björn Borg
1974–81
#
Cons. finals won
Years
8
Pete Sampras
1995–00
7
Roger Federer
2003–06
Rafael Nadal
2008–11
5
Rod Laver
1968–69
4
Pete Sampras
1993–94
Novak Djoković
2011-12
3
Jimmy Connors
1974
Björn Borg
1974-76; 77-78
John McEnroe
1980-81
Mats Wilander
1983-85
Stefan Edberg
1985-88
Andre Agassi
1999-01
Roger Federer
2006-07
Rafael Nadal
2012-13
#
Cons.sets won (all slams)
Years
36
Roger Federer
2006–07
35
John McEnroe
1984
28
Björn Borg
1980
Rafael Nadal
2010
26
Stefan Edberg
1991-92
25
Ilie Nastase
1972-73
ATP career records
Singles titles, finals and semifinals
Finals
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
164
2.
/ Ivan Lendl
146
3.
Roger Federer
125
4.
John McEnroe
108
5.
Guillermo Vilas
104
6.
Rafael Nadal
92
7.
Andre Agassi
90
8.
Björn Borg
88
Pete Sampras
10.
Stefan Edberg
77
Boris Becker
Semifinals
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
235
2.
/ Ivan Lendl
188
3.
Roger Federer
168
4.
John McEnroe
159
5.
Guillermo Vilas
154
6.
Stefan Edberg
138
Andre Agassi
8.
Pete Sampras
128
9.
Rafael Nadal
119
10.
Boris Becker
114
#
Cons. 1+ titles (Seasons)
Years
15
Roger Federer
2001–15
14
/ Ivan Lendl
1980–93
13
Jimmy Connors
1972–84
12
Stefan Edberg
1984–95
Boris Becker
1985–96
Andy Roddick
2001–12
11
Guillermo Vilas
1973–83
Brian Gottfried
1973–83
Michael Chang
1988–98
Pete Sampras
1990–00
Rafael Nadal
2004–14
Finals (Active)
#
1.
Roger Federer
125
2.
Rafael Nadal
92
3.
Novak Djokovic
70
4.
David Ferrer
47
5.
Lleyton Hewitt
46
6.
Andy Murray
45
7.
Tommy Haas
28
8.
Juan Martin del Potro
25
Tomas Berdych
10.
Marin Cilic
22
Tommy Robredo
Semifinals (Active)
#
1.
Roger Federer
168
2.
Rafael Nadal
119
3.
Novak Djokovic
106
4.
David Ferrer
82
5.
Lleyton Hewitt
75
6.
Andy Murray
71
7.
Tommy Haas
64
8.
Tomas Berdych
59
9.
Tommy Robredo
49
10.
Mikhail Youzhny
45
Titles per court type
Outdoor
#
1.
Rafael Nadal
62
Roger Federer
3.
Guillermo Vilas
56
Jimmy Connors
5.
Ivan Lendl
52
6.
Andre Agassi
48
7.
Thomas Muster
43
8.
Björn Borg
41
Pete Sampras
10.
Novak Djokovic
38
Indoor
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
53
2.
John McEnroe
52
3.
Ivan Lendl
42
4.
Boris Becker
30
5.
Björn Borg
23
Pete Sampras
7.
Roger Federer
21
8.
Stefan Edberg
18
9.
Brian Gottfried
15
Goran Ivanišević
Most titles / finals at a single tournament
#
Titles
Tournament
Years
9
Rafael Nadal
French Open
2005–08, 2010–14
8
Guillermo Vilas
Buenos Aires
1973–76, 1977(2) , 1979, 1982
Rafael Nadal
Monte-Carlo
2005–12
Rafael Nadal
Barcelona
2005–09, 2011–13
7
Pete Sampras
Wimbledon
1993–95, 1997–00
Roger Federer
Wimbledon
2003–07, 2009, 2012
Rafael Nadal
Rome
2005–07, 2009–10, 2012–13
Roger Federer
Halle
2003–06, 2008, 2013–14
6
Jimmy Connors
Birmingham
1974–77, 1979–80
Björn Borg
French Open
1974–75, 1978–81
Balázs Taróczy
Amersfoort
1976, 1978–82
/ Ivan Lendl
Canada
1980–81, 1983, 1987–89
Andre Agassi
Miami
1990, 1995–96, 2001–03
Roger Federer
Tour Finals
2003–04, 2006–07, 2010–11
Roger Federer
Dubai
2003–05, 2007, 2012, 2014
Roger Federer
Cincinnati
2005, 2007, 2009–10, 2012, 2014
Roger Federer
Basel
2006–08, 2010–11, 2014
#
Finals
Tournament
Years
11
Roger Federer
Basel
2000–01, 2006–14
10
Guillermo Vilas
Buenos Aires
1972–76, 1977(2) , 1979, 1981–82
9
/ Ivan Lendl
Tour Finals
1980–88
Rafael Nadal
Monte-Carlo
2005–13
Rafael Nadal
Rome
2005–07, 2009–14
Rafael Nadal
French Open
2005–08, 2010–14
Roger Federer
Halle
2003–06, 2008, 2010, 2012–14
Roger Federer
Wimbledon
2003–09, 2012, 2014
Roger Federer
Tour Finals
2003–07, 2010–12, 2014
8
/ Ivan Lendl
Canada
1980–83, 1985, 1987–89
/ Ivan Lendl
US Open
1982–89
Boris Becker
Tour Finals
1985–86, 1988–89, 1992, 1994–96
Pete Sampras
US Open
1990, 1992–93, 1995–96, 2000–02
Andre Agassi
Miami
1990, 1994–96, 1998, 2001–03
Rafael Nadal
Barcelona
2005–09, 2011–13
Roger Federer
Dubai
2003–07, 2011–12, 2014
Winning percentage in finals
Matches played / matches won
[ 4]
Won
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
1253
2.
/ Ivan Lendl
1071
3.
Roger Federer
1002
4.
Guillermo Vilas
929
5.
John McEnroe
875
6.
Andre Agassi
870
7.
Stefan Edberg
801
8.
Ilie Nastase
779
9.
Pete Sampras
762
10.
Boris Becker
713
Won (active)
#
1.
Roger Federer
1002
2.
Rafael Nadal
710
3.
Lleyton Hewitt
612
4.
Novak Djokovic
611
5.
David Ferrer
610
6.
Tommy Haas
561
7.
Tommy Robredo
501
8.
Tomas Berdych
494
9.
Andy Murray
486
10.
Mikhail Youzhny
456
Match wins per court type
Outdoor
#
1.
Guillermo Vilas
812
2.
Jimmy Connors
785
3.
Roger Federer
750
4.
/ Ivan Lendl
727
5.
Andre Agassi
702
6.
Rafael Nadal
645
7.
Thomas Muster
560
8.
Pete Sampras
549
9.
Stefan Edberg
544
10.
Lleyton Hewitt
534
Indoor
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
468
2.
John McEnroe
419
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
344
4.
Boris Becker
297
5.
Brian Gottfried
281
6.
Stefan Edberg
257
7.
Roger Federer
252
8.
Yevgeny Kafelnikov
235
9.
Wojtek Fibak
229
10.
Goran Ivanišević
226
Winning percentage per court type
[ 5]
Note that the figures below represent career winning percentages of players that are retired (regular font) as well as current active players (boldface). The latter are subject to change and do not reflect the final figure.
Clay
% *
W–L
1.
Rafael Nadal
92.98
318–24
2.
Björn Borg
86.31
246–39
3.
Ivan Lendl
81.44
329–75
4.
Guillermo Vilas
79.80
644–163
5.
Novak Djokovic
78.26
144–40
6.
Jimmy Connors
77.65
198–57
7.
José Luis Clerc
77.38
301–88
8.
Thomas Muster
76.86
422–127
9.
Mats Wilander
76.74
264–80
10.
Roger Federer
76.15
198–62
* minimum 100 wins
Grass
% *
W–L
1.
Roger Federer
87.33
131–19
2.
John McEnroe
85.61
119–20
3.
Björn Borg
84.72
61–11
4.
Pete Sampras
83.47
101–20
5.
Jimmy Connors
83.33
170–34
6.
Andy Murray
82.98
78–16
7.
Boris Becker
82.27
116–25
8.
Novak Djokovic
80.00
60–15
9.
Andy Roddick
79.63
86–22
10.
Stefan Edberg
78.57
99–27
* minimum 50 wins
Carpet
% *
W–L
1.
John McEnroe
84.39
346–64
2.
Ivan Lendl
82.66
267–56
3.
Björn Borg
82.62
176–37
4.
Jimmy Connors
82.04
338–74
5.
Boris Becker
80.12
258–64
6.
Pete Sampras
76.60
144–44
7.
Yevgeny Kafelnikov
73.66
165–59
8.
Roger Federer
72.46
50–19
9.
Goran Ivanišević
71.37
187–75
10.
Stefan Edberg
70.81
182–75
* minimum 50 wins (not used since 2009)
Outdoor
% *
W–L
1.
Rafael Nadal
85.43
645–110
2.
Björn Borg
83.97
393–75
3.
Novak Djokovic
82.26
496–107
4.
Roger Federer
81.88
750–166
5.
Jimmy Connors
81.75
785–175
6.
/ Ivan Lendl
81.23
727–168
7.
John McEnroe
78.35
456–126
8.
Guillermo Vilas
78.15
812–227
9.
Andre Agassi
77.74
702–201
10.
Andy Murray
76.15
380–119
* minimum 250 wins
Indoor
% *
W–L
1.
John McEnroe
85.34
419–72
2.
/ Ivan Lendl
82.89
344–71
3.
Jimmy Connors
81.96
468–103
4.
Björn Borg
80.59
216–52
5.
Roger Federer
80.25
252–62
6.
Boris Becker
79.84
297–75
7.
Pete Sampras
77.74
213–61
8.
Novak Djokovic
77.18
115–34
9.
Andy Murray
76.81
106–32
10.
Andy Roddick
72.58
135–51
* minimum 100 wins
Playing top 10 ranked opponents
Winning percentage
W–L
%
1.
Björn Borg
67–28
70.53
2.
Rafael Nadal
129–61
67.89
3.
Roger Federer
183–97
65.36
4.
Boris Becker
121–65
65.05
5.
/ Ivan Lendl
119–66
64.32
6.
Pete Sampras
124–71
63.59
7.
Novak Djokovic
128–75
63.05
8.
John McEnroe
85–64
57.05
9.
Andre Agassi
109–90
54.77
10.
Andy Murray
71–64
52.59
*minimum 50 wins
Pressure situations
After winning 1st set
% *
W–L
1.
Björn Borg
95.45
525–25
2.
Novak Djokovic
95.34
532–26
3.
Rafael Nadal
94.96
623–33
4.
John McEnroe
94.28
775–47
5.
Jimmy Connors
94.27
1087–66
6.
/ Ivan Lendl
93.11
933–69
7.
Roger Federer
92.88
887–68
8.
Andy Murray
92.69
406–32
9.
Arthur Ashe
92.60
563–45
10.
Eddie Dibbs
92.54
496–40
* minimum 250 wins
After losing 1st set
% *
W–L
1.
Rod Laver
48.70
93–98
2.
Bjorn Börg
45.16
84–102
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
44.80
138–170
4.
Rafael Nadal
44.39
87–109
5.
Jimmy Connors
43.90
166–212
6.
Pete Sampras
43.70
122–157
7.
Boris Becker
42.10
110–151
8.
Roger Federer
41.81
115–160
9.
Novak Djokovic
40.72
79–115
10.
Andy Murray
40.40
80–118
* minimum 75 wins
Deciding set
% *
W–L
1.
Björn Borg
74.84
119–40
2.
Novak Djokovic
72.72
128–48
3.
Rafael Nadal
70.00
119–51
4.
Jimmy Connors
69.60
229–100
5.
John McEnroe
68.83
159–72
6.
Andy Murray
68.67
114–52
7.
Rod Laver
68.16
122–57
8.
Johan Kriek
67.93
125–59
9.
Pete Sampras
67.87
188–89
10.
Arthur Ashe
67.41
182–88
* minimum 100 wins
5th set record
% *
W–L
1.
Kei Nishikori
83.33
10–2
2.
Johan Kriek
81.82
18–4
3.
Björn Borg
80.00
24–6
Tommy Robredo
16–4
5.
Rafael Nadal
77.27
17–5
6.
Harold Solomon
76.19
16–5
7.
Aaron Krickstein
75.68
28–9
8.
Andy Murray
73.91
17–6
9.
Novak Djokovic
73.33
22–8
10.
Rod Laver
72.50
29–11
* minimum 10 wins
Year-end championships
(1970–present)
The best players of all participants on the world tour, within a season, would qualify for the year-end tournament.
The world tour event began in 1970 and was originally known as the Masters Grand Prix as part of the Grand Prix tennis circuit . It was organised by the International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF ).
In 1990, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP ) took over the running of the men's tour and replaced the Masters with the ATP Tour World Championship. Between 2000 and 2008, the event was called the Tennis Masters Cup and was endorsed by ITF, ATP and the Grand Slam tournaments (as a result of merging the ATP Tour World Championship with the Grand Slam Cup ). In 2009 the Championship was renamed the ATP World Tour Finals .
Currently, the tournament is organized at the O2 Arena in London, under efficient lighting conditions of play, on blue, medium fast, low bouncing, hard courts.
(1971–1989)
The best players of the season, from a reduced pool of professionals under contract for the WCT circuit, would qualify for the circuit finals.
The WCT Finals was the season-ending championship for the World Championship Tennis circuit . The event was held annually in Dallas, Texas, and played on indoor carpet courts. The 1971 quarterfinals and semifinals were played in Houston, and final played at Moody Coliseum in Dallas. The 1972–1979 editions were played at Moody Coliseum, and the 1980–1989 tournaments at Reunion Arena in Dallas. The WCT, in 1974, was the first tennis tournament to experiment with electronic line calling
ATP year-end championships titles
Finals
#
1.
/ Ivan Lendl
9
Roger Federer
2.
Boris Becker
8
4.
Pete Sampras
6
5.
Ilie Năstase
5
Semifinals
#
1.
/ Ivan Lendl
12
Roger Federer
3.
Pete Sampras
10
4.
Boris Becker
9
5.
Jimmy Connors
8
Appearances
#
1.
Andre Agassi
13
Roger Federer
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
12
4.
Jimmy Connors
11
Boris Becker
Pete Sampras
Consecutive appearances
#
1.
Roger Federer
13
2.
/ Ivan Lendl
12
3.
Pete Sampras
11
4.
Jimmy Connors
8
John McEnroe
Boris Becker
Novak Djokovic
ATP year-end championships match wins
Match wins
#
1.
Roger Federer
48
2.
/ Ivan Lendl
39
3.
Boris Becker
36
4.
Pete Sampras
35
5.
Novak Djokovic
23
Win %
W–L *
1.
Ilie Năstase
84.00
21–4
2.
Roger Federer
81.36
48–11
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
79.59
39–10
4.
Boris Becker
73.47
36–13
5.
Brian Gottfried
72.73
8–3
* minimum 10 matches
Not losing a set
Year
#
/ Ivan Lendl
1982, 1985–86
3
John McEnroe
1983
1
WCT finals totals
Semifinals
#
1.
John McEnroe
9
2.
Björn Borg
5
Jimmy Connors
Ivan Lendl
5.
Rod Laver
4
Appearances
#
1.
John McEnroe
9
2.
Ivan Lendl
6
3.
Rod Laver
5
Jimmy Connors
Björn Borg
WCT finals match wins
Match wins
#
1.
John McEnroe
21
2.
Björn Borg
10
Jimmy Connors
Ivan Lendl
5.
Rod Laver
6
Ken Rosewall
Match winning
% *
W–L
1.
Ken Rosewall
85.71
6–1
2.
John McEnroe
80.76
21–5
3.
Jimmy Connors
76.92
10–3
Ivan Lendl
5.
Björn Borg
71.42
10–4
* minimum 5 matches
Not losing a set
Year
#
John McEnroe
1981, 1984
2
ATP World Tour Masters 1000
After the Grand Slams and the World Tour Finals,there are nine yearly tournaments that are most important. They have existed under different names: from 1970 until 1993 they were called the Grand Prix Championship Series . Then until 1999 they were held under the name Mercedes-Benz Super 9. The name Tennis Masters started in 2000: until 2004 the Tennis Masters Series , from 2005 until 2008 the ATP Masters Series, and since then they have been held under the name ATP World Tour Masters 1000 .
Finals
#
1.
Rafael Nadal
40
2.
Roger Federer
39
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
33
4.
Novak Djokovic
30
5.
Jimmy Connors
29
6.
John McEnroe
26
7.
Andre Agassi
23
8.
Boris Becker
21
9.
Björn Borg
20
Stefan Edberg
Semifinals
#
1.
Rafael Nadal
55
2.
Roger Federer
53
3.
Jimmy Connors
49
4.
Novak Djokovic
43
5.
/ Ivan Lendl
40
6.
Andre Agassi
35
Stefan Edberg
8.
John McEnroe
33
9.
Boris Becker
31
Pete Sampras
Different titles
#
1.
/ Ivan Lendl
9/9
2.
Novak Djokovic
8/9
3.
Björn Borg
7/9
Jimmy Connors
Andre Agassi
Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
8.
John McEnroe
6/9
Stefan Edberg
Different finals reached
#
1.
/ Ivan Lendl
9/9
Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic
Rafael Nadal
5.
Jimmy Connors
8/9
Boris Becker
7.
Björn Borg
7/9
Stefan Edberg
Pete Sampras
Andre Agassi
Gustavo Kuerten
Titles in a season
Year
#
1.
Rod Laver
1970
5
Jimmy Connors
1976
Novak Djokovic
2011
Rafael Nadal
2013
5.
Björn Borg
1979
4
John McEnroe
1984
Ivan Lendl
1989
Roger Federer
2005
Rafael Nadal
2005
Roger Federer
2006
Novak Djokovic
2014
Finals in a season
Year
#
1.
Rod Laver
1970
6
Roger Federer
2006
Novak Djokovic
2011
Novak Djokovic
2012
Rafael Nadal
2013
6.
Jimmy Connors
1976
5
Stefan Edberg
1987
Stefan Edberg
1990
Rafael Nadal
2005
Roger Federer
2007
Rafael Nadal
2007
Rafael Nadal
2009
Novak Djokovic
2009
Rafael Nadal
2011
Roger Federer
2014
Semifinals in a season
Year
#
1.
Rafael Nadal
2013
8
2.
Rafael Nadal
2008
7
Rafael Nadal
2009
Novak Djokovic
2009
Novak Djokovic
2012
6.
Rod Laver
1970
6
John McEnroe
1982
Roger Federer
2006
Rafael Nadal
2007
Rafael Nadal
2010
Novak Djokovic
2011
Novak Djokovic
2014
Match wins
Match wins
#
1.
Roger Federer
313
2.
Rafael Nadal
281
3.
Andre Agassi
251
4.
Jimmy Connors
231
5.
Novak Djokovic
228
6.
/ Ivan Lendl
223
7.
Stefan Edberg
196
8.
John McEnroe
195
9.
Pete Sampras
190
10.
Boris Becker
178
Win %
W–L *
1.
Rafael Nadal
83.63
281–55
2.
Björn Borg
83.44
136–27
3.
John McEnroe
82.28
195–42
4.
/ Ivan Lendl
81.68
223–50
5.
Novak Djokovic
80.28
228–56
6.
Roger Federer
77.56
313–91
7.
Jimmy Connors
77.00
231–69
8.
Andre Agassi
74.92
251–84
9.
Boris Becker
73.86
178–63
10.
Stefan Edberg
73.68
196–70
* minimum 100 wins
Titles per court type
Hard
#
1.
Roger Federer
17
2.
Novak Djokovic
15
3.
Andre Agassi
14
4.
/ Ivan Lendl
12
5.
Andy Murray
9
6.
John McEnroe
8
Boris Becker
Pete Sampras
Rafael Nadal
10.
Michael Chang
7
Carpet *
#
1.
John McEnroe
11
2.
Jimmy Connors
8
3.
Ivan Lendl
4
4.
Rod Laver
3
Björn Borg
Marat Safin
7.
Boris Becker
2
Pete Sampras
Andre Agassi
* not used since 2009
Consecutive titles : Rafael Nadal - 4 (2013) and Novak Djokovic (2013-2014)
Consecutive finals : Rafael Nadal - 5 (2011, 2013)
Consecutive titles in non consecutive Masters 1000 : Novak Djokovic - 5 (2011)
Consecutive finals in non consecutive Masters 1000 : Roger Federer (2005-2006) and Rafael Nadal (2012-2013) - 7
ATP World Tour 500 series
Titles in a season
Year
#
1.
Boris Becker
1990
4
Stefan Edberg
1991
Juan Martin del Potro
2013
4.
Pete Sampras
1996
3
Rafael Nadal
2005
Novak Djokovic
2009
ATP World Tour 250 series
Single season records
#
10+ titles seasons
Years
4
Jimmy Connors
1973–74,76,78
Ivan Lendl
1981–82,85,89
3
John McEnroe
1979,81,84
Roger Federer
2004–06
2
Ilie Năstase
1972–73
Björn Borg
1977,79
Rafael Nadal
2005,13
#
Cons. 10+ titles seasons
Years
3
Roger Federer
2004–06
2
Ilie Năstase
1972–73
Jimmy Connors
1973–74
Ivan Lendl
1981–82
#
Match wins
#
Years
1.
Guillermo Vilas
134
1977
2.
Ilie Năstase
118
1973
3.
Ivan Lendl
109
1980
4.
Ivan Lendl
106
1982
5.
Ivan Lendl
97
1981
6.
Jimmy Connors
93
1974
7.
Roger Federer
92
2006
8.
Jimmy Connors
91
1976
9.
Thomas Muster
86
1995
10.
Pete Sampras
85
1993
#
Match winning
%*
W–L
Years
1.
John McEnroe
96.47
82–3
1984
2.
Jimmy Connors
95.88
93–4
1974
3.
Roger Federer
95.29
81–4
2005
4.
Roger Federer
94.85
92–5
2006
5.
Björn Borg
93.33
84–6
1979
6.
Ivan Lendl
92.50
74–6
1986
Roger Federer
2004
8.
Ivan Lendl
92.31
84–7
1985
9.
Ivan Lendl
92.17
106–9
1982
10.
Björn Borg
92.11
70–6
1980
Novak Djokovic
2011
* 50+ Wins
M/Y = Average Matches per Years
#
M/Y
Cons. 90%+ wins seasons
Years
4
81.5
Björn Borg
1977–80
3
94.7
Jimmy Connors
1974–76
84.0
Ivan Lendl
1985–87
87.3
Roger Federer
2004–06
#
M/Y
Cons. 80%+ wins seasons
Years
12
85.0
Jimmy Connors
1973–84
10
82.5
Roger Federer
2003–12
77.2
Rafael Nadal
2005–14
9
81.8
John McEnroe
1978–86
8
76.3
Björn Borg
1974–81
6
75.8
Ivan Lendl
1985–90
5
84.2
Pete Sampras
1993–97
106.0
Guillermo Vilas
1974–78
4
71.3
Boris Becker
1988–91
78.8
Novak Djokovic
2011-14
3
61.3
Rod Laver
1973–75
#
Cons. titles on 3 surfaces
Years
5
Jimmy Connors
1972, 1974(2)–76
3
John McEnroe
1981, 1983–84
Ivan Lendl
1985(2), 1989
1
Björn Borg
1979
Roger Federer
2004
Rafael Nadal
2008
Winning streaks
* note: Björn Borg's 1979–80 streak totals do not include an additional 7 wins in Davis Cup, Swiss Indoors or Palermo events. His streak total in some sources is 48 during this time period. The 1978 streak totals do not include an additional 14 wins at the Las Vegas Indoor, Davis Cup or the Milan WCT. His streak total should be 49 in 1978.[ 7] [ 8] Some of this may be confusion or errors over walkovers (which count as neither wins nor losses).
ATP Rankings (since 1973)
Weeks at No.1 & in Top 2, 3 (as of January 19, 2015).[ 9] [ 10]
Cons. No. 1
#
1.
Roger Federer
237
2.
Jimmy Connors
160
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
157
4.
Pete Sampras
102
5.
Jimmy Connors
84
6.
Pete Sampras
82
7.
/ Ivan Lendl
80
8.
Lleyton Hewitt
75
9.
John McEnroe
58
10.
Rafael Nadal
56
Top 2
#
1.
Roger Federer
433
2.
/ Ivan Lendl
409
3.
Rafael Nadal
403
4.
Pete Sampras
376
5.
Jimmy Connors
356
Cons. Top 2
#
1.
Roger Federer
346
2.
Jimmy Connors
300
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
280
4.
Rafael Nadal
212
5.
Novak Djokovic
201
Top 3
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
595
2.
Roger Federer
545
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
499
4.
Pete Sampras
457
5.
Rafael Nadal
451
Cons. Top 3
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
507
2.
/ Ivan Lendl
497
3.
Roger Federer
432
4.
Pete Sampras
391
5.
John McEnroe
374
Weeks in Top 4, 5 & 10 (as of January 19, 2015).
Top 4
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
669
2.
Roger Federer
569
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
510
4.
Rafael Nadal
485
5.
Pete Sampras
484
Cons. Top 4
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
651
2.
Roger Federer
522
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
501
4.
Pete Sampras
403
5.
Rafael Nadal
399
Top 5
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
705
2.
Roger Federer
596
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
524
4.
Pete Sampras
511
5.
Rafael Nadal
507
Cons. Top 5
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
658
2.
Roger Federer
548
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
524
4.
Rafael Nadal
507
5.
Pete Sampras
491
Top 10
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
817
2.
Andre Agassi
747
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
664
4.
Roger Federer
651
5.
Pete Sampras
586
Cons. Top 10
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
788
2.
Roger Federer
641
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
612
4.
Pete Sampras
565
5.
Rafael Nadal
509
Most Years end (as of end 2014).
No. 1
#
1.
Pete Sampras
6
2.
Jimmy Connors
5
Roger Federer
4.
John McEnroe
4
/ Ivan Lendl
Top 2
#
1.
Roger Federer
10
2.
Jimmy Connors
8
Rafael Nadal
4.
John McEnroe
6
/ Ivan Lendl
Pete Sampras
Top 3
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
12
2.
Roger Federer
11
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
9
Pete Sampras
Rafael Nadal
Top 4
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
14
2.
Roger Federer
11
3.
Rafael Nadal
10
4.
John McEnroe
9
/ Ivan Lendl
Pete Sampras
Top 5
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
14
2.
Roger Federer
11
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
10
Pete Sampras
Rafael Nadal
Top 10
#
1.
Jimmy Connors
16
Andre Agassi
3.
/ Ivan Lendl
13
Roger Federer
5.
Pete Sampras
12
Other Ranking Achievements
Player
Record
Earliest to clinch year-end No. 1
Roger Federer
September 2004
Roger Federer
September 2006
Rafael Nadal
September 2010
Youngest No. 1 player
Lleyton Hewitt
20y 9m (2001)
Youngest player to end a year in the top-10
Michael Chang
17y 9m (1989)
Youngest player to end a year in the top-100
Aaron Krickstein
16y 4m (1983)
Oldest No. 1 player
Andre Agassi
33y 4m (2003)
Oldest player to end a year in the top-10
Ken Rosewall
41y 1m (1975)
Oldest player to end a year in the top-100
Ken Rosewall
44y 1m (1978)
Other events
Olympic Games (since re-introduction in 1988)
Prize money leaders
Career earning as of November 17, 2014.[ 11] A column with the inflation adjustment is included to have an idea of the real magnitude of prizes at different times. The average US CPI for each year is used for the adjustment.[ 12]
Career
Prize money
Inflation adj.
Year
1.
Roger Federer
$88,611,538
$97,677,955
2014
2.
Novak Djokovic
$72,403,908
$77,481,936
2014
3.
Rafael Nadal
$71,379,236
$76,702,533
2014
4.
Pete Sampras
$43,280,489
$67,291,700
2003
5.
Andy Murray
$34,190,085
$35,627,270
2014
6.
Andre Agassi
$31,152,975
$46,367,824
2006
7.
Boris Becker
$25,080,956
$43,232,646
1999
8.
David Ferrer
$24,733,109
$26,254,814
2014
9.
Yevgeny Kafelnikov
$23,883,797
$34,392,438
2003
10.
Ivan Lendl
$21,262,417
$44,864,113
1994
End of Season
Prize money
Inflation adj.
Year
1.
Rafael Nadal
$14,570,935
$14,888,302
2013
2.
Novak Djokovic
$14,250,527
$14,269,462
2014
3.
Novak Djokovic
$12,803,737
$13,274,242
2012
4.
Novak Djokovic
$12,619,803
$13,354,306
2011
5.
Novak Djokovic
$12,447,947
$12,719,074
2013
6.
Rafael Nadal
$10,171,998
$11,103,803
2010
7.
Roger Federer
$10,130,620
$11,630,068
2007
8.
Roger Federer
$9,343,988
$9,851,703
2014
9.
Roger Federer
$8,768,110
$9,728,308
2009
10.
Roger Federer
$8,584,842
$8,900,313
2012
Miscellaneous
Most aces hit in a match (since 1991):
Doubles (1972 – present)
Grand Slam tournament records
Grand Slam Doubles titles and finals
Finals
#
1.
Mike Bryan
27
Bob Bryan
3.
Todd Woodbridge
20
4.
Mark Woodforde
16
Daniel Nestor
Leander Paes
7.
Jonas Björkman
15
8.
Anders Järryd
13
9.
John McEnroe
12
Paul Haarhuis
ATP career records
Doubles titles and finals
Finals (Active)
#
1.
Mike Bryan
157
2.
Bob Bryan
154
3.
Daniel Nestor
141
4.
Mahesh Bhupathi
97
5.
Leander Paes
93
6.
Max Mirnyi
90
7.
Nenad Zimonjić
86
8.
František Čermák
54
9.
Paul Hanley
51
10.
Michaël Llodra
48
Matches played / matches won and winning percentage
Won
#
1.
Daniel Nestor
963
2.
Mike Bryan
928
3.
Bob Bryan
914
4.
Todd Woodbridge
782
5.
Mark Knowles
744
6.
Sherwood Stewart
724
7.
Jonas Björkman
712
8.
Leander Paes
694
9.
Mahesh Bhupathi
683
10.
Tomáš Šmíd
659
See also
Notes
References