This article lists various career, tournament, and seasonal achievements by Serbian tennis player Novak Djokovic .
Djokovic has won an all-time record 24 Grand Slam singles titles. He has been the world No. 1 for a record total 428 weeks in a record 13 different years, [1] and the year-end world No. 1 a record eight times. Djokovic is the only man in tennis history to be the reigning champion of all four majors at once across all three different surfaces and the only one to achieve a triple Career Grand Slam by winning all four majors at least three times. He has won a record 72 Big Titles, winning all four Grand Slams tournaments, all nine ATP Masters tournaments, the Year-end Championships and Olympic Gold, completing both the Career Golden Slam and Career Super Slam. [2] Djokovic is widely regarded by sports analysts, tennis players and media pundits as the greatest tennis player of all time. [3] [4] [5] [6]
In addition to his winning records at majors, Djokovic made 37 Grand Slam finals, playing at least seven finals at each major and winning at least 90 matches at each major, all all-time records. He also had a record five winning streaks of 26 or more matches at majors with 30 being the longest (2015–16), an open-era record.
Djokovic has won a record 40 ATP Masters titles. By 2018, he had won Masters titles across all nine tournaments, becoming the first and only player to achieve the Career Golden Masters. As a result, he is considered the most accomplished player in ATP Masters history for his versatility and success in winning Masters events on a consistent basis. [7] Moreover, Djokovic has won a record seven Year-end Championship titles, including a record streak of four titles from 2012 to 2015.
Djokovic's 2011 season is considered one of the greatest seasons by a tennis player ever. Djokovic won 10 titles across all three different surfaces and defeated Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer a total of 10 times collectively with a match record of 10–1 against them. Djokovic went on a 41-match win streak and set a then-record of 5 Masters titles won in a season. In 2015, Djokovic won three majors in a season for the second time, improved his record of most Masters won in a season by claiming six titles, and finished the year by winning his fourth consecutive Year-end Championships title. Djokovic also made the finals of all elite tournaments he played in 2015, winning a season-record 10 Big Titles across all surfaces and setting a rankings record of 16,950 points while defeating a record 31 Top-10 players in the season.
Djokovic is unanimously regarded as the greatest hardcourt player ever. [8] He has won a record 50 Big Titles on hardcourts, including the most Majors, most Masters and most Year-end Championship titles. With his 7 Wimbledon titles, Djokovic is also regarded as one of the greatest players on grass courts in history. [9] Besides hard courts and grass courts, Djokovic has won 20 titles on clay, including three French Open titles, Olympic gold and 11 Masters titles, which is second only to Nadal's record of 26. Djokovic is one of three players, along with Robin Söderling and Alexander Zverev, to defeat Nadal at Roland Garros and the only one to do so twice. He is the only player to defeat Nadal in all three clay-court Masters events and the one who ended Nadal's consecutive run of 8 Monte Carlo titles in the 2013 final.
Djokovic is the only player to win at least 3 majors across all three different surfaces (hard, clay and grass) and the only player to hold all major titles at once across the three surfaces. He is also the only player to win 6 Big Titles or more at one tournament on the three surfaces, the Australian Open being the most notable on hardcourts (outdoors), Wimbledon on grass, Italian Open on clay, and the Year-end Championship on hardcourts (indoors).
Djokovic holds the records for most victories against top 10 and top 5 players. Furthermore, he has won a record 61 titles by defeating multiple top 10 players and a record 24 titles by defeating multiple top 5 players en route. He has been part of the two most prolific rivalries in the Open Era, versus Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer, with him having a winning head-to-head record against them. He is the only player to defeat Nadal and Federer in all four Grand Slam tournaments, and the only one to defeat them at their most successful major tournament more than once. Djokovic has scored a record 21 or more victories against five different players; Nadal, Federer, Murray, Wawrinka and Berdych. In 2011, Djokovic had the most dominant record versus a world No. 1 for a single season, going 5–0 against Nadal before overtaking him as No. 1.
Event | Since | Record accomplished | Player(s) tied |
---|---|---|---|
ATP World Tour | 1970 | Big Title Sweep (annual) [a] [2] – twice | Stands alone |
72 Big Titles won | Stands alone | ||
Champion of all four Majors and Year-end Championship simultaneously | Stands alone | ||
Career Super Slam (winning all four Majors, the Year-end Championship and the Olympic gold medal) | Andre Agassi | ||
Won all four Majors and the Year-end Championship in both his 20s and 30s | Stands alone | ||
Multiple champion at all 14 annual elite tournaments | Stands alone | ||
6+ Big Titles at one tournament on hard, clay, grass and indoors [b] | Stands alone | ||
10 Big Titles in a season (2015) | Stands alone | ||
18 Big finals in a row | Stands alone | ||
11 years winning 4+ Big Titles | Stands alone | ||
71 titles on hardcourts | Roger Federer | ||
15 straight finals reached in a season (2015) | Stands alone | ||
Most match wins against Top-10 players (257) | Stands alone | ||
31 match wins against Top-10 opponents in a season (2015) | Stands alone | ||
Defeated all Top-10 players in a season (2015) | Stands alone | ||
Grand Slams | 1877 | 24 Grand Slam singles titles [10] | Stands alone |
Triple Career Grand Slam [c] [11] | Stands alone | ||
Champion of all Grand Slam titles at once | Don Budge Rod Laver | ||
Champion of all four Majors at once across all three different surfaces [d] | Stands alone | ||
7+ titles at two majors with two distinct surfaces (hard & grass) | Stands alone | ||
Surface Slam [e] (major titles across all three surfaces in a season) | Rafael Nadal | ||
4 streaks of 3+ consecutive Grand Slam titles | Stands alone | ||
7 seasons winning multiple Grand Slam titles | Stands alone | ||
37 Grand Slam singles finals | Stands alone | ||
7+ finals at each Grand Slam | Stands alone | ||
3+ consecutive finals at each Grand Slam | Stands alone | ||
5 winning streaks of 26+ Grand Slam matches | Stands alone | ||
30 consecutive Grand Slam matches across all three surfaces | Stands alone | ||
11+ semifinals at each Grand Slam | Stands alone | ||
90+ match wins at each Grand Slam | Stands alone | ||
14 hardcourt Grand Slam titles | Stands alone | ||
375 Grand Slam match wins [12] | Stands alone | ||
ATP rankings | 1973 | Most weeks at world No. 1 (428) [13] | Stands alone |
13 different years ranked world No. 1 | Stands alone | ||
Most ranking points accumulated as world No. 1 (16,950) [14] | Stands alone | ||
Eight-time Year-end world No. 1 | Stands alone | ||
Eight-time ITF World Champion | Stands alone | ||
ATP Masters | 1970 | Career Golden Masters [f] [15] – twice | Stands alone |
Double Career Golden Masters [g] | Stands alone | ||
40 Masters singles titles | Stands alone | ||
6 Masters titles won in a season (2015) | Stands alone | ||
12 consecutive Masters finals won | Stands alone | ||
31 consecutive Masters match wins | Stands alone | ||
ATP Finals | 1970 | 7 Year-end Championship titles | Stands alone |
4 consecutive Year-end Championship titles | Stands alone | ||
Winner of the Year-end Championship in three different decades [16] | Stands alone |
Year(s) | Record accomplished | Players tied |
---|---|---|
Grand Slam tournaments | ||
2008–23 | 24 Grand Slam singles titles | Stands alone |
2008–23 | Triple Career Grand Slam [c] | Stands alone |
2015–16 | Champion of all four Major titles at once | Rod Laver |
2015–16 | Champion of all four Majors at once across all three different surfaces [d] | Stands alone |
2015–16 | Champion of all four Majors and Year-end Championship simultaneously | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 37 Grand Slam singles finals | Stands alone |
2021 | Surface Slam [e] (major titles across all three surfaces in a season) | Rafael Nadal |
Dominance | ||
2015–16 | Non-Calendar Year Grand Slam [h] | Stands alone |
2007–21 | Completed a full Career Grand Slam in both his 20s and 30s | Stands alone |
2008–23 | Won 12+ Major titles in both his 20s and 30s | Stands alone |
2011–21 | 4 streaks of 3+ consecutive Major titles | Stands alone |
2011–23 | 4 seasons winning 3 Major titles [17] | Stands alone |
2010–16 | 3+ consecutive finals at each of all four Majors | Stands alone |
2011–23 | 4 winning streaks of 27+ Grand Slam matches | Stands alone |
2011–23 | 5 winning streaks of 26+ Grand Slam matches | Stands alone |
2015–16 | 30 consecutive Grand Slam match wins | Stands alone |
2015, 21, 23 | 3 seasons winning 27 Grand Slam matches | Stands alone |
2021 | 27 Grand Slam match-winning streak in a season | Stands alone |
Versatility | ||
2008–23 | 3+ titles at each of all four Majors | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 7+ finals at each of all four Majors | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 11+ semifinals at each of all four Majors | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 13+ quarterfinals at each of all four Majors | Stands alone |
2005–24 | 90+ match wins at each of all four Majors | Stands alone |
2008–23 | 3+ Major titles across all three surfaces (hard, grass and clay) | Stands alone |
2008–22 | 7+ titles at two majors with two distinct surfaces (hard & grass) | Stands alone |
Consistency | ||
2011–23 | 7 seasons winning multiple Major titles [18] | Stands alone |
2011–23 | 7 seasons reaching 3+ Major finals | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 16 seasons reaching 1+ Major finals | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 11 seasons reaching 3+ Major semifinals | Stands alone |
2015, 21, 23 | 3 seasons winning 27 Major matches | Stands alone |
2011–23 | 10 seasons winning 20+ Major matches | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 37 finals played at Majors | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 49 semifinals played at Majors | Stands alone |
2006–24 | 60 quarterfinals played at Majors | Stands alone |
2015, 21, 23 | 3 seasons reaching all four Major finals [19] | Roger Federer |
2011–23 | 6 seasons reaching all four Major semifinals [20] | Stands alone |
2010–23 | 8 seasons reaching all four Major quarterfinals [21] | Roger Federer |
At three majors | ||
2007–24 | 10+ finals at three different Majors | Stands alone |
2018–19 | 3 consecutive Major finals won in straight sets | Stands alone |
2021 | 3 consecutive Major titles on 3 surfaces in a season | Rafael Nadal |
2011, 21, 23 | 3 distinct Major title triples in a season [22] | Stands alone |
At two majors | ||
2008–23 | 7+ titles at multiple majors | Stands alone |
2016, 21, 23 | Australian Open–French Open title double in a season (thrice) | Stands alone |
2021 | Channel Slam (Wimbledon–French Open title double in a season) [23] | Rod Laver Björn Borg Roger Federer Rafael Nadal Carlos Alcaraz |
Other | ||
2021 | Won a Major title from 2 sets down in multiple matches | Stands alone |
2011–23 | Won 5 Major titles from 2 sets down in at least one match | Stands alone |
2011, 19 | Won two Major titles after saving match points | Stands alone |
2018–23 | Won 12 Major titles in his 30s [24] [25] | Stands alone |
2008–23 | Won Major titles in three different decades | Rafael Nadal |
2005–23 | Won 35 five-set matches at Majors [26] | Stands alone |
2005–23 | Won 69 matches against top-10 at Majors [27] | Stands alone |
2005–23 | Won 46 matches at Majors after dropping the first set | Stands alone |
2006–24 | Won 69 consecutive opening matches at Majors [28] [29] | Stands alone |
2023 | Won 15 consecutive tiebreaks at Majors [30] | Stands alone |
2011–23 | Won a final in straight sets at all four Majors [31] | Roger Federer |
2021 | Won a Grand Slam final from two sets down [32] | Seven players [i] |
2012 | Played the longest Grand Slam final by duration (5h:53m) [33] | Rafael Nadal |
2007–08 | Youngest player to reach the semifinals of all four Majors [j] | Stands alone |
2007–08 | Youngest player to reach all four Majors semifinals consecutively | Stands alone |
Australian Open & US Open | ||
2008–23 | 14 hardcourt Major titles | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 20 hardcourt Major finals | Stands alone |
2007–23 | Most finals appearances at each hardcourt Major | Stands alone |
2010–13 | 7 consecutive hardcourt Major finals | Stands alone |
2005–24 | Highest match winning percentage at hardcourt Majors – 89.2% | Stands alone |
2011, 15, 23 | Major hardcourt title double in a season | Mats Wilander Roger Federer |
Time span | Record accomplished | Players tied |
---|---|---|
2007–18 | Career Golden Masters [f] [15] | Stands alone |
2007–20 | Double Career Golden Masters [g] | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 40 Masters singles titles | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 58 Masters singles finals | Stands alone |
Dominance | ||
2015 | 6 Masters titles won in a season | Stands alone |
2015 | 8 Masters finals reached in a season [k] | Stands alone |
2012–15 | 12 Masters finals won in a row | Stands alone |
2011, 14–15 | Streak of 5 Masters titles (twice) | Stands alone |
2014–16 | Streak of 11 Masters finals | Stands alone |
2015 | 39 Masters match wins in a season | Stands alone |
2011 | 31 consecutive Masters match wins | Stands alone |
2011, 14–15 | 2 streaks of 30+ consecutive Masters match wins | Stands alone |
2007–22 | 11 Masters titles won without dropping a set | Stands alone |
2007–22 | 6 different Masters tournaments won without dropping a set | Stands alone |
2007–23 | All 9 Masters tournaments won without dropping more than 1 set | Stands alone |
2007–22 | 6 Masters titles at one tournament on hard, clay, and indoors [l] | Stands alone |
2007–21 | Record holder of most titles won at 4 different Masters tournaments [m] | Stands alone |
2018 | Winner of a Masters title without losing serve | Roger Federer Alexander Zverev |
Consistency | ||
2011, 15 | 2 years winning 5+ Masters titles | Stands alone |
2011, 14–16 | 4 years winning 4+ Masters titles | Stands alone |
2011–12, 15 | 3 years reaching 6+ Masters finals | Stands alone |
2011–12 | 2 consecutive years reaching 6+ Masters finals | Stands alone |
2014–16 | 3 consecutive years winning 4+ Masters titles | Stands alone |
2011–16 | 6 consecutive years winning 3+ Masters titles | Stands alone |
2011–15 | 2 consecutive titles at 6 different Masters tournaments | Stands alone |
2015 | 4 consecutive Masters title defences | Stands alone |
Versatility | ||
2007–20 | 2+ titles at all 9 different Masters tournaments | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 3+ titles at 8 different Masters tournaments | Stands alone |
2007–18 | 4+ titles at 6 different Masters tournaments | Stands alone |
2007–19 | 3+ finals across all 9 different Masters tournaments | Stands alone |
2005–22 | 30+ match wins at each of all 9 Masters tournaments | Stands alone |
Title doubles and triples | ||
2015 | Winner of the season's first 3 Masters tournaments [n] | Stands alone |
2011, 16 | Indian Wells–Miami–Canada Masters title triple [o] (x2) | Stands alone |
2013–15 | Hard–Clay–Indoors Masters title triple [p] (x3) | Stands alone |
2011–16 | Winner of all 3 clay Masters tournaments [q] (x2) | Rafael Nadal |
2011, 14–16 | Indian Wells–Miami Masters title double (x4) | Stands alone |
2011 | Madrid–Rome Masters title double [r] | Rafael Nadal |
2007–16 | Miami–Canada Masters title double (x4) | Stands alone |
2003, 15 | Shanghai–Paris Masters title double (x2) | Stands alone |
Time span | Record accomplished | Players tied |
---|---|---|
2008–23 | 7 Year-end Championships titles | Stands alone |
2012–15 | 4 consecutive Year-end Championship titles | Stands alone |
2008–23 | Winner of the Year-end Championships in three different decades [16] | Stands alone |
2008–23 | Longest timespan between first and last titles (15 years) [s] | Stands alone |
2012–15 | 15 consecutive Year-end Championship match wins | Stands alone |
2012–14 | Went undefeated in three consecutive Year-end Championships | Stands alone |
2014 | 76% game winning percentage in a single Year-end Championship | Stands alone |
2023 | Oldest Year-end Championships champion – 36 years, 5 months | Stands alone |
2011 | Fastest to qualify for the Year-end Championship – 18 weeks, 6 days | Stands alone |
2013, 15 | Autumn sweep [t] – twice | Stands alone |
2013–15, 23 | Paris Masters and Year-end Championship back-to-back titles (x4) | Stands alone |
Time span | Record accomplished | Players tied |
---|---|---|
2006–22 | Part of the top-2 rivalries in the Open Era (vs. Nadal & Federer) | Stands alone |
2006–22 | 25+ wins over each other member of the Big Four (Federer, Nadal & Murray) | Stands alone |
2006–22 | Winning head-to-head record against each other member of the Big Four | Stands alone |
2006–23 | 21+ wins over five opponents (Nadal, Federer, Murray, Wawrinka & Berdych) | Stands alone |
2005–24 | Most match wins vs. Top-10 players (258) | Stands alone |
2007–24 | Most match wins vs. Top-5 players (123) | Stands alone |
2007–24 | Most match wins against one opponent (31 vs. Rafael Nadal) | Stands alone |
2008–17 | Most dominant record against one opponent (22-match win lead vs. Tomas Berdych) | Stands alone |
2005–23 | Most dominant unbeaten record against one opponent (19–0 vs. Gael Monfils) | Stands alone |
2009–21 | Most dominant sets record against one opponent (33–0 vs. Jérémy Chardy) | Stands alone |
2011 | Most dominant record against world No. 1 in a season (5–0 vs. Rafael Nadal) [36] | Stands alone |
2008–20 | Most Grand Slam match wins against one opponent (11 vs. Roger Federer) | Rafael Nadal |
2015 | 31 match wins vs. Top-10 opponents in a season | Stands alone |
2015 | 37.8% percentage of Top-10 wins to the overall match wins of a season | Stands alone |
2015 | Defeated all Top-10 players in a season | Stands alone |
2015 | Defeated all year-end Top-19 players in a season | Stands alone |
2011–16 | 5 seasons winning 20+ matches vs. Top-10 opponents | Stands alone |
2011 | 5 consecutive match wins against world No. 1 player in finals (Rafael Nadal) [u] | Stands alone |
2008–21 | 8 match victories over defending Grand Slam champions [38] | Stands alone |
2007 | Youngest player to beat the top-3 in succession (Roddick, Nadal & Federer) [v] | Stands alone |
Time span | Record accomplished | Players tied |
---|---|---|
2011–24 | Most weeks at world No. 1 (428) | Stands alone |
2011–24 | 13 different years ranked world No. 1 | Stands alone |
2016 | Most ranking points accumulated at No. 1 (16,950) [39] | Stands alone |
2011–23 | Eight-time Year-end world No. 1 | Stands alone |
2011–23 | Eight-time ITF World Champion | Stands alone |
2011–23 | 9 seasons with 11,000+ points accumulated as No. 1 | Stands alone |
2011–15 | 5 consecutive seasons with 11,000+ points accumulated as No. 1 | Stands alone |
2011–23 | Longest timespan between first and last Year-end No. 1 finishes (13 years) | Stands alone |
2018 | Clinched Year-end No. 1 after ranked outside the top 20 in the same season [40] | Carlos Alcaraz |
2018 | Clinched Year-end No. 1 after ending the previous season outside the top 10 | Carlos Alcaraz |
2023 | Biggest jump to world No. 1 (5 → 1) [41] | Stands alone |
2011–22 | 4 streaks of 50+ weeks at No. 1 | Stands alone |
2011–24 | Most wins as world No. 1 (485) [42] [43] | Stands alone |
2007–10 | 4 consecutive years ended at No. 3 | Stands alone |
Time span | Elite tournaments records | Players tied |
---|---|---|
2007–21 | Big Title Sweep (annual) [a] [2] – twice | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 72 Big Titles won | Stands alone |
2008–24 | Career Super Slam (winning all four Majors, the Year-end Championship and the Olympic gold medal) | Andre Agassi |
2007–23 | 50 Big Titles on hardcourts | Stands alone |
2015 | 10 Big Titles in a season | Stands alone |
2007–23 | Multiple champion at all 14 annual elite tournaments | Stands alone |
2008–22 | 6+ Big Titles at one tournament on hard, clay, grass and indoors [b] | Stands alone |
2011–21 | Three-peat at 6 different elite tournaments | Stands alone |
2014–15–16 | 7 Big Titles in a row (twice) | Stands alone |
2015 | Champion or finalist in all elite tournaments a player played in a season | Stands alone |
2008–23 | 11 years winning 4+ Big Titles | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 18 consecutive years reaching 1+ Big final | Rafael Nadal |
2011–16 | 6 consecutive years winning 5+ Big Titles | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 103 Big finals appearances | Stands alone |
2014–16 | 18 Big finals in a row | Stands alone |
2007–19 | 3+ finals across all elite tournaments | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 5+ finals in 12 different elite tournaments | Stands alone |
2014–15 | 43 match winning streak in elite tournaments | Stands alone |
2004–24 | 80%+ win rate across all three surfaces in elite tournaments [d] | Stands alone |
All tournaments records | ||
2007–23 | 61 titles won by defeating multiple Top-10 players [44] | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 24 titles won by defeating multiple Top-5 players | Stands alone |
2006–23 | 71 titles on hardcourts | Roger Federer |
2009–21 | Three-peat at 8 different tournaments | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 12 seasons winning 5+ titles [45] | Stands alone |
2010–23 | 10 winning streaks of 20+ matches | Stands alone |
2015 | 15 straight finals in a season | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 9 titles won after saving 1+ match points during the tournament [46] | Stands alone |
2007–23 | 17 consecutive quarterfinals played in one tournament (Italian Open) | Stands alone |
2004–24 | 80%+ win rate across all three surfaces (hard, grass and clay) [47] [18] | Stands alone |
2018 | All-time prize money leader ($185,065,269) | Stands alone |
2015 | Most prize money won in a season ($21,146,145) | Stands alone |
2011–23 | 9 seasons winning $10,000,000+ [45] | Stands alone |
2023 | Longest best-of-three final by duration (3h:49m) | Carlos Alcaraz |
2009 | Longest best-of-three match with a deciding-set tiebreak by duration (4h:3m) [48] | Rafael Nadal |
2004–24 | 83.5% (1124–222) – Highest career match winning percentage [49] | Stands alone |
84.6% (709–129) – Highest hardcourt match winning percentage [50] | Stands alone | |
96% (979–41) – Highest match winning percentage after winning first set [w] | Stands alone | |
44.5% (145–181) – Highest match winning percentage after losing first set [x] | Stands alone | |
66.2% (337–172) – Highest tiebreaks winning percentage [y] | Stands alone | |
Grand Slam | Year(s) | Record accomplished | Players tied |
---|---|---|---|
Australian Open | 2008–23 | 10 singles titles | Stands alone |
2008–23 | 10 singles finals | Stands alone | |
2011–13 2019–21 | 2 streaks of 3 consecutive titles | Stands alone | |
2008–23 | 4+ titles in his 20s and 30s | Stands alone | |
2005–24 | Highest match winning percentage – 91.3% | Stands alone | |
2019–24 | Longest match win streak (33) [51] [52] | Stands alone | |
2012 | Longest final by duration (5h:53m) | Rafael Nadal | |
French Open | 2011–16 | 6 consecutive semifinals | Rafael Nadal |
2010–24 | 15 consecutive quarterfinals [12] | Stands alone | |
2006–24 | 18 quarterfinals overall | Stands alone | |
2023 | Oldest singles champion – 36 years | Stands alone | |
Wimbledon | 2011–22 | 3+ titles in his 20s and 30s | Stands alone |
2007–24 | 13 semifinals [53] | Roger Federer | |
2014–23 | Longest Centre Court match win streak (45) [54] [55] | Stands alone | |
2019 | Longest final by duration (4h:57m) | Roger Federer | |
2019 | Longest rally played at Wimbledon (45-shot rally) [56] [57] | R. Bautista Agut | |
US Open | 2007–23 | 10 singles finals | Stands alone |
2023 | Oldest singles champion – 36 years | Stands alone | |
2012 | Longest final by duration (4h:54m) [58] | Andy Murray Mats Wilander Ivan Lendl |
Tournament | Year(s) | Record accomplished | Players tied |
---|---|---|---|
Paris Masters | 2009–21 | 7 singles titles | Stands alone |
2013–15 | 3 consecutive titles | Stands alone | |
2023 | Oldest singles champion – 36 years | Stands alone | |
Miami Masters | 2007–16 | 6 singles titles | Andre Agassi |
2014–16 | 3 consecutive titles | Andre Agassi | |
Indian Wells Masters | 2008–16 | 5 singles titles | Roger Federer |
2014–16 | 3 consecutive titles | Roger Federer | |
Shanghai Masters | 2012–18 | 4 singles titles | Stands alone |
2012–13 | 2 consecutive titles | Andy Murray | |
Rome Masters | 2008–22 | 12 singles finals | Rafael Nadal |
2022 | Oldest singles champion – 34 years | Stands alone | |
Cincinnati Masters | 2023 | Winner of longest Cincinnati final (3h:49m vs. Alcaraz) | Stands alone |
Oldest singles champion – 36 years [59] | Stands alone |
Tournament | Year(s) | Record accomplished (selected) | Players tied |
---|---|---|---|
ATP Finals | 2008–23 | 7 singles titles | Stands alone |
2012–15 | 4 consecutive singles titles | Stands alone |
Tournament | Year(s) | Record accomplished (selected) | Players tied |
---|---|---|---|
Summer Olympics | 2024 | Winning an Olympic gold medal in singles without losing a set | Stands alone |
Oldest Olympic gold medalist – 37 years | Stands alone |
Tournament | Year(s) | Record accomplished | Players tied |
---|---|---|---|
China Open | 2009–15 | 6 singles titles | Stands alone |
Serbia Open | 2009–11 | 2 singles titles [z] | Stands alone |
This is a list of official Guinness World Records that belong to Djokovic. [60]
Roger Federer is a Swiss former professional tennis player. He was ranked world No. 1 in singles by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for 310 weeks, including a record 237 consecutive weeks, and finished as the year-end No. 1 five times. He won 103 singles titles on the ATP Tour, the second most of all time, including 20 major men's singles titles and six year-end championships.
Rafael Nadal Parera is a Spanish professional tennis player. He has been ranked world No. 1 in singles by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for 209 weeks, and has finished as the year-end No. 1 five times. Nadal has won 22 Grand Slam men's singles titles, including a record 14 French Open titles. He has won 92 ATP-level singles titles, including 36 Masters titles and an Olympic gold medal, with 63 of these on clay courts. Nadal is one of three men to complete the Career Golden Slam in singles. His 81 consecutive wins on clay constitute the longest single-surface win streak in the Open Era.
Stanislas Wawrinka is a Swiss professional tennis player. He reached a career-high Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) singles ranking of world No. 3 on 27 January 2014. He is a three-time Grand Slam champion, at the 2014 Australian Open, the 2015 French Open and at the 2016 US Open, where he defeated the world No. 1 player in the final on all three occasions.
Novak Djokovic is a Serbian professional tennis player. He has been ranked No. 1 for a record total of 428 weeks in a record 13 different years by the ATP, and finished as the year-end No. 1 a record eight times. Djokovic has won a record 24 Grand Slam men's singles titles, including a record ten Australian Open titles. Overall, he has won 99 singles titles, including a record 72 Big Titles: 24 majors, a record 40 Masters, a record seven year-end championships, and an Olympic gold medal. Djokovic is the only man in tennis history to be the reigning champion of all four majors at once across three different surfaces. In singles, he is the only man to achieve a triple Career Grand Slam, and the only player to complete a Career Golden Masters, a feat he has accomplished twice. Djokovic is the only player in singles to have won all of the Big Titles over the course of his career, having completed the Career Super Slam as part of that accomplishment.
The tennis rivalry between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal is considered one of the greatest in the history of the sport. Federer and Nadal played each other 40 times, with Nadal leading 24–16 overall, including 14–10 in finals.
This is a list of the main career statistics of Swiss former professional tennis player Roger Federer. All statistics are according to the ATP Tour website. Federer won 103 ATP singles titles including 20 majors, 28 ATP Masters, and six ATP Finals. Federer was also a gold medalist in men's doubles with Stan Wawrinka at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and a silver medalist in singles at the 2012 London Olympics. Representing Switzerland, Federer participated in winning the 2014 Davis Cup and a record three Hopman Cup titles. He is the first Swiss male player to win a major title, the only Swiss male player to hold the No. 1 ranking in singles, and the only Swiss player, male or female, to win all four majors. He helped Team Europe win three consecutive Laver Cup titles, the 2017, 2018 and 2019 editions.
This is a list of the main career statistics of professional tennis player Rafael Nadal. All statistics are according to the ATP Tour website. To date, Nadal has won 92 ATP singles titles, including 22 Grand Slam men's singles titles and 36 ATP Tour Masters 1000 titles. He is one of three men to achieve the Career Golden Slam in men's singles, with titles at all four majors and the Olympic singles gold. He is the first man in history to win Grand Slam singles titles on three different surfaces in a calendar year and is the youngest (24) in the Open Era to achieve the Career Grand Slam. He is the fourth man in history to complete the double Career Grand Slam in singles, after Roy Emerson, Rod Laver, and Novak Djokovic. He is the first man to win multiple majors and rank world No. 1 in three different decades. Representing Spain, Nadal has won two Olympic gold medals including a singles gold at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and a doubles gold at the 2016 Rio Olympics. In the process, he became the first male player in history to complete the Career Grand Slam and win Olympic gold medals in both singles and doubles. He has led Spain to five Davis Cup titles in 2004, 2008, 2009, 2011, and 2019. He has won the 2017 and 2019 editions of the Laver Cup with Team Europe.
Roger Federer made all four Major finals in 2007, winning three of them. He defeated Fernando González, 7–6(2), 6–4, 6–4, at the Australian Open, Rafael Nadal, 7–6(7), 4–6, 7–6(3), 2–6, 6–2, at Wimbledon, and Novak Djokovic, 7–6(4), 7–6(2), 6–4, at the US Open. However, Federer lost the 2007 French Open final to Nadal, 3–6, 6–4, 3–6, 4–6. Federer made five ATP Masters Series 1000 Finals in 2007, but only won two of those, in Hamburg and Cincinnati. Federer won 1 ATP 500 series event in Dubai. He ended the year by winning the year-end championships for the fourth time. In 2011 Stephen Tignor, chief editorial writer for Tennis.com, ranked Federer's 2007 season as the sixth greatest season of all-time during the Open Era.
This page covers all the important events in the sport of tennis in 2011. Primarily, it provides the results of notable tournaments throughout the year on both the ATP and WTA Tours, the Davis Cup, and the Fed Cup.
The tennis rivalry between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal was the most prolific in men's tennis in the Open Era. It is widely considered by players, coaches, and pundits as one of the greatest rivalries in the history of the sport. The pair contested at least one professional match every year from 2006 to 2022, and in 2024. Nadal and Djokovic are statistically two of the most successful male players in the history of the sport.
The rivalry between Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer was one of the most prolific rivalries in tennis history and is considered one of the greatest rivalries of all time.
The 2013 ATP World Tour Finals (also known as the 2013 Barclays ATP World Tour Finals for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament that was played on indoor hard courts at the O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom, between 4 and 11 November 2013. It was the season-ending event for the best singles players and doubles teams of the 2013 ATP World Tour.
The 2014 ATP World Tour Finals (also known as the 2014 Barclays ATP World Tour Finals for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played at the O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom, between 9 and 16 November 2014. It was the season-ending event for the best singles players and doubles teams on the 2014 ATP World Tour. The Bryan Brothers won the title at the doubles tournament, while Novak Djokovic successfully defended his single title for the second time after Roger Federer withdrew from the final, the first walkover in a final in the tournament's 45-year history.
The 2015 ATP World Tour Finals (also known as the 2015 Barclays ATP World Tour Finals for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament that was played at the O2 Arena in London, United Kingdom, between 15 and 22 November 2015. It was the season-ending event for the best singles players and doubles teams on the 2015 ATP World Tour.
The Big Three is a common nickname in tennis for the trio of Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, each considered to be among the greatest players of all time. The trio dominated men's singles tennis for two decades, collectively winning 66 major singles tournaments; Djokovic leads with an all-time record of 24 titles, followed by Nadal with 22 and Federer with 20. They have been ranked as world No. 1s in singles for a total of 947 weeks ; Djokovic for a record 428 weeks, Federer for 310, and Nadal for 209. One of the three finished the season as the year-end No. 1 player every year from 2004 to 2023, with the exceptions of 2016 and 2022. They collectively occupied the top-three positions of the year-end ATP rankings eight times; in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2014, 2018, and 2019.
This is a list of the combined career statistics of the Big Four, the four players who have dominated men's tennis in singles for the majority of the first quarter of the 21st century. The Big Four consists of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, and Andy Murray.