ATP World Tour records
The ATP World Tour is the top-level men's professional tennis circuit, administered by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP). The tour began in 1990, so all of the records listed here start at that time and are based on official ATP data.[1]
Note the following:
- Grand Slam, Olympic, and Davis Cup results are all included, as they factor into the ATP Rankings used by the tour to determine player eligibility and seedings.
- The names of active players appear in boldface for their career totals and currently active streaks, except for the lists exclusive to active players.
Singles
All tournaments
Titles and Finals
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Matches
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Other
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Grand Slam tournaments
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Year-end tournament
Currently called the ATP World Tour Finals
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Masters 1000 tournaments
After the Grand Slams and the year-end tournament, the ATP Masters series are the nine annual tournaments that hold the most importance. They are currently called the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 because the winner earns 1000 ranking points.
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500 series tournaments
This is the class of tournaments in which the winner earns 500 ranking points. This format began in 2009, so these records include the equivalent former classes called the ATP Championship Series (1990–99) and ATP International Series Gold (2000–08).
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250 series tournaments
This is the class of tournaments in which the winner earns 250 ranking points. This format began in 2009, so these records include the equivalent former classes called the ATP World Series (1990–99) and ATP International Series (2000–08).
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Miscellaneous
Gap between titles | Player | Tournaments |
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6 years, 8 months | Richard Fromberg | 1991 Wellington — 1997 Bucharest |
6 years | Jarkko Nieminen Rajeev Ram |
2006 Auckland — 2012 Sydney 2009 Newport — 2015 Newport |
- Other
- Most times elected ATP Player of The Year: 6 – Pete Sampras, 1993–98
- Won a Masters 1000 tournament without having serve broken or losing a set: Roger Federer twice in Cincinnati – 2012[3] and 2015[4]
- Oldest title winner: Ivo Karlović at 35 years, 11 months, 25 days won 2015 Delray Beach
- Longest match: John Isner defeated Nicolas Mahut at Wimbledon 2010 in an 11-hour-5-minute first round match played over three days. (Isner also set the record for aces in a match with 113 and Mahut became second with 103.)
- Shortest match: Jarkko Nieminen defeated Bernard Tomic at 2014 Miami Masters in 28 minutes and 20 seconds.[5]
Doubles
All tournaments
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Grand Slam tournaments
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Prize money
See the Open Era article since the leaders and amounts of prize money in that era are the same or nearly the same.
See also
References
- ↑ ATP statistics
- ↑ http://www.atpworldtour.com/en/stats/aces
- ↑ Roger Federer. "Roger Federer hails 'perfect reaction' to Andy Murray London Olympics defeat with Cincinnati Masters triumph". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-07-08.
- ↑ "Federer wins 7th Cincinnati title; Djokovic denied again". tennis.com. Retrieved 24 August 2015.
- ↑ "Jarkko Nieminen breaks Greg Rusedski's fastest win record in Miami". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
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