M/Y is average number of matches per year during the streak
#
Cons. seasons 90%+ win rate
Years
M/Y
4
Björn Borg
1977–80
81.5
3
Jimmy Connors
1974–76
95.0
3
Ivan Lendl
1985–87
84.0
3
Roger Federer
2004–06
87.3
#
Total seasons won 10+ titles
Years
4
Jimmy Connors
1973–74, 76, 78
4
Ivan Lendl
1981–82, 85, 89
3
Rod Laver
1968–70
3
John McEnroe
1979, 81, 84
3
Roger Federer
2004–06
2
Ilie Năstase
1972–73
2
Björn Borg
1977, 79
2
Rafael Nadal
2005, 13
2
Novak Djokovic
2011, 15
#
Cons. seasons reached a final
Years
20
Roger Federer
2000–19
19
Jimmy Connors
1971–89
17
Rafael Nadal
2004–20
16
/ Ivan Lendl
1979–94
16
Gaël Monfils
2005–20
15
Manuel Orantes
1969–83
15
Novak Djokovic
2006–20
14
John McEnroe
1978–91
14
Carlos Moyá
1995–08
14
Tomáš Berdych
2004–17
Single season records
#
Titles
Year
18
Rod Laver
1969
16
Guillermo Vilas
1977
15
Rod Laver
1970
15
Ilie Năstase
1973
15
Jimmy Connors
1974
15
Ivan Lendl
1982
13
Björn Borg
1979
13
John McEnroe
1984
12
Ilie Năstase
1972
12
Jimmy Connors
1976
12
Thomas Muster
1995
12
Roger Federer
2006
Win streaks
#
Matches
Years
49
Björn Borg
1978
48
Björn Borg
1979–80
46
Guillermo Vilas
1977
44
Ivan Lendl
1981–82
43
Novak Djokovic
2010–11
42
John McEnroe
1984
41
Roger Federer
2006–07
36
Jimmy Connors
1975
35
Jimmy Connors
1974
35
Thomas Muster
1995
35
Roger Federer
2005
Consecutive matches won on each court type
#
Hard
Years
56
Roger Federer
2005–06
36
Roger Federer
2006–07
35
Novak Djokovic
2010–11
34
Pete Sampras
1994
34
Pete Sampras
1996–97
#
Grass
Years
65
Roger Federer
2003–08
41
Björn Borg
1976–81
23
John McEnroe
1980–82
23
Pete Sampras
1994–96
23
Pete Sampras
1998–00
Consecutive sets won on each court type
#
Hard
Years
34
Novak Djokovic
2016
33
Roger Federer
2005–06
31
Roger Federer
2006–07
#
Grass
Years
36
Roger Federer
2003–04
30
Roger Federer
2017
29
Roger Federer
2007–08
Titles won and finals reached across consecutive tournaments played
#
Titles
Years
10
Björn Borg
1979–80
8
Ivan Lendl
1981–82
8
John McEnroe
1983–84
7
Guillermo Vilas
1977
7
Roger Federer
2006–07
7
Novak Djokovic
2011
7
Novak Djokovic
2015–16
Consecutive wins in tournament finals and against top 10 opponents
#
Finals
Years
24
Roger Federer
2003–05
19
Rod Laver
1969–70
15
Björn Borg
1979–80
14
Rafael Nadal
2005–06
12
Rod Laver
1973–75
12
John McEnroe
1980–81
12
John McEnroe
1984–85
11
John Newcombe
1971–73
11
Björn Borg
1977
11
José Luis Clerc
1980–81
11
Thomas Muster
1994–95
11
Stan Wawrinka
2014–16
Year-end championships
The year-end championships listed here are the most prestigious tournaments after the Grand Slams. There have been three prominent YECs in the Open Era, each involving only top performers for the given year. ' This is a combination of the YECs for two separate tours: the ITF Grand Prix that ran until 1989 and the ATP Tour that replaced it. For record-keeping purposes, the ATP has incorporated the entire history of the ITF Masters Grand Prix alongside its ATP Finals tournament; thus they are both listed as "ATP" here. In total, these YECs have been held at numerous venues around the globe and played on several surfaces. ' The WCT Finals, as the YEC for the World Championship Tennis tour, was held in Dallas, Texas and played on indoor carpet courts. The Grand Slam Cup was an ITF event for the top performers in the year's Grand Slam events. It was held in Munich, Germany and played on indoor carpet courts. WCT and GSC events are specifically indicated in the Overall titles table.
Overall totals
Finals
#
1.
Ivan Lendl
12
1.
John McEnroe
12
3.
Boris Becker
11
4.
Roger Federer
10
5.
Pete Sampras
9
6.
Björn Borg
8
7.
Novak Djokovic
7
8.
Andre Agassi
5
9.
Ilie Năstase
4
9.
Jimmy Connors
4
Appearances
#
1.
Ivan Lendl
19
1.
John McEnroe
19
1.
Andre Agassi
19
4.
Boris Becker
18
5.
Jimmy Connors
17
5.
Roger Federer
17
ATP totals
Finals
#
1.
Roger Federer
10
2.
Ivan Lendl
9
3.
Boris Becker
8
4.
Novak Djokovic
7
5.
Pete Sampras
6
Appearances
#
1.
Roger Federer
17
2.
Andre Agassi
13
3.
Ivan Lendl
12
3.
Novak Djokovic
12
5.
Jimmy Connors
11
5.
Boris Becker
11
5.
Pete Sampras
11
WCT totals
Finals
#
1.
John McEnroe
8
2.
Björn Borg
4
3.
Jimmy Connors
3
3.
Ivan Lendl
3
5.
Ken Rosewall
2
5.
Rod Laver
2
5.
Arthur Ashe
2
5.
Boris Becker
2
Appearances
#
1.
John McEnroe
9
2.
Arthur Ashe
6
3.
Rod Laver
5
3.
Björn Borg
5
3.
Jimmy Connors
5
3.
Ivan Lendl
5
Masters tournaments
These are a collection of 9 annual tournaments that are the most important after the Grand Slams and the year-end championships. From 1970, the Grand Prix circuit, alongside the smaller WCT circuit, was the highest tier of men’s tennis. The leading tournament category on the Grand Prix circuit was the Grand Prix Super Series, the predecessor to the Masters Series. Starting from 1990, the ATP took control of the main tour creating the ATP Tour. Since then, the tournaments outside of the Grand Slams and year-end championships on the ATP Tour have been classified as ATP Masters 1000, ATP 500 and ATP 250 events. The Masters Series was part of the Championship Series from 1990 to 1995, was known as Super 9 from 1996 to 1999 and took it’s Masters Series name in 2000 before being known as the Masters 1000 series in 2009.
Career totals
Match wins
#
1.
Rafael Nadal
384
2.
Roger Federer
381
3.
Novak Djokovic
355
4.
Andy Murray
213
5.
Andre Agassi
209
6.
Tomáš Berdych
191
7.
Pete Sampras
190
8.
David Ferrer
189
9.
Andy Roddick
157
10.
Stan Wawrinka
152
Titles per court type
Hard
#
1.
Novak Djokovic
25
2.
Roger Federer
22
3.
Andre Agassi
14
4.
Andy Murray
12
5.
Rafael Nadal
10
Titles won per season
Olympic tournaments
Tennis became an official Olympic sport in 1988, so there have been eight events in the Open Era. Andy Murray has won two titles, while Fernando González and Juan Martín del Potro, with one silver and bronze medal each, are the only other players to have won more than one singles medal.
ATP Rankings began in 1973. These weekly rankings determine event eligibility and seedings. At the end of each year they also become the official ATP season rankings.
Note: The ATP Tour was suspended from 16 March to 21 August, 2020. ATP Ranking is frozen from 23 March to 23 August, 2020.
Total weeks as of 2020 with currently-ranked players in boldface
Prize money has increased throughout the era, in some cases greatly in a short time span. For example, the Australian Open winner received A$916,000 in 2004 and A$4,120,000 in 2020. Career totals include doubles prize money and are not inflation-adjusted.
Career
Prize money
Ending
1.
Novak Djokovic
$143,631,560
2020
2.
Roger Federer
$129,946,683
2020
3.
Rafael Nadal
$120,955,904
2020
4.
Andy Murray
$61,544,007
2019
5.
Pete Sampras
$43,280,489
2002
6.
Stan Wawrinka
$34,278,627
2020
7.
David Ferrer
$31,483,911
2019
8.
Andre Agassi
$31,152,975
2006
9.
Tomáš Berdych
$29,491,328
2019
10.
Marin Čilić
$27,864,286
2020
Miscellaneous
Youngest and oldest title winners Instances of winning titles on 3 surfaces across consecutive events played