ATP Masters 1000 singles records and statistics

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Novak Djokovic, the only player to complete the Career Golden Masters.

In tennis, the ATP Masters events, currently known as ATP Tour Masters 1000 series, are an annual series of nine top-level tournaments featuring the elite men's players on the ATP Tour since 1990.[1][2] The Masters tournaments along with the Grand Slam tournaments and the year-end championships make up the most coveted titles on the annual ATP Tour calendar. In addition to the quadrennial Olympics, they are collectively known as the 'Big Titles'.[3]

Twelve tournaments have been held as Masters events so far, nine each year. They have been played on three different surfaces: hard outdoors: Indian Wells, Miami, Canada, Cincinnati and Shanghai; hard indoors: Stockholm (1991–94), Stuttgart (1998–2001), Madrid (2002–08) and Paris; clay: Hamburg (1990–2008), Monte Carlo, Madrid and Rome; carpet indoors: Stockholm (1990), Stuttgart (1995–97) and Paris (1990–2006).

Champions by year

  Active tournaments
  Defunct tournaments
Year[a][4] Indian Wells Miami Monte Carlo Hamburg Rome Canada Cincinnati Stockholm Paris
1990 Edberg (1/4) Agassi (1/17) Chesnokov (1/2) Aguilera (1/1) Muster (1/8) Chang (1/7) Edberg (2/4) Becker (1/5) Edberg (3/4)
1991 Courier (1/5) Courier (2/5) Bruguera (1/2) Nováček (1/1) Sánchez (1/1) Chesnokov (2/2) Forget (1/2) Becker (2/5) Forget (2/2)
1992 Chang (2/7) Chang (3/7) Muster (2/8) Edberg (4/4) Courier (3/5) Agassi (2/17) Sampras (1/11) Ivanišević (1/2) Becker (3/5)
1993 Courier (4/5) Sampras (2/11) Bruguera (2/2) Stich (1/2) Courier (5/5) Pernfors (1/1) Chang (4/7) Stich (2/2) Ivanišević (2/2)
1994 Sampras (3/11) Sampras (4/11) A. Medvedev (1/4) A. Medvedev (2/4) Sampras (5/11) Agassi (3/17) Chang (5/7) Becker (4/5) Agassi (4/17)
↓ Stuttgart ↓
1995 Sampras (6/11) Agassi (5/17) Muster (3/8) A. Medvedev (3/4) Muster (4/8) Agassi (6/17) Agassi (7/17) Muster (5/8)[b] Sampras (7/11)
1996 Chang (6/7) Agassi (8/17) Muster (6/8) Carretero (1/1) Muster (7/8) Ferreira (1/2) Agassi (9/17) Becker (5/5) Enqvist (1/3)
1997 Chang (7/7) Muster (8/8) Ríos (1/5) A. Medvedev (4/4) Corretja (1/2) Woodruff (1/1) Sampras (8/11) Korda (1/1) Sampras (9/11)
1998 Ríos (2/5) Ríos (3/5) Moyá (1/3) Costa (1/1) Ríos (4/5) Rafter (1/2) Rafter (2/2) Krajicek (1/2) Rusedski (1/1)
1999 Philippoussis (1/1) Krajicek (2/2) Kuerten (1/5) Ríos (5/5) Kuerten (2/5) Johansson (1/1) Sampras (10/11) Enqvist (2/3) Agassi (10/17)
2000 Corretja (2/2) Sampras (11/11) Pioline (1/1) Kuerten (3/5) Norman (1/1) Safin (1/5) Enqvist (3/3) Ferreira (2/2) Safin (2/5)
2001 Agassi (11/17) Agassi (12/17) Kuerten (4/5) Portas (1/1) Ferrero (1/4) Pavel (1/1) Kuerten (5/5) Haas (1/1) Grosjean (1/1)
↓ Madrid ↓
2002 Hewitt (1/2) Agassi (13/17) Ferrero (2/4) Federer (1/28) Agassi (14/17) Cañas (1/1) Moyá (2/3) Agassi (15/17) Safin (3/5)
2003 Hewitt (2/2) Agassi (16/17) Ferrero (3/4) Coria (1/2) Mantilla (1/1) Roddick (1/5) Roddick (2/5) Ferrero (4/4) Henman (1/1)
2004 Federer (2/28) Roddick (3/5) Coria (2/2) Federer (3/28) Moyá (3/3) Federer (4/28) Agassi (17/17) Safin (4/5) Safin (5/5)
2005 Federer (5/28) Federer (6/28) Nadal (1/36) Federer (7/28) Nadal (2/36) Nadal (3/36) Federer (8/28) Nadal (4/36) Berdych (1/1)
2006 Federer (9/28) Federer (10/28) Nadal (5/36) Robredo (1/1) Nadal (6/36) Federer (11/28) Roddick (4/5) Federer (12/28) Davydenko (1/3)
2007 Nadal (7/36) Djokovic (1/40) Nadal (8/36) Federer (13/28) Nadal (9/36) Djokovic (2/40) Federer (14/28) Nalbandian (1/2) Nalbandian (2/2)
2008 Djokovic (3/40) Davydenko (2/3) Nadal (10/36) Nadal (11/36) Djokovic (4/40) Nadal (12/36) Murray (1/14) Murray (2/14) Tsonga (1/2)
↓ Madrid[c] ↓ ↓ Shanghai ↓
2009 Nadal (13/36) Murray (3/14) Nadal (14/36) Federer (15/28) Nadal (15/36) Murray (4/14) Federer (16/28) Davydenko (3/3) Djokovic (5/40)
2010 Ljubičić (1/1) Roddick (5/5) Nadal (16/36) Nadal (18/36) Nadal (17/36) Murray (5/14) Federer (17/28) Murray (6/14) Söderling (1/1)
2011 Djokovic (6/40) Djokovic (7/40) Nadal (19/36) Djokovic (8/40) Djokovic (9/40) Djokovic (10/40) Murray (7/14) Murray (8/14) Federer (18/28)
2012 Federer (19/28) Djokovic (11/40) Nadal (20/36) Federer (20/28) Nadal (21/36) Djokovic (12/40) Federer (21/28) Djokovic (13/40) Ferrer (1/1)
2013 Nadal (22/36) Murray (9/14) Djokovic (14/40) Nadal (23/36) Nadal (24/36) Nadal (25/36) Nadal (26/36) Djokovic (15/40) Djokovic (16/40)
2014 Djokovic (17/40) Djokovic (18/40) Wawrinka (1/1) Nadal (27/36) Djokovic (19/40) Tsonga (2/2) Federer (22/28) Federer (23/28) Djokovic (20/40)
2015 Djokovic (21/40) Djokovic (22/40) Djokovic (23/40) Murray (10/14) Djokovic (24/40) Murray (11/14) Federer (24/28) Djokovic (25/40) Djokovic (26/40)
2016 Djokovic (27/40) Djokovic (28/40) Nadal (28/36) Djokovic (29/40) Murray (12/14) Djokovic (30/40) Čilić (1/1) Murray (13/14) Murray (14/14)
2017 Federer (25/28) Federer (26/28) Nadal (29/36) Nadal (30/36) Zverev (1/7) Zverev (2/7) Dimitrov (1/1) Federer (27/28) Sock (1/1)
2018 del Potro (1/1) Isner (1/1) Nadal (31/36) Zverev (3/7) Nadal (32/36) Nadal (33/36) Djokovic (31/40) Djokovic (32/40) Khachanov (1/1)
2019 Thiem (1/1) Federer (28/28) Fognini (1/1) Djokovic (33/40) Nadal (34/36) Nadal (35/36) D. Medvedev (1/6) D. Medvedev (2/6) Djokovic (34/40)
2020 not held[d] Djokovic (36/40) not held[d] Djokovic (35/40)[e] not held[d] D. Medvedev (3/6)
2021 Norrie (1/1) Hurkacz (1/2) Tsitsipas (1/3) Zverev (4/7) Nadal (36/36) D. Medvedev (4/6) Zverev (5/7) Djokovic (37/40)
2022 Fritz (1/1) Alcaraz (1/5) Tsitsipas (2/3) Alcaraz (2/5) Djokovic (38/40) Carreño Busta (1/1) Ćorić (1/1) Rune (1/1)
2023 Alcaraz (3/5) [f] D. Medvedev (5/6) [f] Rublev (1/2) Alcaraz (4/5) [f] D. Medvedev (6/6) Sinner (1/4) Djokovic (39/40) Hurkacz (2/2) Djokovic (40/40)
2024 Alcaraz (5/5) Sinner (2/4) Tsitsipas (3/3) [f] Rublev (2/2) Zverev (6/7) Popyrin (1/1) Sinner (3/4) Sinner (4/4) Zverev (7/7)
Year Indian Wells Miami Monte Carlo Madrid Rome Canada Cincinnati Shanghai Paris
  1. ^ Seasons' tournaments are in chronological order with three exceptions:
    1. Cincinnati was held before Canada in 1996.
    2. Rome was held before Madrid/Hamburg from 2000–2010 and after Cincinnati in 2020.
    3. Indian Wells was held after Cincinnati in 2021.
  2. ^ First event of Stuttgart Masters was held in Essen.
  3. ^ Madrid replaced Hamburg in 2009, switching from indoor hard courts to clay.
  4. ^ a b c not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  5. ^ In 2020, Cincinnati was held in New York City.
  6. ^ a b c d Competed under no flag due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Title leaders

  Active tournaments  Events not played
  Defunct tournaments  Events not won
Titles[5] Player[a] IW MI MC MA IT CA CI SH PA ST EU HA MA[b] Years Strike
Rate[c]
40 Novak Djokovic 5 6 2 3 6 4 3 4 7 2007–2023 9/9
36 Rafael Nadal 3 11 4 10 5 1 1 1 2005–2021 7/9
28 Roger Federer 5 4 2 2 7 2 1 4 1 2002–2019
17 Andre Agassi 1 6 1 3 3 2 1 1990–2004
14 Andy Murray 2 1 1 3 2 3 1 1 2008–2016
11 Pete Sampras 2 3 1 3 2 1992–2000 5/9
8 Thomas Muster 1 3 3 1 1990–1997 4/9
7 Michael Chang 3 1 1 2 1990–1997
Alexander Zverev 2 2 1 1 1 2017–2024 5/9
6 Daniil Medvedev 1 1 1 1 1 1 2019–2023 6/9
5 Boris Becker 1 3 1 1990–1996 2/9
Jim Courier 2 1 2 1991–1993 3/9
Marcelo Ríos 1 1 1 1 1 1997–1999 5/9
Gustavo Kuerten 2 1 1 1 1999–2001 4/9
Marat Safin 1 3 1 2000–2004 3/9
Andy Roddick 2 1 2 2003–2010
Carlos Alcaraz 2 1 2 2022–2024
4 Stefan Edberg 1 1 1 1 1990–1992 4/9
Andrei Medvedev 1 3 1994–1997 2/9
Juan Carlos Ferrero 2 1 1 2001–2003 3/9
Jannik Sinner 1 1 1 1 2023–2024 4/9

80 champions in 307 events as of 2024 Paris.

  1. ^ Players with 4+ titles listed. Active players and records are denoted in bold.
  2. ^ Madrid was held as the 8th event between 2002–08 before being replaced by Shanghai in 2009.
  3. ^ Player's best career strike rate of winning the Masters series events.

Career Golden Masters

The achievement of winning all of the nine active ATP Masters tournaments over the course of a player's career.

  • The event at which the Career Golden Masters was accomplished indicated in bold.
Player Indian Wells Miami Monte Carlo Madrid Rome Canada Cincinnati Shanghai Paris
Novak Djokovic[6][7][a] 2008 2007 2013 2011 2008 2007 2018 2012 2009
2011 2011 2015 2016 2011 2011 2020 2013 2013

Career totals

  • Active players denoted in bold.
Singles
No. Titles
40 Serbia Novak Djokovic
36 Spain Rafael Nadal
28 Switzerland Roger Federer
17 United States Andre Agassi
14 United Kingdom Andy Murray
11 United States Pete Sampras
8 Austria Thomas Muster
7 United States Michael Chang
Germany Alexander Zverev
6 Russia Daniil Medvedev
No. Finals
59 Novak Djokovic
53 Rafael Nadal
50 Roger Federer
22 Andre Agassi
21 Andy Murray
19 Pete Sampras
12 Alexander Zverev
11 Boris Becker
10 Gustavo Kuerten
Thomas Muster
Daniil Medvedev
No. Semifinals
78 Novak Djokovic
76 Rafael Nadal
66 Roger Federer
33 Andy Murray
32 Andre Agassi
31 Pete Sampras
20 Andy Roddick
Alexander Zverev
19 Lleyton Hewitt
Tomáš Berdych
No. Quarterfinals
99 Rafael Nadal
95 Novak Djokovic
87 Roger Federer
51 Andy Murray
45 Pete Sampras
Tomáš Berdych
David Ferrer
44 Andre Agassi
35 Andy Roddick
31 Alexander Zverev
No. Match wins
410 Rafael Nadal
409 Novak Djokovic
381 Roger Federer
230 Andy Murray
209 Andre Agassi
191 Tomáš Berdych
190 Pete Sampras
189 David Ferrer
166 Stan Wawrinka
157 Andy Roddick
% W–L Match record
82.00 410–90 Rafael Nadal
81.96 409–90 Novak Djokovic
77.91 381–108 Roger Federer
74.11 209–73 Andre Agassi
73.08 190–70 Pete Sampras
72.00 108–42 Stefan Edberg
70.24 144–61 Alexander Zverev
69.49 230–101 Andy Murray
69.18 101–45 Thomas Muster
69.16 157–70 Andy Roddick
minimum 100 wins

^ Statistics correct as of 2024 Paris Masters. To avoid double counting, they are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

Season records

Season totals

No. Titles Year(s)
6 Novak Djokovic 2015
5 Novak Djokovic 2011
Rafael Nadal 2013
4 Novak Djokovic 2 2014, 16
Roger Federer 2 2005, 06
Rafael Nadal 2005
3 Rafael Nadal 5 2007–10, 18
Roger Federer 3 2004, 12, 17
Novak Djokovic 2 2012, 13
Andre Agassi 2 1995, 2002
Jannik Sinner 2024
Andy Murray 2016
Marcelo Ríos 1998
Thomas Muster 1995
Pete Sampras 1994
Stefan Edberg 1990
No. Finals Year(s)
8 Novak Djokovic 2015
6 Novak Djokovic 2 2011, 12
Rafael Nadal 2013
Roger Federer 2006
5 Rafael Nadal 4 2005–11
Novak Djokovic 2 2009, 16
Roger Federer 2 2007, 14
Andy Murray 2016
Stefan Edberg 1990
4 Roger Federer 3 2005–17
Rafael Nadal 2 2008, 17
Andy Murray 2015
Novak Djokovic 2014
Andre Agassi 1995
Pete Sampras 1995
No. Match wins Year
39 Novak Djokovic 2015
35 Rafael Nadal 2013
34 Novak Djokovic 2012
Rafael Nadal 2009
Roger Federer 2006
33 Novak Djokovic 2011
Novak Djokovic 2009
32 Rafael Nadal 2008
31 Novak Djokovic 2016
Rafael Nadal 2007
30 Andy Murray 2015
minimum 30 wins
% W–L Match record Year
97.1 33–1 Novak Djokovic 2011
95.1 39–2 Novak Djokovic 2015
92.1 35–3 Rafael Nadal 2013
91.9 34–3 Roger Federer 2006
88.6 31–4 Novak Djokovic 2016
85.7 30–5 Andy Murray 2015
85.0 34–6 Novak Djokovic 2012
85.0 34–6 Rafael Nadal 2009
84.2 32–6 Rafael Nadal 2008
83.8 31–6 Rafael Nadal 2007
80.5 33–8 Novak Djokovic 2009
minimum 30 wins

Most years of success

Most years of title success
Titles/yr Player Years
5+ Novak Djokovic 2 2011, 15
4+ Novak Djokovic 4 2011–16
3+ Rafael Nadal 7 2005–18
2+ Novak Djokovic 12 2007–23
1+ Rafael Nadal 15 2005–21
Novak Djokovic 2007–23
Most years of final appearances
Finals/yr Player Years
6+ Novak Djokovic 3 2011–15
5+ Novak Djokovic 5 2009–16
Rafael Nadal 2005–13
4+ Rafael Nadal 7 2005–17
3+ Novak Djokovic 11 2007–19
2+ Novak Djokovic 15 2007–23
1+ Roger Federer 17 2002–19
Rafael Nadal 2005–22

Consecutive records

Spanning consecutive events

No. Consecutive titles Years
4 Novak Djokovic 3 2013–16
Rafael Nadal 2013
3 Novak Djokovic 2 2011, 19–20
Rafael Nadal 2010
No. Consecutive finals Years
7 Novak Djokovic 2015–16
5 Rafael Nadal 2 2011, 13
4 Novak Djokovic 4 2011–15
Roger Federer 3 2006–10
No. Match win streak Years
31 Novak Djokovic 2011
30 Novak Djokovic (2) 2014–15
29 Roger Federer 2005–06
23 Rafael Nadal 2013
Novak Djokovic (3) 2013–14
22 Novak Djokovic (4) 2015–16

Spanning non-consecutive events

No. Titles streak Years
5 Novak Djokovic 2 2011, 14–15
4 Novak Djokovic 2 2011, 15
Roger Federer 2013
Rafael Nadal 2005–06
No. Finals streak Years
11 Novak Djokovic 2014–16
7 Rafael Nadal 2012–13
Roger Federer 2005–06
6 Novak Djokovic 2006
5 Roger Federer 2017–18
Andy Murray 2016
Rafael Nadal 2011
No. Final win streak Years
12 Novak Djokovic 2012–15
9 Rafael Nadal 2005–07
Roger Federer 2004–06
8 Andre Agassi 1999–04
6 Andy Murray 2009–11
Pete Sampras 1992–95
Rafael Nadal 2018–21

Most consecutive years of title success

Titles/yr Player Consecutive years
4+ Novak Djokovic 3 2014–16
3+ Novak Djokovic 6 2011–16
2+ Novak Djokovic 6 2011–16
Rafael Nadal 2005–10
1+ Rafael Nadal 10 2005–14

Tournament records

Most titles per tournament

Masters No. Player Years
Indian Wells 5 Novak Djokovic 2007–16
Roger Federer 2004–17
Miami 6 Novak Djokovic 2007–16
Andre Agassi 1990–2003
Monte Carlo 11 Rafael Nadal 2005–18
Madrid 5 Rafael Nadal 2005–17
Rome 10 Rafael Nadal 2005–21
Canada 5[b] Spain Rafael Nadal 2005–19
Cincinnati 7 Roger Federer 2005–15
Shanghai 4 Novak Djokovic 2012–18
Paris 7 Novak Djokovic 2009–23
Discontinued
Hamburg 4 Roger Federer 2002–07
Stuttgart 2 Stefan Edberg 1991–94
Boris Becker 1990–96
Stockholm 3 Boris Becker 1990–94
  1. ^ Djokovic won all current nine Masters series events, except ATP's Hamburg (Clay) and Madrid (Indoor) defunct Masters events played in his career.
  2. ^ Ivan Lendl's record six Canadian Open titles before 1990 not counted.[8][9]

"In a single Masters tournament" records

Most No. Player Tournament Years
Titles 11 Rafael Nadal Monte Carlo 2005–18
Finals 12 Rafael Nadal Monte Carlo 2005–18
Rome 2005–21
Novak Djokovic Rome 2008–22
Cons. titles[α] 8 Rafael Nadal Monte Carlo 2005–12
Cons. wins[α] 46 Rafael Nadal Monte Carlo 2005–13
Matches won 73 Rafael Nadal Monte Carlo 2003–21
Matches played 80 Novak Djokovic Rome 2007–23
79 Rafael Nadal Monte Carlo 2003–21
Roger Federer Indian Wells 2001–19
Finals w/o win 5 Rafael Nadal Miami 2005–17
Entries 19 Rafael Nadal Madrid 2003–22
  1. ^ a b Nadal's dominance of the Monte Carlo Masters came to an end at the 2013 final against Djokovic.[10]

Tournaments won with no sets dropped

No. Player Events
11 Novak Djokovic Miami (2007, 2012, 2014, 2016), Paris (2014, 2019), Toronto (2016),
Shanghai (2015, 2018[a]), Madrid (2019), Rome (2022)
8 Rafael Nadal Monte Carlo (2007, 2008, 2010[b], 2012, 2018), Indian Wells (2007),
Rome (2009, 2012)
7 Roger Federer Indian Wells (2005, 2017) Hamburg (2005), Madrid (2006),
Cincinnati (2012[a], 2015[a]), Paris (2011)
4 Andy Murray Rome (2016), Cincinnati (2011), Shanghai (2010, 2016)
2 Pete Sampras Cincinnati (1997, 1999)
Marcelo Ríos Monte Carlo (1997), Rome (1998)
1 Carlos Alcaraz Indian Wells (2023)
Stefanos Tsitsipas Monte Carlo (2021)
Daniil Medvedev Shanghai (2019)
Alexander Zverev Madrid (2018[a])
Grigor Dimitrov Cincinnati (2017)
Carlos Moya Cincinnati (2002)
Andre Agassi Rome (2002)
Patrick Rafter Montreal (1998)
Petr Korda Stuttgart (1997)
Thomas Enqvist Paris (1996)
Emilio Sanchez Rome (1991)
Stefan Edberg Paris (1990)
Boris Becker Stockholm (1990)
  1. ^ a b c d Won the tournament without having serve broken.
  2. ^ Fewest games (14) lost winning a tournament.

Miscellaneous records

"In all Masters tournaments" records

Most No. Player
Hardcourt titles 29 Novak Djokovic
22 Roger Federer
Claycourt titles 26 Rafael Nadal
11 Novak Djokovic
Different titles[11] 9 Novak Djokovic
8 Roger Federer[a]
Different finals 10[b] Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
Matches played 500 Rafael Nadal
493 Novak Djokovic
Finals w/o title 5 Yevgeny Kafelnikov
Entries 139 Feliciano López[12]
138 Roger Federer
  1. ^ 7 currently active tournaments + Hamburg.
  2. ^ 9 currently active tournaments + Hamburg.

Surface sweeps

Sweep Player Tournaments
Clay sweep Marcelo Ríos Monte Carlo,
Madrid,[a]
Rome
Gustavo Kuerten
Rafael Nadal (5)
Novak Djokovic (2)[13]
Hardcourt sweep Andre Agassi Indian Wells,
Miami,
Canada,
Cincinnati,
Shanghai,[b]
Paris
Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic (3)[13]
  1. ^ Hamburg (1990–2008), Madrid (2009–present).
  2. ^ Madrid (2002–2008), Shanghai (2009–present).

Youngest & oldest

Youngest Winner 18 years, 5 months Michael Chang 1990 Canada
Finalist 18 years, 5 months Michael Chang 1990 Canada
Qualifier 15 years, 9 months Richard Gasquet 2002 Monte Carlo
Oldest Winner 37 years, 7 months Roger Federer 2019 Miami
Finalist 37 years, 7 months Roger Federer 2019 Miami
Qualifier 40 years, 5 months Ivo Karlović 2019 Cincinnati
Debutant 28 years, 4 months Wayne Arthurs 1999 Cincinnati

Calendar Masters combinations

  • Back-to-back tournament titles.
  • Currently active combinations in bold.

Triples

Combination Winner Year
Indian Wells—Miami—Monte Carlo[14]
"Season first triple"
Novak Djokovic 2015
Monte Carlo—Madrid—Rome[15]
"Clay triple"
Rafael Nadal 2010
  • Nadal won a season-record of four consecutive Masters by winning the Madrid–Rome–Montreal–Cincinnati titles in 2013.

Doubles

Combination Winner Year(s)
Indian Wells—Miami[15]
"Sunshine double"
Novak Djokovic 4 2011, 14–16
Roger Federer 3 2005–06, 17
Andre Agassi 2001
Marcelo Ríos 1998
Pete Sampras 1994
Michael Chang 1992
Jim Courier 1991
Madrid—Rome[16]
"Clay double"
Rafael Nadal 2 2010, 13
Novak Djokovic 2011
Canada—Cincinnati[15][17]
"Summer double"
Rafael Nadal 2013
Andy Roddick 2003
Patrick Rafter 1998
Andre Agassi 1995
Shanghai—Paris (Madrid)[15][a]
"Fall double"
Novak Djokovic 2 2013, 15
Andy Murray 2016
David Nalbandian 2007
Marat Safin 2004
  1. ^ In 2009, Shanghai replaced Madrid as the 8th Masters event. Madrid was moved to the clay season.

Title defence

  • Note: Currently active tournaments in bold.

Hardcourt

Tournament Player Consecutive titles
Indian Wells Roger Federer 3 2004–06
Novak Djokovic 2014–16
Pete Sampras 2 1994–95
Michael Chang 1996–97
Lleyton Hewitt 2002–03
Carlos Alcaraz 2023–24
Miami Andre Agassi 3 2001–03
Novak Djokovic 2014–16
Pete Sampras 2 1993–94
Andre Agassi 1995–96
Roger Federer 2005–06
Novak Djokovic 2011–12
Canada Andre Agassi 2 1994–95
Andy Murray 2009–10
Novak Djokovic 2011–12
Rafael Nadal 2018–19
Cincinnati Michael Chang 2 1993–94
Andre Agassi 1995–96
Roger Federer 2009–10
2014–15
Shanghai Andy Murray 2 2010–11
Novak Djokovic 2012–13
Paris Novak Djokovic 3 2013–15

Clay

Tournament Player Consecutive titles
Monte Carlo Rafael Nadal 8 2005–12
3 2016–18
Juan Carlos Ferrero 2 1995–96
Thomas Muster 2002–03
Stefanos Tsitsipas 2021–22
Madrid Rafael Nadal 2 2013–14
Carlos Alcaraz 2022–23
Rome Rafael Nadal 3 2005–07
2 2009–10
2012–13
2018–19
Jim Courier 2 1992–93
Thomas Muster 1995–96
Novak Djokovic 2014–15
Hamburg Andrei Medvedev 2 1994–95
Roger Federer 2004–05

Carpet

Tournament Player Consecutive titles
Stockholm Boris Becker 2 1990–91[a]
  1. ^ In 1991, Stockholm was played on hard courts.
  • Djokovic has retained a record six different tournaments (Indian Wells, Miami, Rome, Canada, Shanghai, Paris).
  • Nadal has retained a tournament on a record sixteen occasions across multiple seasons (Monte Carlo, Madrid, Rome, Canada).
  • Federer has won Madrid on three different court surfaces (hardcourt in 2006, red clay in 2009, and blue clay in 2012).

Statistics

Seeds statistics

No. 1 vs. No. 2 seeds in final

W The top seed won the final. L The second seed won the final.

* The top 2 seeds were also the top 2-ranked players in the rankings.
Year Event Top seed W/L Second seed
1990 Stockholm* Stefan Edberg L Boris Becker
Paris* Stefan Edberg W Boris Becker
1991 Stockholm* Stefan Edberg L Boris Becker
1995 Indian Wells* Pete Sampras W Andre Agassi
Miami* Pete Sampras L Andre Agassi
Canada* Andre Agassi W Pete Sampras
1999 Cincinnati Pete Sampras W Pat Rafter
2004 Hamburg Roger Federer W Guillermo Coria
Canada* Roger Federer W Andy Roddick
2005 Indian Wells* Roger Federer W Lleyton Hewitt
2006 Monte Carlo* Roger Federer L Rafael Nadal
Rome* Roger Federer L Rafael Nadal
2007 Monte Carlo* Roger Federer L Rafael Nadal
Hamburg* Roger Federer W Rafael Nadal
2008 Monte Carlo* Roger Federer L Rafael Nadal
Hamburg* Roger Federer L Rafael Nadal
2009 Madrid* Rafael Nadal L Roger Federer
2010 Madrid* Roger Federer L Rafael Nadal
2011 Miami* Rafael Nadal L Novak Djokovic
Madrid* Rafael Nadal L Novak Djokovic
Rome* Rafael Nadal L Novak Djokovic
Year Event Top seed W/L Second seed
2012 Monte Carlo* Novak Djokovic L Rafael Nadal
Rome* Novak Djokovic L Rafael Nadal
Cincinnati* Roger Federer W Novak Djokovic
2014 Miami* Rafael Nadal L Novak Djokovic
Rome* Rafael Nadal L Novak Djokovic
2015 Indian Wells* Novak Djokovic W Roger Federer
Rome* Novak Djokovic W Roger Federer
Canada Novak Djokovic L Andy Murray
Cincinnati Novak Djokovic L Roger Federer
Paris Novak Djokovic W Andy Murray
2016 Madrid* Novak Djokovic W Andy Murray
Rome* Novak Djokovic L Andy Murray
2017 Shanghai* Rafael Nadal L Roger Federer
2018 Rome Rafael Nadal W Alexander Zverev
2019 Rome* Novak Djokovic L Rafael Nadal
2021 Rome* Novak Djokovic L Rafael Nadal
Paris* Novak Djokovic W Daniil Medvedev
2023 Cincinnati* Carlos Alcaraz L Novak Djokovic

Most finals contested between two players

Finals Players Result
14 Novak Djokovic Rafael Nadal 7–7
12 Rafael Nadal Roger Federer 7–5
10 Novak Djokovic Andy Murray 5–5
8 Novak Djokovic Roger Federer 5–3
5 Andre Agassi Pete Sampras 3–2

Top 4 seeds in semifinals

  • Tournament winner in bold.
Year Event Seeds
1999 Cincinnati 1. Pete Sampras 2. Patrick Rafter 3. Andre Agassi 4. Yevgeny Kafelnikov
2008 Monte Carlo 1. Roger Federer 2. Rafael Nadal 3. Novak Djokovic 4. Nikolay Davydenko
2009 Cincinnati 1. Roger Federer 2. Rafael Nadal 3. Andy Murray 4. Novak Djokovic
2010 Canada 1. Rafael Nadal 2. Novak Djokovic 3. Roger Federer 4. Andy Murray
2012 Shanghai 1. Roger Federer 2. Novak Djokovic 3. Andy Murray 4. Tomáš Berdych
2021 Cincinnati 1. Daniil Medvedev 2. Stefanos Tsitsipas 3. Alexander Zverev 4. Andrey Rublev

Top 8 seeds in quarterfinals

  • Tournament winner in bold.
Year Event Seeds
2009 Canada 1. Roger Federer 2. Rafael Nadal 3. Andy Murray 4. Novak Djokovic
5. Andy Roddick 6. Juan Martín del Potro 7. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 8. Nikolay Davydenko

15 of Top-16 seeds in R16

  • Tournament winner in bold.
Year Event Seeds
2015 Monte Carlo 1. Novak Djokovic 2. Roger Federer 3. Rafael Nadal 4. Milos Raonic
5. David Ferrer 6. Tomáš Berdych 7. Stan Wawrinka 8. Marin Čilić
9. Grigor Dimitrov 10. Gilles Simon 11. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 12. Roberto Bautista Agut
14. Gaël Monfils 15. John Isner 16. Tommy Robredo

Qualifiers in final

W Qualifier won the final.
L Qualifier lost the final.
Year Event Qualifier W/L Opponent
1991 Rome Alberto Mancini L Emilio Sánchez
1996 Hamburg Roberto Carretero W Àlex Corretja
2000 Canada Harel Levy L Marat Safin
2001 Hamburg Albert Portas W Juan Carlos Ferrero
Stuttgart Max Mirnyi L Tommy Haas
2004 Paris Radek Štěpánek L Marat Safin
2005 Hamburg Richard Gasquet L Roger Federer
2007 Miami Guillermo Cañas L Novak Djokovic
2012 Paris Jerzy Janowicz L David Ferrer
2017 Paris Filip Krajinović L Jack Sock

No seeds in final

Year Event Winner Runner-up
1996 Hamburg Roberto Carretero Àlex Corretja
2003 Paris Tim Henman Andrei Pavel

^ Borna Ćorić is the lowest-ranked (No. 152) Masters champion.
^ Andrei Pavel is the lowest-ranked (No. 191) Masters finalist.

Match statistics

Shortest
28 minutes
2014 Miami First Round[18]
Jarkko Nieminen 6 6
Bernard Tomic 0 1

Age statistics

Youngest winners
Age Winner First title
18 years, 157 days Michael Chang 1990 Canada
18 years, 318 days Rafael Nadal 2005 Monte Carlo
18 years, 333 days Carlos Alcaraz 2022 Miami
19 years, 191 days Holger Rune 2022 Paris
19 years, 236 days Andrei Medvedev 1994 Monte Carlo
Oldest winners
Age Winner Last title
37 years, 235 days Roger Federer 2019 Miami
36 years, 167 days Novak Djokovic 2023 Paris
34 years, 347 days Rafael Nadal 2021 Rome
34 years, 101 days Andre Agassi 2004 Cincinnati
32 years, 340 days John Isner 2018 Miami

All countrymen statistics

All countrymen in final

Year Event Winner Runner-up
1990 Canada Michael Chang Jay Berger
1991 Miami Jim Courier David Wheaton
1992 Canada Andre Agassi Ivan Lendl
Cincinnati Pete Sampras Ivan Lendl
1993 Miami Pete Sampras MaliVai Washington
1994 Miami Pete Sampras Andre Agassi
1995 Indian Wells Pete Sampras Andre Agassi
Miami Andre Agassi Pete Sampras
Canada Andre Agassi Pete Sampras
Cincinnati Andre Agassi Michael Chang
1996 Hamburg Roberto Carretero Àlex Corretja
Cincinnati Andre Agassi Michael Chang
1998 Hamburg Albert Costa Àlex Corretja
Year Event Winner Runner-up
2001 Indian Wells Andre Agassi Pete Sampras
Miami Andre Agassi Jan-Michael Gambill
Hamburg Albert Portas Juan Carlos Ferrero
2002 Monte Carlo Juan Carlos Ferrero Carlos Moyá
2003 Hamburg Guillermo Coria Agustín Calleri
Cincinnati Andy Roddick Mardy Fish
2010 Monte Carlo Rafael Nadal Fernando Verdasco
Rome Rafael Nadal David Ferrer
2011 Monte Carlo Rafael Nadal David Ferrer
2014 Monte Carlo Stan Wawrinka Roger Federer
2017 Indian Wells Roger Federer Stan Wawrinka
Monte Carlo Rafael Nadal Albert Ramos Viñolas

All countrymen in semifinals

  • Tournament winner in bold.
Year Event Country Finalists Semifinalists
2003 Hamburg  ARG Agustín Calleri David Nalbandian
Guillermo Coria Gastón Gaudio

Titles won by decade

as of 2024 Paris.

1990s

10 
Agassi, Sampras
Muster
Chang
Becker, Courier, Ríos
Edberg, A. Medvedev
Bruguera, Chesnokov, Enqvist, Ivanišević, Krajicek, Kuerten, Rafter, Stich
Aguilera, Carretero, Corretja, Costa, Ferreira, Forget, Johansson, Korda, Moyá, Nováček, Pernfors, Philippoussis, Rusedski, Sánchez, Woodruff

2000s

16 
Federer
15 
Nadal
Agassi
Djokovic, Safin
Ferrero, Murray, Roddick
Davydenko, Kuerten
Coria, Hewitt, Moyá, Nalbandian
Berdych, Cañas, Corretja, Enqvist, Ferreira, Grosjean, Haas, Henman, Mantilla, Norman, Pavel, Pioline, Portas, Robredo, Sampras, Tsonga

2010s

29 
Djokovic
20 
Nadal
12 
Federer
10 
Murray
Zverev
D. Medvedev
Čilić, del Potro, Dimitrov, Ferrer, Fognini, Isner, Khachanov, Ljubičić, Roddick, Sock, Söderling, Thiem, Tsonga, Wawrinka

2020s

Djokovic
Alcaraz
D. Medvedev, Sinner, Zverev
Tsitsipas
Hurkacz, Rublev
Carreño Busta, Ćorić, Fritz, Nadal, Norrie, Popyrin, Rune

Titles by country

as of 2024 Paris.

61 
 Spain (15 players)
49 
 United States (9 players)
40 
 Serbia (1 player)
29 
  Switzerland (2 players)
17 
 Great Britain (4 players)
15 
Germany (4 players), Soviet Union / Russia (5 players)[a]
11 
 Sweden (6 players)
 Austria (2 players)
 Argentina (4 players),  Australia (4 players),  France (4 players)
 Brazil (1 player),  Chile (1 player),  Croatia (4 players),  Italy (2 players)
 Ukraine (1 player)
Czechoslovakia / Czech Republic (3 players),  Greece (1 player)
 Netherlands (1 player),  Poland (1 player),  South Africa (1 player)
 Bulgaria,  Denmark,  Romania
  1. ^ Not including Daniil Medvedev's two titles and Andrey Rublev's two titles in 2023–2024.

See also

References

  1. ^ "ATP Masters records and statistics". ATP Tour. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.
  2. ^ "ATP Masters 1000: Tournaments, Records, Stats". ATP Tour. November 7, 2021. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.
  3. ^ "Novak Djokovic Extends 'Big Titles' Lead With Record-Breaking Paris Win". ATP Tour. November 7, 2021. Archived from the original on November 23, 2021.
  4. ^ "Winners and results archive". ATP Tour. Retrieved October 13, 2022.
  5. ^ "Ultimate Tennis Statistics – Most Masters Titles". www.ultimatetennisstatistics.com. Archived from the original on November 1, 2022.
  6. ^ "Nine To Shine: Djokovic Claims Historic Cincy Crown". ATP Tour. August 19, 2018. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.
  7. ^ "Novak Djokovic's Golden Rule: A Grandmaster Twice Over! | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP Tour. August 29, 2020. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.
  8. ^ "Ivan Lendl | Titles and Finals | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP Tour. Archived from the original on October 20, 2022.
  9. ^ "National Bank Open presented by Rogers 2024: Draws, Dates, History & All You Need To Know | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP Tour. August 2, 2024. Archived from the original on August 2, 2024. Retrieved August 2, 2024.
  10. ^ Djokovic Ends Nadal Reign In 2013 Monte Carlo Classic Moment. ATP Tour. April 13, 2016. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022 – via YouTube.
  11. ^ "Ultimate Tennis Statistics – Most Different Masters Titles". Ultimate Tennis Statistics. Archived from the original on April 18, 2023.
  12. ^ "Feliciano Breaks The ATP Masters 1000 Appearance Record". Tennis Majors. October 7, 2021. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.
  13. ^ a b "Novak Djokovic Extends Big Titles, Masters 1000 Leads With Cincinnati Win | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP Tour. August 21, 2023. Archived from the original on August 21, 2023.
  14. ^ "Djokovic Continues Masters 1000 Surge With Monte-Carlo Title". ATP Tour. April 19, 2015. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d "ATP Masters 1000 Stats". ATP Tour. November 7, 2021. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.
  16. ^ "Toughest double: Even for Rafa, winning Madrid and Rome is difficult". Tennis.com. May 4, 2018. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.
  17. ^ "How Agassi, Rafter, Roddick & Nadal sealed the 'Summer Sweep' in Cincy | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP Tour. August 5, 2024. Archived from the original on August 9, 2024. Retrieved August 9, 2024.
  18. ^ "Bernard Tomic thrashed by Jarkko Nieminen in shortest-ever ATP match at Miami Masters". ABC News. March 20, 2014. Archived from the original on March 9, 2022.