ATP rankings

The Pepperstone ATP rankings[1] are the merit-based method used by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for determining the qualification for entry as well as the seeding of players in all singles and doubles tournaments.[2] The first rankings for singles were published on 23 August 1973 while the doubles players were ranked for the first time on 1 March 1976. Ranking points are awarded according to the stage of tournament reached, and the prestige of the tournament, with the four Grand Slam tournaments awarding the most points. The rankings are updated every Monday, and points are dropped 52 weeks after being awarded (with the exception of the ATP Finals, from which points are dropped on the Monday following the last ATP Tour event of the following year). Carlos Alcaraz is the current world No. 1.

Carlos Alcaraz, men's singles No. 1.
Rafael Nadal, men's singles No. 2.
Daniil Medvedev, men's singles No. 3.
Casper Ruud, men's singles No. 4.
Stefanos Tsitsipas, men's singles No. 5.


History

The ATP began as the men's trade union in 1972, through the combined efforts of Jack Kramer, Cliff Drysdale, and Donald Dell, and rose to prominence when 81 of its members boycotted the 1973 Wimbledon Championships.[3] Just two months later, in August, the ATP introduced its ranking system intended to objectify tournament entry criteria, which up to that point were controlled by national federations and tournament directors.[4]

The ATP's new ranking system was quickly adopted by men's tennis.[5] While virtually all ATP members were in favor of objectifying event participation, the system's first No. 1, Ilie Năstase, lamented that "everyone had a number hanging over them," fostering a more competitive and less collegial atmosphere among the players.[6]

The original ATP ranking criteria, which were then regularly published weekly only from mid-1979 and persisted through the 1980s, were based on averaging each player's results, though the details were revised a number of times.[4][5] Starting in 1990, in conjunction with the expansion of ATP purview as the new men's tour operator, the ranking criteria were replaced with a 'best of' system modeled after competitive downhill skiing.[5] This 'best of' system originally used 14 events but expanded to 18 in 2000.[5] The computer that calculates the rankings is nicknamed "Blinky".[7]

Overview

A player's ATP ranking is based on the total points he accrued in the following 20 tournaments (19 if he did not qualify for the ATP Finals):

  • The four Grand Slam tournaments
  • The eight mandatory ATP Masters 1000 tournaments,[lower-alpha 1]
  • The previous ATP Finals count until the Monday following the final regular-season ATP event of the following year.[8]
  • The best seven results from the non-mandatory ATP Masters 1000, all ATP 500 series, ATP 250 series, ATP Challenger Tour, Futures Series and ATP Cup tournaments played in the calendar year[lower-alpha 2]

For a better result within the same tour type to be transposed one has to wait for the expiry of the first worse result from previous year. It only expires at the drop date of that tournament and only if the player reached a worse result or has not entered the current year.

Ranking points gained in a tournament are dropped 52 weeks later, with the exception of the ATP Finals, from which points are dropped on the Monday following the last ATP Tour event of the following year.[2]

The Monte-Carlo Masters 1000 became optional in 2009, but if a player chooses to participate in it, its result is counted and his fourth-best result in an ATP 500 event is ignored (his three best ATP 500 results remain). From 2009 until 2015, if a player did not play enough ATP 500 events and did not have an ATP 250 or Challenger appearance with a better result, the Davis Cup was counted in the 500's table.[9] The World Team Cup was also included before its cancellation in 2012.

For the Davis Cup, from 2009 until 2015, points were distributed for the World Group countries. Instead of having an exact drop date they were gradually updated at each phase of the competition, comparing the player's results with his results from the previous year. (e.g. if a player played two matches in a semifinal but plays one the next year only that one missing match would be extracted from his points).[9]

A player who is out of competition for 30 or more days, due to a verified injury, will not receive any penalty. The ATP Finals will count as an additional 20th tournament in the ranking of its eight qualifiers at season's end.[10]

For every Grand Slam tournament or mandatory ATP Masters 1000 tournament for which a player is not in the main draw, and was not (and, in the case of a Grand Slam tournament, would not have been, had he and all other players entered) a main draw direct acceptance on the original acceptance list, and never became a main draw direct acceptance, the number of his results from all other eligible tournaments in the ranking period that count for his ranking is increased by one.[2]

Once a player is accepted in the main draw of a Grand Slam tournament or ATP Masters 1000 tournament,[lower-alpha 3] his result in this tournament counts for his ranking, regardless of whether he participates. A player's withdrawal from an ATP 500 event, regardless of whether the withdrawal was on time, results in a zero point included as one of his best of four results. Further non-consecutive withdrawals results in a zero point allocation replacing the next best positive result for each additional withdrawal.[2]

Players with multiple consecutive withdrawals who are out of competition for 30 days or longer because of injury are not subject to a ranking penalty as long as verified and approved medical forms are provided; or, a player will not have the ranking penalty imposed if he completes the Promotional Activities requirement as specified under "Repeal of Withdrawal Fines and/or Penalties" or if the on-site withdrawal procedures apply. Players may also appeal withdrawal penalties to a Tribunal who will determine whether the penalties are affirmed or set aside.[2]

Between 2000 and 2012, ranking points were awarded based on results in the Summer Olympics. This was changed before the 2016 Olympics where no ranking points were awarded.[11]

With these rules, a player playing and winning the mandatory 4 Grand Slams and 8 ATP Masters 1000 events, a further 6 ATP 500 events and the Monte-Carlo Masters 1000 can amass a total of 20,000 points before the ATP Finals and end the calendar year with a maximum of 21,500 points. As of 2022, the maximum points achieved by any player since 2009 is 16,950 by Novak Djokovic, on June 6, 2016.[12]

ATP race

The ATP Race is an annual points race to determine the year-end No. 1 singles player and doubles team in the ATP rankings system used by the ATP. The race, initially called the "ATP Champions Race", was introduced by the ATP for the 2000 season as part of their "21st Century Tennis" strategy announced in 1999.[13] All players and teams start the year with zero points, and accumulate points from tournament to tournament based on their performances.[14] The player and team who ends the tennis season with the most points is crowned the year-end No. 1, and the top 8 players and teams participate in the year-end championship, the ATP Finals.

Ranking method

Since the introduction of the ATP rankings the method used to calculate a player's ranking points has changed several times.[15][16]

Points distribution (2009–present)

Ranking points are awarded as follows:[17]

Tournament category WFSFQFR16R32R64R128Q
ATP Tour
Grand Slam 2000120072036018090451025
ATP Finals +900
(1500 max)
+400
(1000 max)
200 for each round robin match win
(600 max)
ATP Masters 1000 1000600360180904510 (25)(10)25 (12)
ATP 500 Series 5003001809045(20)20 (10)
ATP 250 Series 250150904520(5)12 (5)
ATP Challenger Tour
Challenger 125 1257545251155
Challenger 110 110654020954
Challenger 100 100603518854
Challenger 90 90553317854
Challenger 80 80503016734
Challenger 50 503017943
ITF Men's World Tennis Tour
Futures M25 2516831
Futures M15 158421
  • (ATP Masters 1000 series) Qualifying points changes to 12 points only if the main draw is larger than 56.
  • (ATP 500 series) Qualifying points changes to 10 points only if the main draw is larger than 32.
  • (ATP 250 series) Qualifying points changes to 5 points only if the main draw is larger than 32.
  • Players who draw a bye in the first round in the ATP 1000 series and lose their first match in the second round are considered to have lost their first round and receive the points equivalent to first round loss. Similarly, loss in the second round of the ATP 500 series and the ATP 250 series after drawing bye in first round will result in 0 points being awarded.[18]

In addition qualifiers and main draw entry players will then also receive the points in brackets for the rounds they reached.[19]

Starting in 2016, points were no longer awarded for Davis Cup ties,[20] nor for the tennis tournament at the Summer Olympics.[21]

Current rankings

ATP rankings (singles) as of 31 October 2022[22]
No. Player Points Move
1  Carlos Alcaraz (ESP)6,730
2  Rafael Nadal (ESP)5,810
3  Daniil Medvedev (RUS)5,655 1
4  Casper Ruud (NOR)5,510 1
5  Stefanos Tsitsipas (GRE)5,035
6  Alexander Zverev (GER)4,360
7  Novak Djokovic (SRB)4,320
8  Félix Auger-Aliassime (CAN)3,725 1
9  Andrey Rublev (RUS)3,685 1
10  Hubert Hurkacz (POL)3,220 1
11  Taylor Fritz (USA)3,090 1
12  Jannik Sinner (ITA)2,610
13  Cameron Norrie (GBR)2,490
14  Pablo Carreño Busta (ESP)2,450 1
15  Matteo Berrettini (ITA)2,375 1
16  Denis Shapovalov (CAN)2,180 3
17  Marin Čilić (CRO)2,140 1
18  Holger Rune (DNK)1,991 7
19  Karen Khachanov (RUS)1,945 1
20  Roberto Bautista Agut (ESP)1,940 2

Change since previous week's rankings.

ATP rankings (doubles individual) as of 31 October 2022[23]
No. Player Points Move
1  Rajeev Ram (USA)6,800
2  Joe Salisbury (GBR)6,710
3  Neal Skupski (GBR)6,540
4  Wesley Koolhof (NED)6,450
5  Jean-Julien Rojer (NED)5,270
6  Marcelo Arévalo (ESA)5,210
7  Mate Pavić (CRO)4,725
8  Nikola Mektić (CRO)4,520
9  Michael Venus (NZL)4,410
10  Tim Pütz (GER)4,305
11  Horacio Zeballos (ARG)4,110
12  Marcel Granollers (ESP)3,960
13  Ivan Dodig (CRO)3,810 5
14  Nick Kyrgios (AUS)3,740 1
15  Austin Krajicek (USA)3,650 7
16  Harri Heliövaara (FIN)3,423
17  Thanasi Kokkinakis (AUS)3,420
18  Lloyd Glasspool (GBR)3,375 1
19  Rohan Bopanna (IND)3,330 1
20  John Isner (USA)3,320 1

Change since previous week's rankings.

Top 8 singles players points breakdown

  • as of 3 October 2022
Rank Player[24][25][26] Grand Slam ATP Masters 1000 ATP
Finals
21
Best other tournaments ATP
Cup
Tourn Total
points
Ref.
AUS22 FRA22 WIM22 USO22 IW22 MIA22 MOC22 MAD22 ROM22 CAN22 CIN22 SHA22 PAR21 1 2 3 4 5
1 Carlos Alcaraz R32
90
QF
360
R16
W
2000
SF
360
W
1000
R32
10
W
1000
A
R32
10
QF
180
NH
R16
90
DNQ
W
500
W
500
F
300
F
150
A
17 6,740 [27]
2 Rafael Nadal W
2000
W
2000
SF
R16
180
F
600
A
A
QF
180
R16
90
A
R32
10
NH
A
DNQ
W
500
W
250
A
10 5,810 [28]
3 Casper Ruud A F
1200
R64
F
1200
R32
45
F
600
R16
90
R32
10
SF
360
SF
360
R32
10
NH
QF
180
SF
400
W
250
W
250
W
250
RR
125
23 4,645 [29]
4 Daniil Medvedev F
1200
R16
180
A
R16
180
R32
45
QF
180
A
A
A
R32
10
SF
360
NH
F
600
F
1000
W
250
F
300
F
150
SF
295
20 5,065 [30]
5 Alexander Zverev R16
180
SF
720
A
A
R64
10
QF
180
R16
90
F
600
SF
360
A
A
NH
SF
360
W
1300
W
500
F
150
RR
140
19 6,040 [31]
6 Stefanos Tsitsipas SF
720
R16
180
R32
R128
10
R32
45
R16
90
W
1000
SF
360
F
600
R32
10
F
600
NH
R32
10
RR
0
W
250
F
300
RR
60
22 4,810 [32]
7 Novak Djokovic A QF
360
W
A
A
A
R32
10
SF
360
W
1000
A
A
NH
W
1000
SF
600
W
500
W
250
F
150
A
12 4,820 [33]
8 Andrey Rublev R32
90
QF
360
A
QF
360
SF
360
R64
10
R16
90
QF
180
R32
10
R32
10
R16
90
NH
R32
10
RR
200
W
500
W
250
W
250
W
250
A
23 3,345 [34]
Other top players
Taylor Fritz R16
180
R64
45
QF
R128
10
W
1000
R16
90
QF
180
A
A
R16
90
QF
180
NH
QF
180
DNQ
W
250
F
150
RR
160
22 3,055 [35]
Jannik Sinner QF
360
R16
180
QF
QF
360
R16
90
QF
180
QF
180
R16
90
QF
180
R16
90
R16
90
NH
R32
10
RR
200
W
250
W
250
W
250
RR
80
21 3,040 [36]
Félix Auger-Aliassime QF
360
R16
180
R128
R64
45
R64
10
R64
10
R32
10
QF
180
QF
180
QF
180
QF
180
NH
R32
45
DNQ
W
500
W
250
F
150
W
390
24 2,950 [37]
Hubert Hurkacz R64
45
R16
180
R128
R64
45
R16
90
SF
360
QF
180
QF
180
R64
10
F
600
R32
10
NH
SF
360
RR
0
W
500
SF
120
21 3,175 [38]
Matteo Berrettini SF
720
A A
QF
360
R16
90
A
A
A
A
R64
10
R32
10
NH
A
RR
0
W
500
W
250
F
150
RR
45
18 2,360 [39]
  • The total points for a player is the accumulation of points earned from his best 19 tournaments (20 for the eight players who make the ATP Finals).
  • The results of all Big tournaments (Grand Slams, Masters and the ATP Finals) are included in the breakdown.
  • Only the titles and finals results are included for the other tournaments.

ATP No. 1 ranked singles players

Novak Djokovic holds the record for the most weeks spent as world No. 1 (373), the most year-end No. 1 finishes (7), and the most ranking points ever accumulated by any player (16,950).
  Current world No. 1 as of October 31.
  Active former No. 1 player.
WeeksWorld No. 1 playerFirst reached
373  Novak Djokovic (SRB)Jul 4, 2011
310    Roger Federer (SUI)Feb 2, 2004
286  Pete Sampras (USA)Apr 12, 1993
270  Ivan Lendl (TCH)Feb 28, 1983
268  Jimmy Connors (USA)Jul 29, 1974
209  Rafael Nadal (ESP)Aug 18, 2008
170  John McEnroe (USA)Mar 3, 1980
109  Björn Borg (SWE)Aug 23, 1977
101  Andre Agassi (USA)Apr 10, 1995
80  Lleyton Hewitt (AUS)Nov 19, 2001
72  Stefan Edberg (SWE)Aug 13, 1990
58  Jim Courier (USA)Feb 10, 1992
43  Gustavo Kuerten (BRA)Dec 4, 2000
41  Andy Murray (GBR)Nov 7, 2016
40  Ilie Năstase (ROM)Aug 23, 1973
20  Mats Wilander (SWE)Sep 12, 1988
16  Daniil Medvedev (RUS)Feb 28, 2022
13  Andy Roddick (USA)Nov 3, 2003
12  Boris Becker (GER)Jan 28, 1991
9  Marat Safin (RUS)Nov 20, 2000
8  John Newcombe (AUS)Jun 3, 1974
 Juan Carlos Ferrero (ESP)Sep 8, 2003
 Carlos Alcaraz (ESP)Sep 12, 2022
6  Thomas Muster (AUT)Feb 12, 1996
 Marcelo Ríos (CHI)Mar 30, 1998
 Yevgeny Kafelnikov (RUS)May 3, 1999
2  Carlos Moyá (ESP)Mar 15, 1999
1  Patrick Rafter (AUS)Jul 26, 1999
28 singles players
Year-end No. 1
7  Novak Djokovic (SRB)
6  Pete Sampras (USA)
5  Jimmy Connors (USA)
  Roger Federer (SUI)
 Rafael Nadal (ESP)
4  John McEnroe (USA)
 Ivan Lendl (TCH)
2  Björn Borg (SWE)
 Stefan Edberg (SWE)
 Lleyton Hewitt (AUS)
1  Ilie Năstase (ROM)
 Mats Wilander (SWE)
 Jim Courier (USA)
 Andre Agassi (USA)
 Gustavo Kuerten (BRA)
 Andy Roddick (USA)
 Andy Murray (GBR)
17 players

Players with highest career rank 2–5

The following is a list of players who were ranked world No. 5 or higher but not No. 1 since the 1973 introduction of the ATP rankings (active players in bold).[40]

World No. 2
Player Date reached
Manuel Orantes Aug 23, 1973
Ken Rosewall Apr 30, 1975
Guillermo Vilas
Arthur Ashe May 10, 1976
Michael Stich Nov 22, 1993
Goran Ivanišević Jul 4, 1994
Michael Chang Sep 9, 1996
Petr Korda Feb 2, 1998
Àlex Corretja Feb 1, 1999
Magnus Norman Jun 12, 2000
Tommy Haas May 13, 2002
Alexander Zverev Jun 13, 2022
Casper Ruud Sep 12, 2022
World No. 3
Player Date reached
Stan Smith Aug 23, 1973
Tom Okker Mar 2, 1974
Rod Laver Aug 9, 1974
Brian Gottfried Jun 19, 1977
Vitas Gerulaitis Feb 27, 1978
Yannick Noah Jul 7, 1986
Sergi Bruguera Aug 1, 1994
Guillermo Coria May 3, 2004
David Nalbandian Mar 20, 2006
Ivan Ljubičić May 1, 2006
Nikolay Davydenko Nov 6, 2006
David Ferrer Jul 8, 2013
Stan Wawrinka Jan 27, 2014
Milos Raonic Nov 21, 2016
Grigor Dimitrov Nov 20, 2017
Marin Čilić Jan 29, 2018
Juan Martín del Potro Aug 13, 2018
Dominic Thiem Mar 2, 2020
Stefanos Tsitsipas Aug 9, 2021
World No. 4
Player Date reached
Adriano Panatta Aug 24, 1976
Raúl Ramírez Nov 7, 1976
Roscoe Tanner Jul 30, 1979
Gene Mayer Oct 6, 1980
José Luis Clerc Aug 3, 1981
Miloslav Mečíř Feb 22, 1988
Pat Cash May 9, 1988
Brad Gilbert Jan 1, 1990
Andrés Gómez Jun 11, 1990
Guy Forget Mar 25, 1991
Andrei Medvedev May 16, 1994
Greg Rusedski Oct 6, 1997
Jonas Björkman Nov 3, 1997
Richard Krajicek Mar 29, 1999
Todd Martin Sep 13, 1999
Thomas Enqvist Nov 15, 1999
Nicolas Kiefer Jan 10, 2000
Tim Henman Jul 8, 2002
Sébastien Grosjean Oct 28, 2002
James Blake Nov 20, 2006
Robin Söderling Nov 15, 2010
Kei Nishikori Mar 2, 2015
Tomáš Berdych May 18, 2015
World No. 5
Player Date reached
Jan Kodeš Sep 13, 1973
Eddie Dibbs Jul 24, 1978
Harold Solomon Sep 8, 1980
Jimmy Arias Apr 9, 1984
Anders Järryd Jul 22, 1985
Kevin Curren
Henri Leconte Sep 22, 1986
Cédric Pioline May 8, 2000
Jiří Novák Oct 21, 2002
Rainer Schüttler Apr 26, 2004
Gastón Gaudio Apr 25, 2005
Tommy Robredo Aug 28, 2006
Fernando González Jan 29, 2007
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga Feb 27, 2012
Kevin Anderson Jul 16, 2018
Andrey Rublev Sep 13, 2021

Players with highest career rank 6–10

The following is a list of players who were ranked world No. 6 to No. 10 since the 1973 introduction of the ATP rankings (active players in bold).[40]

World No. 6
Player Date reached
Eliot Teltscher Jun 7, 1982
José Higueras Jun 13, 1983
Henrik Sundström Oct 8, 1984
Kent Carlsson Sep 19, 1988
Aaron Krickstein Feb 26, 1990
Wayne Ferreira May 8, 1995
Karol Kučera Sep 14, 1998
Nicolás Lapentti Apr 17, 2000
Albert Costa Jul 22, 2002
Gilles Simon Jan 5, 2009
Gaël Monfils Nov 7, 2016
Matteo Berrettini Jan 31, 2022
World No. 7
Player Date reached
Corrado Barazzutti Aug 21, 1978
Brian Teacher Oct 5, 1981
Sandy Mayer Apr 26, 1982
Peter McNamara Mar 14, 1983
Johan Kriek Sep 10, 1984
Juan Aguilera Sep 17, 1984
Joakim Nyström Mar 31, 1986
Tim Mayotte Oct 31, 1988
Jakob Hlasek Apr 17, 1989
Jay Berger Apr 16, 1990
Emilio Sánchez Apr 30, 1990
Alberto Berasategui Nov 14, 1994
Thomas Johansson Jun 10, 2002
Mario Ančić Jul 10, 2006
Richard Gasquet Jul 9, 2007
Fernando Verdasco Apr 20, 2009
Mardy Fish Aug 15, 2011
David Goffin Nov 20, 2017
World No. 8
Player Date reached
Tony Roche Nov 16, 1975
John Alexander Dec 15, 1975
Dick Stockton Oct 31, 1977
Peter Fleming Jul 7, 1980
Alberto Mancini Oct 9, 1989
Karel Nováček Nov 18, 1991
Mark Philippoussis Apr 19, 1999
Guillermo Cañas Jun 6, 2005
Radek Štěpánek Jul 10, 2006
Marcos Baghdatis Aug 21, 2006
Mikhail Youzhny Jan 28, 2008
Jürgen Melzer Apr 18, 2011
Janko Tipsarević Apr 2, 2012
Jack Sock Nov 20, 2017
John Isner Jul 16, 2018
Karen Khachanov Jul 15, 2019
Diego Schwartzman Oct 12, 2020
Félix Auger-Aliassime Aug 22, 2022
Cameron Norrie Sep 12, 2022
Taylor Fritz Oct 10, 2022
World No. 9
Player Date reached
Alex Metreveli Jun 3, 1974
Victor Pecci Mar 24, 1980
Bill Scanlon Jan 9, 1984
Andrei Chesnokov Apr 8, 1991
Marc Rosset Sep 11, 1995
Paradorn Srichaphan May 12, 2003
Nicolás Massú Sep 13, 2004
Joachim Johansson Feb 14, 2005
Mariano Puerta Aug 15, 2005
Nicolás Almagro May 2, 2011
Fabio Fognini Jul 15, 2019
Roberto Bautista Agut Nov 4, 2019
Jannik Sinner Nov 1, 2021
Hubert Hurkacz Nov 8, 2021
World No. 10
Player Date reached
Tom Gorman May 1, 1974
Wojciech Fibak Jul 25, 1977
Thierry Tulasne Aug 4, 1986
Mikael Pernfors Sep 22, 1986
Martín Jaite Jul 9, 1990
Jonas Svensson Mar 25, 1991
Magnus Gustafsson Jul 29, 1991
Carlos Costa May 18, 1992
Magnus Larsson Apr 17, 1995
Félix Mantilla Jun 8, 1998
Arnaud Clement Apr 2, 2001
Juan Mónaco Jul 23, 2012
Ernests Gulbis Jun 9, 2014
Pablo Carreño Busta Sep 11, 2017
Lucas Pouille Mar 19, 2018
Denis Shapovalov Sep 21, 2020

Year-end Top 10

★ indicates player's highest year-end ranking
YearNo. 1No. 2No. 3No. 4No. 5No. 6No. 7No. 8No. 9No. 10
1973 I. Năstase J. Newcombe J. Connors T. Okker S. Smith K. Rosewall M. Orantes R. Laver J. Kodeš A. Ashe
1974 J. Connors J. Newcombe B. Borg R. Laver G. Vilas T. Okker A. Ashe K. Rosewall S. Smith I. Năstase
1975 J. Connors G. Vilas B. Borg A. Ashe M. Orantes K. Rosewall I. Năstase J. Alexander R. Tanner R. Laver
1976 J. Connors B. Borg I. Năstase M. Orantes R. Ramírez G. Vilas A. Panatta H. Solomon E. Dibbs B. Gottfried
1977 J. Connors G. Vilas B. Borg V. Gerulaitis B. Gottfried E. Dibbs M. Orantes R. Ramírez I. Năstase D. Stockton
1978 J. Connors B. Borg G. Vilas J. McEnroe V. Gerulaitis E. Dibbs B. Gottfried R. Ramírez H. Solomon C. Barazzutti
1979 B. Borg J. Connors J. McEnroe V. Gerulaitis R. Tanner G. Vilas A. Ashe H. Solomon J. Higueras E. Dibbs
1980 B. Borg J. McEnroe J. Connors G. Mayer G. Vilas I. Lendl H. Solomon JL. Clerc V. Gerulaitis E. Teltscher
1981 J. McEnroe I. Lendl J. Connors B. Borg JL. Clerc G. Vilas G. Mayer E. Teltscher V. Gerulaitis P. McNamara
1982 J. McEnroe J. Connors I. Lendl G. Vilas V. Gerulaitis JL. Clerc M. Wilander G. Mayer Y. Noah P. McNamara
1983 J. McEnroe I. Lendl J. Connors M. Wilander Y. Noah J. Arias J. Higueras JL. Clerc K. Curren G. Mayer
1984 J. McEnroe J. Connors I. Lendl M. Wilander A. Gómez A. Järryd H. Sundström P. Cash E. Teltscher Y. Noah
1985 I. Lendl J. McEnroe M. Wilander J. Connors S. Edberg B. Becker Y. Noah A. Järryd M. Mečíř K. Curren[lower-alpha 4]
1986 I. Lendl B. Becker M. Wilander Y. Noah S. Edberg H. Leconte J. Nyström J. Connors M. Mečíř A. Gómez
1987 I. Lendl S. Edberg M. Wilander J. Connors B. Becker M. Mečíř P. Cash Y. Noah T. Mayotte J. McEnroe
1988 M. Wilander I. Lendl A. Agassi B. Becker S. Edberg K. Carlsson J. Connors J. Hlasek H. Leconte T. Mayotte
1989 I. Lendl B. Becker S. Edberg J. McEnroe M. Chang B. Gilbert A. Agassi A. Krickstein A. Mancini J. Berger
1990 S. Edberg B. Becker I. Lendl A. Agassi P. Sampras A. Gómez T. Muster E. Sánchez G. Ivanišević B. Gilbert
1991 S. Edberg J. Courier B. Becker M. Stich I. Lendl P. Sampras G. Forget K. Nováček P. Korda A. Agassi
1992 J. Courier S. Edberg P. Sampras G. Ivanišević B. Becker M. Chang P. Korda I. Lendl[lower-alpha 5] A. Agassi R. Krajicek
1993 P. Sampras M. Stich J. Courier S. Bruguera S. Edberg A. Medvedev G. Ivanišević M. Chang T. Muster C. Pioline
1994 P. Sampras A. Agassi B. Becker S. Bruguera G. Ivanišević M. Chang S. Edberg A. Berasategui M. Stich T. Martin
1995 P. Sampras A. Agassi T. Muster B. Becker M. Chang Y. Kafelnikov T. Enqvist J. Courier W. Ferreira G. Ivanišević
1996 P. Sampras M. Chang Y. Kafelnikov G. Ivanišević T. Muster B. Becker R. Krajicek A. Agassi T. Enqvist W. Ferreira
1997 P. Sampras P. Rafter M. Chang J. Björkman Y. Kafelnikov G. Rusedski C. Moya S. Bruguera T. Muster M. Ríos
1998 P. Sampras M. Ríos A. Corretja P. Rafter C. Moya A. Agassi T. Henman K. Kučera G. Rusedski R. Krajicek
1999 A. Agassi Y. Kafelnikov P. Sampras T. Enqvist G. Kuerten N. Kiefer T. Martin N. Lapentti M. Ríos R. Krajicek
2000 G. Kuerten M. Safin P. Sampras M. Norman Y. Kafelnikov A. Agassi L. Hewitt A. Corretja T. Enqvist T. Henman
2001 L. Hewitt G. Kuerten A. Agassi Y. Kafelnikov JC. Ferrero S. Grosjean P. Rafter T. Haas T. Henman P. Sampras
2002 L. Hewitt A. Agassi M. Safin JC. Ferrero C. Moya R. Federer J. Novák T. Henman A. Costa A. Roddick
2003 A. Roddick R. Federer JC. Ferrero A. Agassi G. Coria R. Schüttler C. Moyá D. Nalbandian M. Philippoussis S. Grosjean
2004 R. Federer A. Roddick L. Hewitt M. Safin C. Moyá T. Henman G. Coria A. Agassi D. Nalbandian G. Gaudio
2005 R. Federer R. Nadal A. Roddick L. Hewitt N. Davydenko D. Nalbandian A. Agassi G. Coria I. Ljubičić G. Gaudio
2006 R. Federer R. Nadal N. Davydenko J. Blake I. Ljubicic A. Roddick T. Robredo D. Nalbandian M. Ančić F. González
2007 R. Federer R. Nadal N. Djokovic N. Davydenko D. Ferrer A. Roddick F. González R. Gasquet D. Nalbandian T. Robredo
2008 R. Nadal R. Federer N. Djokovic A. Murray N. Davydenko JW. Tsonga G. Simon A. Roddick JM. del Potro J. Blake
2009 R. Federer R. Nadal N. Djokovic A. Murray JM. del Potro N. Davydenko A. Roddick R. Söderling F. Verdasco JW. Tsonga
2010 R. Nadal R. Federer N. Djokovic A. Murray R. Söderling T. Berdych D. Ferrer A. Roddick F. Verdasco M. Youzhny
2011 N. Djokovic R. Nadal R. Federer A. Murray D. Ferrer JW. Tsonga T. Berdych M. Fish J. Tipsarević N. Almagro
2012 N. Djokovic R. Federer A. Murray R. Nadal D. Ferrer T. Berdych JM. del Potro JW. Tsonga J. Tipsarević R. Gasquet
2013 R. Nadal N. Djokovic D. Ferrer A. Murray JM. del Potro R. Federer T. Berdych S. Wawrinka R. Gasquet JW. Tsonga
2014 N. Djokovic R. Federer R. Nadal S. Wawrinka K. Nishikori A. Murray T. Berdych M. Raonic M. Čilić D. Ferrer
2015 N. Djokovic A. Murray R. Federer S. Wawrinka R. Nadal T. Berdych D. Ferrer K. Nishikori R. Gasquet JW. Tsonga
2016 A. Murray N. Djokovic M. Raonic S. Wawrinka K. Nishikori M. Čilić G. Monfils D. Thiem R. Nadal T. Berdych
2017 R. Nadal R. Federer G. Dimitrov A. Zverev D. Thiem M. Čilić D. Goffin J. Sock S. Wawrinka P. Carreño Busta
2018 N. Djokovic R. Nadal R. Federer A. Zverev JM. del Potro K. Anderson M. Čilić D. Thiem K. Nishikori J. Isner
2019 R. Nadal N. Djokovic R. Federer D. Thiem D. Medvedev S. Tsitsipas A. Zverev M. Berrettini R. Bautista Agut G. Monfils
2020 N. Djokovic R. Nadal D. Thiem D. Medvedev R. Federer S. Tsitsipas A. Zverev A. Rublev D. Schwartzman M. Berrettini
2021 N. Djokovic D. Medvedev A. Zverev S. Tsitsipas A. Rublev R. Nadal M. Berrettini C. Ruud H. Hurkacz J. Sinner

Note: Not all year-end rankings listed were taken from 31 December. Due to the Australian Open's date in the 1970s through to the mid-1980s, the year-end ranking in 1974, 1978–1984 were recorded from varying dates.[41]

ATP rankings achievements

Total weeks

as of 2022 October 31, with currently-ranked players in boldface[42]

#No. 1
373 Novak Djokovic
310 Roger Federer
286 Pete Sampras
270 Ivan Lendl
268 Jimmy Connors
#Top 2
584 Rafael Nadal
528 Roger Federer
520 Novak Djokovic
385 Jimmy Connors
377 Ivan Lendl
#Top 3
750 Roger Federer
674 Rafael Nadal
672 Novak Djokovic
591 Jimmy Connors
499 Ivan Lendl
#Top 4
804 Roger Federer
744 Rafael Nadal
704 Novak Djokovic
669 Jimmy Connors
540 Ivan Lendl
#Top 5
859 Roger Federer
825 Rafael Nadal
715 Novak Djokovic
706 Jimmy Connors
563 Ivan Lendl
#Top 10
968 Roger Federer
893 Rafael Nadal
817 Jimmy Connors
758 Novak Djokovic
747 Andre Agassi

Year-end rankings

As of the end of 2021, with active players in boldface

#No. 1
7 Novak Djokovic
6 Pete Sampras
5 Jimmy Connors
Roger Federer
Rafael Nadal
4 John McEnroe
Ivan Lendl
#Top 2
12 Rafael Nadal
11 Roger Federer
10 Novak Djokovic
8 Jimmy Connors
6 John McEnroe
Ivan Lendl
Pete Sampras
#Top 3
15 Roger Federer
14 Novak Djokovic
13 Rafael Nadal
12 Jimmy Connors
10 Ivan Lendl
#Top 4
15 Roger Federer
14 Jimmy Connors
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic
10 Ivan Lendl
#Top 5
16 Roger Federer
15 Rafael Nadal
14 Jimmy Connors
Novak Djokovic
11 Ivan Lendl
#Top 10
18 Roger Federer
17 Rafael Nadal
16 Jimmy Connors
Andre Agassi
14 Novak Djokovic

ATP No. 1 in singles and doubles

Players who were ranked No. 1 in both singles and doubles at any time in their careers.

Player Singles Doubles
First heldLast heldWeeksFirst heldLast heldWeeks
John McEnroeMar 03, 1980Sep 08, 1985170Apr 23, 1979Sep 24, 1989269
Stefan EdbergAug 13, 1990Oct 04, 199272Jun 09, 1986Feb 22, 198715
  • McEnroe was ranked No. 1 in singles and doubles simultaneously for 121 weeks.
  • McEnroe finished as the year-end No. 1 in both singles and doubles for 3 years: 1981, 1982, and 1983.

ATP No. 1 ranked doubles players

Mike and Bob Bryan, the most successful doubles No. 1 players.
  Current world No. 1 as of October 10.
  Active former No. 1 players.
Weeks No. 1 player
506 Mike Bryan
439 Bob Bryan
269 John McEnroe
204 Todd Woodbridge
108 Daniel Nestor
107 Anders Järryd
85 Frew McMillan
83 Mark Woodforde
74 Jonas Björkman
71 Paul Haarhuis
68 Robert Farah
67 Raúl Ramírez
65 Mark Knowles
63 Jacco Eltingh
62 Robert Seguso
57 Max Mirnyi
56 Marcelo Melo
Mate Pavić
50 Nenad Zimonjić
40 John Fitzgerald
39 Leander Paes
Nicolas Mahut
34 Tomáš Šmíd
29 Juan Sebastián Cabal
27 Danie Visser
26 Jim Pugh
Henri Kontinen
Joe Salisbury
25 David Pate
20 Donald Johnson
19 Pieter Aldrich
Yannick Noah
Łukasz Kubot
17 Jared Palmer
Grant Connell
15 Stefan Edberg
13 Richey Reneberg
Jim Grabb
Andrés Gómez
11 Peter Fleming
Tom Okker
9 Rick Leach
Jamie Murray
8 Byron Black
Stan Smith
7 Slobodan Živojinović
6 Jonathan Stark
Emilio Sánchez
Bob Hewitt
5 Alex O'Brien
Rajeev Ram
Ken Flach
4 Mahesh Bhupathi
Patrick Galbraith
3 Paul McNamee
Nikola Mektić
1 Kelly Jones
57 doubles players
Year-end No. 1
10 Mike Bryan
8 Bob Bryan
5 John McEnroe
3 Mark Woodforde
Todd Woodbridge
2 Frew McMillan
Robert Seguso
Anders Järryd
Mark Knowles
Marcelo Melo
Robert Farah
1 Raúl Ramírez
Tomáš Šmíd
Andrés Gómez
Pieter Aldrich
Danie Visser
John Fitzgerald
Grant Connell
Paul Haarhuis
Jacco Eltingh
Leander Paes
Jonas Björkman
Max Mirnyi
Daniel Nestor
Nenad Zimonjić
Nicolas Mahut
Juan Sebastián Cabal
Mate Pavić
28 players

See also

  • List of ATP number 1 ranked singles tennis players
  • List of ATP number 1 ranked doubles tennis players
  • World number 1 ranked male tennis players
  • Top ten ranked male tennis players
  • Top ten ranked male tennis players (1912–1972)
  • ITF World Champions
  • List of highest ranked tennis players per country
  • WTA rankings

Notes

  1. In weeks where there are not four Grand Slam tournaments and eight Masters 1000 tournaments in the ranking period, the number of a player's best results from all eligible tournaments in the ranking period will be adjusted accordingly.
  2. At least one of these tournaments must follow the US Open.
  3. "Accepted" means a direct acceptance, a qualifier, a special exempt, or a lucky loser, or having accepted a wild card.
  4. Kevin Curren became a naturalized American citizen in 1985 after representing South Africa.
  5. Ivan Lendl became a naturalized American citizen in 1992 after representing Czechoslovakia.

References

  1. "ATP Partnerhip". pepperstone.com.
  2. "ATP World Tour - Rulebook, Chapter IX, ATP Rankings" (PDF). Retrieved 2017-05-10.
  3. Tignor, Steve (19 March 2015). "1973: The men boycott Wimbledon and shift power to the players". tennis.com. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  4. Buddell, James (23 August 2013). "The Rankings That Changed Tennis (Part I)". Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).
  5. Buddell, James (23 August 2013). "The Rankings That Changed Tennis (Part II)". Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).
  6. Tignor, Steve (26 March 2015). "1973: The ATP institutes computer rankings". tennis.com. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  7. Collins, Bud (2010). The Bud Collins History of Tennis (2nd ed.). New York: New Chapter Press. p. 715. ISBN 978-0942257700.
  8. "Rankings FAQ". Atpworldtour.com. Retrieved 2012-07-25.
  9. "Frequently Asked Questions". atpworldtour.com. Retrieved 2011-03-13.
  10. "Rankings-FAQ". ATP World Tour.
  11. Rothenberg, Ben (2016-05-29). "Points and Prize Money Mean More to Olympic Tennis Holdouts". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  12. Ultimate Tennis Statistics - Most ATP Points
  13. "New Strategy For 21st Century Tennis, $1.2 Billion Investment, Global Brand, Simple Structure, Premier Tennis Series". Sportcal. 1999-12-02. Archived from the original on 2021-11-27.
  14. "ATP Tour unveils new ATP Champions Race". Sportscal. 1999-11-26. Archived from the original on 2021-11-27.
  15. Douglas Robson (22 August 2013). "Happy 40th birthday, ATP computer rankings". USA Today.
  16. Simon Cambers (15 February 2013). "40 years on, how have the ATP World Rankings developed?". www.wimbledon.com. AELTC. Archived from the original on 2014-12-31.
  17. "ATP Rankings FAQ". ATP.
  18. "ATP World Tour 2017 Rulebook" (PDF). ATP World Tour.
  19. "Tennis - ATP World Tour - Rankings FAQ". ATP World Tour. Retrieved 2012-07-25.
  20. "Rankings | FAQ | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP World Tour. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  21. "ITF confirms no ATP points will be assigned at Olympic Games in Rio 2016". Tennis World. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  22. "Current ATP Rankings (Singles)". Association of Tennis Professionals.
  23. "Current ATP Rankings (Doubles)". Association of Tennis Professionals.
  24. "Weekly singles ranking". ATP.
  25. "Live singles ranking". live-tennis.eu.
  26. "ATP live ranking". ATP.
  27. "Alcaraz's points breakdown". ATP.
  28. "Nadal's points breakdown". ATP.
  29. "Ruud's points breakdown". ATP.
  30. "Medvedev's points breakdown". ATP.
  31. "Zverev's points breakdown". ATP.
  32. "Tsitsipas' points breakdown". ATP.
  33. "Djokovic's points breakdown". ATP.
  34. "Rublev's points breakdown". ATP.
  35. "Fritz's points breakdown". ATP.
  36. "Sinner's points breakdown". ATP.
  37. "Auger-Aliassime's points breakdown". ATP.
  38. "Hurkacz's points breakdown". ATP.
  39. "Berrettini's points breakdown". ATP.
  40. "Top10" (PDF). atptour.com. Retrieved 2021-01-18.
  41. "ATP Rankings: Year-End Top 10 History" (PDF). ATP. p. 6. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  42. "ATP Singles Rankings".
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