Atp Finals

The ATP Finals is the season-ending championship of the ATP Tour.

It is the most significant tennis event in the men's annual calendar after the four majors, as it features the top eight singles players and top eight doubles teams based on their results throughout the season. The eighth spot is reserved, if needed, for a player or team who won a major in the current year and is ranked from ninth to twentieth.

ATP Finals
Atp Finals
Tournament information
Founded1970; 54 years ago (1970)
LocationTurin, Italy (2021–25)
VenuePala Alpitour
CategoryYear-end Championships
SurfaceHard (indoor)
Draw8 Singles / 8 Doubles
Prize moneyUS$15,000,000 (2023)
Websitenittoatpfinals.com
Current champions (2023)
SinglesSerbia Novak Djokovic
DoublesUnited States Rajeev Ram
United Kingdom Joe Salisbury

The tournament uses a unique format not seen in other ATP Tour events, where the singles players and doubles teams are separated into two groups of four, within which they each play three round-robin matches. After the round-robin stage, the top two performers from each group play in knock-out semifinals and a final to determine the champion(s).

The tournament was first held in 1970, shortly after the beginning of the Open Era. Novak Djokovic holds the record for the most singles titles with seven, while Peter Fleming and John McEnroe jointly hold the record for the most doubles titles with seven (all won consecutively as a team).

In the tournament's current format, the champion can earn a maximum of 1,500 ranking points, if they win the event after going undefeated in the round-robin stage. By winning the 2022 title, Djokovic earned a record $4,740,300, the highest payout for a tournament winner in tennis. Also that year, Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury claimed $930,300, the highest payout in doubles history.

Tournament

History

The ATP Finals is the fifth iteration of a championship which began in 1970. It was originally known as the Masters Grand Prix and was part of the Grand Prix tennis circuit. It was organised by the International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF) and ran alongside the competing WCT Finals from 1971 to 1989. The Masters was a year-end showpiece event between the best players on the men's tour, but did not count for any world ranking points.

In 1990, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) took over the running of the men's tour and replaced the Masters with the "ATP Tour World Championships". World ranking points were now at stake, with an undefeated champion earning the same number of points they would earn for winning one of the four Grand Slam events. The ITF, who continued to run the Grand Slam tournaments, created a rival year-end event known as the Grand Slam Cup, which was contested by the 16 players with the best records in the Grand Slam tournaments of the season (1990–99).

In December 1999, the ATP and ITF agreed to discontinue the two separate events and create a new jointly-owned event called the "Tennis Masters Cup". As with the Masters Grand Prix and the ATP Tour World Championships, the Tennis Masters Cup was contested by eight players and teams. However, the player or team ranked number eight in the ATP Race world rankings was not guaranteed a spot: if a player or team won one of the year's majors and finished the year ranked from ninth to twentieth, they were included in the Tennis Masters Cup instead. If two outside the top eight won majors, the higher-ranked of the two in the world rankings took the final spot. This accommodation for major champions continues in the event's current form.

In 2009, the championship was renamed the "ATP World Tour Finals" and was held at The O2 Arena in London. The contract ran through 2013, but was extended multiple times until it was last held there in 2020. In 2017 the event was renamed the "ATP Finals." In April 2019, the ATP announced that Turin would host the ATP Finals from 2021 to 2025.

Years Championships name
1970–89 Masters Grand Prix
1990–99 ATP Tour World Championships
2000–08 Tennis Masters Cup
2009–16 ATP World Tour Finals
2017– ATP Finals

For most of its history, the event has been considered the most important indoor tennis tournament in the world (there were a few exceptions when the event was held outdoors: 1974 in Melbourne & 2003–04 in Houston). The indoor atmosphere allows for controlled conditions of play, both in terms of the court surface and the court's illumination.

In recent years it has been played on indoor hard courts, however, indoor carpet was used in some previous editions. On one occasion, when Melbourne hosted the event in 1974, the grass courts of Kooyong Stadium were used; the tournament was staged only 1–2 weeks before the 1975 Australian Open, which was also played on grass. Apart from 1974, all tournaments have been on a hard court variant, which has prompted calls from some players (such as Rafael Nadal) to feature a greater variety of surfaces, including clay courts.

For many years, the doubles event was held as a separate tournament staged the week after the singles competition, but more recently both events have been held together during the same week and in the same venue.

In 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic and in an effort to reduce the number of staff on-site, the ATP introduced live electronic line-calling powered by Hawk-Eye Live. Instead of line umpires, the system detects the relevant movements of the player and where the ball bounces on court. A pre-recorded voice announces "Out", "Fault", and "Foot fault". Also, video review was also introduced for suspected double bounces, touches, and other reviewable calls.

The tournament has traditionally been sponsored by the title sponsor of the tour; however, in 1990–2008 the competition was not sponsored, even though the singles portion of the event, as part of the ATP Tour, was sponsored by IBM. In 2009, the tournament gained Barclays PLC as its title sponsor. Barclays confirmed in 2015 that they would not renew their sponsorship deal once it expires in 2016. On 25 May 2017, it was announced that Nitto Denko would be the main sponsor for the tournament through 2020. In September 2020, Nitto Denko announced it will extend its title partnership of the ATP Finals for another five years, until 2025.

Qualification

The criteria to qualify for the ATP Finals are as follows:

  1. Players and teams who finish the season ranked in the top seven in the ATP race automatically qualify.
  2. The eighth spot is reserved for a player or team who won a major in the season and is ranked from eighth to twentieth. Goran Ivanišević in 2001, Albert Costa in 2002, Gastón Gaudio in 2004, and Marin Čilić in 2014 are the singles players who have qualified due to their major title despite not ending in the top eight in the ATP race.
  3. If more than one player or team won a Grand Slam event in the season and are ranked from eighth to twentieth, then whoever is highest-ranked is awarded the eighth spot; whoever is second highest-ranked is made first alternate.
  4. If there is no player who won a major in the season and is ranked from eighth to twentieth, then the eight spot is awarded to the player ranked eighth.

Two alternates also attend the ATP Finals. If the first alternate has already been selected according to (3) mentioned above, then the second alternate is the highest-ranked player who has not otherwise qualified for the event. If both alternate spots are available, they are awarded to the two highest-ranked players who did not otherwise qualify for the event.

An alternate can replace a player who withdraws before the round-robin stage is over, so long as the player who withdraws still has at least one round-robin match left to play. When an alternate enters the competition, his results are considered separately, i.e. the alternate does not inherit the results of the player he is replacing. If an alternate's round-robin results qualify him for the semifinals, then he may continue into the single-elimination rounds.

Format

Unlike other events on the ATP Tour, the ATP Finals is not a straightforward single-elimination tournament. The eight players and teams are divided into two groups of four and each play three round-robin matches against the others in their group. After the round-robin stage, the top two performers in each group advance to the semifinals in a knock-out stage. The two winners of the semifinals play a final to determine the champion. In this format, it is theoretically possible to advance to the semifinals with two round-robin losses, but no player in the history of the singles tournament has won the title after losing more than one round-robin match.

To create the groups, the eight players and teams are seeded according to rank. The first and second seeds are placed in Group A and Group B, respectively. The remaining seeds are drawn in pairs (third and fourth, fifth and sixth, seventh and eighth); the first of the pair to be drawn goes to Group A and the other to Group B, and so on.

The format described above has been in place for all editions of the tournament except the following years:

  • 1970–71: All round robin (no groups), no semifinals or finals, the winner was decided based on round-robin standings.
  • 1982–84: 12-player three-round single-elimination tournament (no round robin), the top four seeds received byes in the first round.
  • 1985: 16-player four-round single-elimination tournament (no round robin), no byes.

Group standings

Since 2019, the group standings at the end of the round-robin stage are determined by, in order:

  • Most matches won.
  • Most matches played (for example: the record 1–2 beats 1–1, and 2–1 beats 2–0).

If some players are tied, the following tiebreakers are used depending on how many players are tied (two or three):

If two players are tied, then:

  • Head-to-head round-robin result.

If three players are tied, then the following tiebreakers are used, in order, until all three players are no longer tied OR until only two players are tied, at which point the two-player tie is broken by the head-to-head round robin result:

  • Highest % of sets won.
  • Highest % of games won.
  • Highest ranking at the start of the tournament.

When calculating tiebreakers, a match that ended in a retirement is counted as a 0–2 sets loss for the retiring player and a 2–0 sets win for their opponent, regardless of the actual score when the retirement occurred. When calculating the "Highest % of games won" tiebreaker, a match that ended in a retirement is disregarded.

Singles venues

ATP Finals is the men's premier indoor event of the season, only in three editions it was played outdoors; 1974, 2003 and 2004.

Years City Surface Stadium Capacity
1970 Atp Finals  Tokyo, Japan Carpet (i) Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium 6,500
1971 Atp Finals  Paris, France Hard (i) Stade Pierre de Coubertin 5,000
1972 Atp Finals  Barcelona, Spain Palau Blaugrana 5,700
1973 Atp Finals  Boston, United States Boston Garden 14,900
1974 Atp Finals  Melbourne, Australia Grass Kooyong Stadium 8,500
1975 Atp Finals  Stockholm, Sweden Carpet (i) Kungliga tennishallen 6,000
1976 Atp Finals  Houston, United States The Summit 16,300
1977–1989 Atp Finals  New York City, United States Madison Square Garden 18,000
1990–1995 Atp Finals  Frankfurt, Germany Festhalle Frankfurt 12,000
1996–1999 Atp Finals  Hanover, Germany Carpet (i)
Hard (i)
Hanover Fairground 15,000
2000 Atp Finals  Lisbon, Portugal Hard (i) Pavilhão Atlântico 12,000
2001 Atp Finals  Sydney, Australia Sydney Super Dome 17,500
2002 Atp Finals  Shanghai, China SNIEC 10,000
2003–2004 Atp Finals  Houston, United States Hard Westside Tennis Club 5,240
2005–2008 Atp Finals  Shanghai, China Carpet (i)
Hard (i)
Qizhong Forest Sports City Arena 15,000
2009–2020 Atp Finals  London, United Kingdom Hard (i) The O2 Arena 20,000
2021–2025 Atp Finals  Turin, Italy Pala Alpitour 16,600

Prize money, ranking points and trophies

The 2023 ATP Finals rewarded the following points and prize money, per victory (Doubles' prize money is per team):

Stage Singles Doubles Points
Final win $2,201,000 $351,000 500
Semi-final win $1,105,000 $175,650 400
Round robin match win $390,000 $95,000 200
Participation fee 3 matches = $325,500
2 matches = $244,125
1 match = $162,750
3 matches = $132,000
2 matches = $99,000
1 match = $66,000
Alternates $152,500 $50,850
  • An undefeated champion would earn the maximum 1,500 points, and $4,801,500 in singles or $943,650 in doubles.

Additional prizes include the ATP Finals trophy and the ATP year-end No. 1 trophy, all made by London-based silversmiths Thomas Lyte.

Past finals

Singles

Location Year Champion Runner-up Score
Tokyo 1970 Atp Finals  Stan Smith (1/1) Atp Finals  Rod Laver Round robin
Paris 1971 Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase (1/4) Atp Finals  Stan Smith Round robin
Barcelona 1972 Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase (2/4) Atp Finals  Stan Smith 6–3, 6–2, 3–6, 2–6, 6–3
Boston 1973 Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase (3/4) Atp Finals  Tom Okker 6–3, 7–5, 4–6, 6–3
Melbourne 1974 Atp Finals  Guillermo Vilas (1/1) Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase 7–6(8–6), 6–2, 3–6, 3–6, 6–4
Stockholm 1975 Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase (4/4) Atp Finals  Björn Borg 6–2, 6–2, 6–1
Houston 1976 Atp Finals  Manuel Orantes (1/1) Atp Finals  Wojtek Fibak 5–7, 6–2, 0–6, 7–6(7–1), 6–1
New York City 1977 Atp Finals  Jimmy Connors (1/1) Atp Finals  Björn Borg 6–4, 1–6, 6–4
1978 Atp Finals  John McEnroe (1/3) Atp Finals  Arthur Ashe 6–7(5–7), 6–3, 7–5
1979 Atp Finals  Björn Borg (1/2) Atp Finals  Vitas Gerulaitis 6–2, 6–2
1980 Atp Finals  Björn Borg (2/2) Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl 6–4, 6–2, 6–2
1981 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl (1/5) Atp Finals  Vitas Gerulaitis 6–7(5–7), 2–6, 7–6(8–6), 6–2, 6–4
1982 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl (2/5) Atp Finals  John McEnroe 6–4, 6–4, 6–2
1983 Atp Finals  John McEnroe (2/3) Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl 6–3, 6–4, 6–4
1984 Atp Finals  John McEnroe (3/3) Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl 7–5, 6–0, 6–4
1985 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl (3/5) Atp Finals  Boris Becker 6–2, 7–6(7–4), 6–3
1986 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl (4/5) Atp Finals  Boris Becker 6–4, 6–4, 6–4
1987 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl (5/5) Atp Finals  Mats Wilander 6–2, 6–2, 6–3
1988 Atp Finals  Boris Becker (1/3) Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl 5–7, 7–6(7–5), 3–6, 6–2, 7–6(7–5)
1989 Atp Finals  Stefan Edberg (1/1) Atp Finals  Boris Becker 4–6, 7–6(8–6), 6–3, 6–1
Frankfurt 1990 Atp Finals  Andre Agassi (1/1) Atp Finals  Stefan Edberg 5–7, 7–6(7–5), 7–5, 6–2
1991 Atp Finals  Pete Sampras (1/5) Atp Finals  Jim Courier 3–6, 7–6(7–5), 6–3, 6–4
1992 Atp Finals  Boris Becker (2/3) Atp Finals  Jim Courier 6–4, 6–3, 7–5
1993 Atp Finals  Michael Stich (1/1) Atp Finals  Pete Sampras 7–6(7–3), 2–6, 7–6(9–7), 6–2
1994 Atp Finals  Pete Sampras (2/5) Atp Finals  Boris Becker 4–6, 6–3, 7–5, 6–4
1995 Atp Finals  Boris Becker (3/3) Atp Finals  Michael Chang 7–6(7–3), 6–0, 7–6(7–5)
Hanover 1996 Atp Finals  Pete Sampras (3/5) Atp Finals  Boris Becker 3–6, 7–6(7–5), 7–6(7–4), 6–7(11–13), 6–4
1997 Atp Finals  Pete Sampras (4/5) Atp Finals  Yevgeny Kafelnikov 6–3, 6–2, 6–2
1998 Atp Finals  Àlex Corretja (1/1) Atp Finals  Carlos Moyá 3–6, 3–6, 7–5, 6–3, 7–5
1999 Atp Finals  Pete Sampras (5/5) Atp Finals  Andre Agassi 6–1, 7–5, 6–4
Lisbon 2000 Atp Finals  Gustavo Kuerten (1/1) Atp Finals  Andre Agassi 6–4, 6–4, 6–4
Sydney 2001 Atp Finals  Lleyton Hewitt (1/2) Atp Finals  Sébastien Grosjean 6–3, 6–3, 6–4
Shanghai 2002 Atp Finals  Lleyton Hewitt (2/2) Atp Finals  Juan Carlos Ferrero 7–5, 7–5, 2–6, 2–6, 6–4
Houston 2003 Atp Finals  Roger Federer (1/6) Atp Finals  Andre Agassi 6–3, 6–0, 6–4
2004 Atp Finals  Roger Federer (2/6) Atp Finals  Lleyton Hewitt 6–3, 6–2
Shanghai 2005 Atp Finals  David Nalbandian (1/1) Atp Finals  Roger Federer 6–7(4–7), 6–7(11–13), 6–2, 6–1, 7–6(7–3)
2006 Atp Finals  Roger Federer (3/6) Atp Finals  James Blake 6–0, 6–3, 6–4
2007 Atp Finals  Roger Federer (4/6) Atp Finals  David Ferrer 6–2, 6–3, 6–2
2008 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic (1/7) Atp Finals  Nikolay Davydenko 6–1, 7–5
London 2009 Atp Finals  Nikolay Davydenko (1/1) Atp Finals  Juan Martín del Potro 6–3, 6–4
2010 Atp Finals  Roger Federer (5/6) Atp Finals  Rafael Nadal 6–3, 3–6, 6–1
2011 Atp Finals  Roger Federer (6/6) Atp Finals  Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 6–3, 6–7(6–8), 6–3
2012 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic (2/7) Atp Finals  Roger Federer 7–6(8–6), 7–5
2013 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic (3/7) Atp Finals  Rafael Nadal 6–3, 6–4
2014 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic (4/7) Atp Finals  Roger Federer walkover
2015 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic (5/7) Atp Finals  Roger Federer 6–3, 6–4
2016 Atp Finals  Andy Murray (1/1) Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic 6–3, 6–4
2017 Atp Finals  Grigor Dimitrov (1/1) Atp Finals  David Goffin 7–5, 4–6, 6–3
2018 Atp Finals  Alexander Zverev (1/2) Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic 6–4, 6–3
2019 Atp Finals  Stefanos Tsitsipas (1/1) Atp Finals  Dominic Thiem 6–7(6–8), 6–2, 7–6(7–4)
2020 Atp Finals  Daniil Medvedev (1/1) Atp Finals  Dominic Thiem 4–6, 7–6(7–2), 6–4
Turin 2021 Atp Finals  Alexander Zverev (2/2) Atp Finals  Daniil Medvedev 6–4, 6–4
2022 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic (6/7) Atp Finals  Casper Ruud 7–5, 6–3
2023 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic (7/7) Atp Finals  Jannik Sinner 6–3, 6–3

Doubles

Location Year Champions Runners-up Score
Tokyo 1970 Atp Finals  Stan Smith (1/1)
Atp Finals  Arthur Ashe (1/1)
Atp Finals  Jan Kodeš
Atp Finals  Rod Laver
Round robin
1971–1974: Not Held
Stockholm 1975 Atp Finals  Juan Gisbert (1/1)
Atp Finals  Manuel Orantes (1/1)
Atp Finals  Jürgen Fassbender
Atp Finals  Hans-Jürgen Pohmann
Round robin
Houston 1976 Atp Finals  Fred McNair (1/1)
Atp Finals  Sherwood Stewart (1/1)
Atp Finals  Brian Gottfried
Atp Finals  Raúl Ramírez
6–3, 5–7, 5–7, 6–4, 6–4
New York City 1977 Atp Finals  Bob Hewitt (1/1)
Atp Finals  Frew McMillan (1/1)
Atp Finals  Robert Lutz
Atp Finals  Stan Smith
7–5, 7–6, 6–3
1978 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming (1/7)
Atp Finals  John McEnroe (1/7)
Atp Finals  Wojtek Fibak
Atp Finals  Tom Okker
6–4, 6–2, 6–4
1979 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming (2/7)
Atp Finals  John McEnroe (2/7)
Atp Finals  Wojtek Fibak
Atp Finals  Tom Okker
6–3, 7–6, 6–1
1980 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming (3/7)
Atp Finals  John McEnroe (3/7)
Atp Finals  Peter McNamara
Atp Finals  Paul McNamee
6–4, 6–3
1981 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming (4/7)
Atp Finals  John McEnroe (4/7)
Atp Finals  Kevin Curren
Atp Finals  Steve Denton
6–3, 6–3
1982 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming (5/7)
Atp Finals  John McEnroe (5/7)
Atp Finals  Sherwood Stewart
Atp Finals  Ferdi Taygan
7–5, 6–3
1983 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming (6/7)
Atp Finals  John McEnroe (6/7)
Atp Finals  Pavel Složil
Atp Finals  Tomáš Šmíd
6–2, 6–2
1984 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming (7/7)
Atp Finals  John McEnroe (7/7)
Atp Finals  Mark Edmondson
Atp Finals  Sherwood Stewart
6–3, 6–1
1985 Atp Finals  Stefan Edberg (1/2)
Atp Finals  Anders Järryd (1/3)
Atp Finals  Joakim Nyström
Atp Finals  Mats Wilander
6–1, 7–6(7–5)
London 1986 Atp Finals  Stefan Edberg (2/2)
Atp Finals  Anders Järryd (2/3)
Atp Finals  Guy Forget
Atp Finals  Yannick Noah
6–3, 7–6(7–2), 6–3
1987 Atp Finals  Miloslav Mečíř (1/1)
Atp Finals  Tomáš Šmíd (1/1)
Atp Finals  Ken Flach
Atp Finals  Robert Seguso
6–4, 7–5, 6–7(5–7), 6–3
1988 Atp Finals  Rick Leach (1/3)
Atp Finals  Jim Pugh (1/1)
Atp Finals  Sergio Casal
Atp Finals  Emilio Sánchez
6–4, 6–3, 2–6, 6–0
1989 Atp Finals  Jim Grabb (1/1)
Atp Finals  Patrick McEnroe (1/1)
Atp Finals  John Fitzgerald
Atp Finals  Anders Järryd
7–5, 7–6(7–4), 5–7, 6–3
Gold Coast 1990 Atp Finals  Guy Forget (1/1)
Atp Finals  Jakob Hlasek (1/1)
Atp Finals  Sergio Casal
Atp Finals  Emilio Sánchez
6–4, 7–6(7–5), 5–7, 6–4
Johannesburg 1991 Atp Finals  John Fitzgerald (1/1)
Atp Finals  Anders Järryd (3/3)
Atp Finals  Ken Flach
Atp Finals  Robert Seguso
6–4, 6–4, 2–6, 6–4
1992 Atp Finals  Todd Woodbridge (1/2)
Atp Finals  Mark Woodforde (1/2)
Atp Finals  John Fitzgerald
Atp Finals  Anders Järryd
6–2, 7–6(7–4), 5–7, 3–6, 6–3
1993 Atp Finals  Jacco Eltingh (1/2)
Atp Finals  Paul Haarhuis (1/2)
Atp Finals  Todd Woodbridge
Atp Finals  Mark Woodforde
7–6(7–4), 7–6(7–5), 6–4
Jakarta 1994 Atp Finals  Jan Apell (1/1)
Atp Finals  Jonas Björkman (1/2)
Atp Finals  Todd Woodbridge
Atp Finals  Mark Woodforde
6–4, 4–6, 4–6, 7–6(7–5), 7–6(8–6)
Eindhoven 1995 Atp Finals  Grant Connell (1/1)
Atp Finals  Patrick Galbraith (1/1)
Atp Finals  Jacco Eltingh
Atp Finals  Paul Haarhuis
7–6(8–6), 7–6(8–6), 3–6, 7–6(7–2)
Hartford 1996 Atp Finals  Todd Woodbridge (2/2)
Atp Finals  Mark Woodforde (2/2)
Atp Finals  Sébastien Lareau
Atp Finals  Alex O'Brien
6–4, 5–7, 6–2, 7–6(7–3)
1997 Atp Finals  Rick Leach (2/3)
Atp Finals  Jonathan Stark (1/1)
Atp Finals  Mahesh Bhupathi
Atp Finals  Leander Paes
6–3, 6–4, 7–6(7–3)
1998 Atp Finals  Jacco Eltingh (2/2)
Atp Finals  Paul Haarhuis (2/2)
Atp Finals  Mark Knowles
Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor
6–4, 6–2, 7–5
1999 Atp Finals  Sébastien Lareau (1/1)
Atp Finals  Alex O'Brien (1/1)
Atp Finals  Mahesh Bhupathi
Atp Finals  Leander Paes
6–3, 6–2, 6–2
Bangalore 2000 Atp Finals  Donald Johnson (1/1)
Atp Finals  Piet Norval (1/1)
Atp Finals  Mahesh Bhupathi
Atp Finals  Leander Paes
7–6(10–8), 6–3, 6–4
2001
Atp Finals  Ellis Ferreira (1/1)
Atp Finals  Rick Leach (3/3)
Atp Finals  Petr Pála
Atp Finals  Pavel Vízner
6–7(6–8), 7–6(7–2), 6–4, 6–4
2002 Not held
Houston 2003 Atp Finals  Bob Bryan (1/4)
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan (1/5)
Atp Finals  Michaël Llodra
Atp Finals  Fabrice Santoro
6–7(6–8), 6–3, 3–6, 7–6(7–3), 6–4
2004 Atp Finals  Bob Bryan (2/4)
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan (2/5)
Atp Finals  Wayne Black
Atp Finals  Kevin Ullyett
4–6, 7–5, 6–4, 6–2
Shanghai 2005 Atp Finals  Michaël Llodra (1/1)
Atp Finals  Fabrice Santoro (1/1)
Atp Finals  Leander Paes
Atp Finals  Nenad Zimonjić
6–7(6–8), 6–3, 7–6(7–4)
2006 Atp Finals  Jonas Björkman (2/2)
Atp Finals  Max Mirnyi (1/2)
Atp Finals  Mark Knowles
Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor
6–2, 6–4
2007 Atp Finals  Mark Knowles (1/1)
Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor (1/4)
Atp Finals  Simon Aspelin
Atp Finals  Julian Knowle
6–2, 6–3
2008 Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor (2/4)
Atp Finals  Nenad Zimonjić (1/2)
Atp Finals  Bob Bryan
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan
7–6(7–3), 6–2
London 2009 Atp Finals  Bob Bryan (3/4)
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan (3/5)
Atp Finals  Max Mirnyi
Atp Finals  Andy Ram
7–6(7–5), 6–3
2010 Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor (3/4)
Atp Finals  Nenad Zimonjić (2/2)
Atp Finals  Mahesh Bhupathi
Atp Finals  Max Mirnyi
7–6(8–6), 6–4
2011 Atp Finals  Max Mirnyi (2/2)
Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor (4/4)
Atp Finals  Mariusz Fyrstenberg
Atp Finals  Marcin Matkowski
7–5, 6–3
2012 Atp Finals  Marcel Granollers (1/1)
Atp Finals  Marc López (1/1)
Atp Finals  Mahesh Bhupathi
Atp Finals  Rohan Bopanna
7–5, 3–6, [10–3]
2013 Atp Finals  David Marrero (1/1)
Atp Finals  Fernando Verdasco (1/1)
Atp Finals  Bob Bryan
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan
7–5, 6–7(3–7), [10–7]
2014 Atp Finals  Bob Bryan (4/4)
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan (4/5)
Atp Finals  Ivan Dodig
Atp Finals  Marcelo Melo
6–7(5–7), 6–2, [10–7]
2015 Atp Finals  Jean-Julien Rojer (1/1)
Atp Finals  Horia Tecău (1/1)
Atp Finals  Rohan Bopanna
Atp Finals  Florin Mergea
6–4, 6–3
2016 Atp Finals  Henri Kontinen (1/2)
Atp Finals  John Peers (1/2)
Atp Finals  Raven Klaasen
Atp Finals  Rajeev Ram
2–6, 6–1, [10–8]
2017 Atp Finals  Henri Kontinen (2/2)
Atp Finals  John Peers (2/2)
Atp Finals  Łukasz Kubot
Atp Finals  Marcelo Melo
6–4, 6–2
2018 Atp Finals  Jack Sock (1/1)
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan (5/5)
Atp Finals  Pierre-Hugues Herbert
Atp Finals  Nicolas Mahut
5–7, 6–1, [13–11]
2019 Atp Finals  Pierre-Hugues Herbert (1/2)
Atp Finals  Nicolas Mahut (1/2)
Atp Finals  Raven Klaasen
Atp Finals  Michael Venus
6–3, 6–4
2020 Atp Finals  Wesley Koolhof (1/1)
Atp Finals  Nikola Mektić (1/1)
Atp Finals  Jürgen Melzer
Atp Finals  Édouard Roger-Vasselin
6–2, 3–6, [10–5]
Turin 2021 Atp Finals  Pierre-Hugues Herbert (2/2)
Atp Finals  Nicolas Mahut (2/2)
Atp Finals  Rajeev Ram
Atp Finals  Joe Salisbury
6–4, 7–6(7–0)
2022 Atp Finals  Rajeev Ram (1/2)
Atp Finals  Joe Salisbury (1/2)
Atp Finals  Nikola Mektić
Atp Finals  Mate Pavić
7–6(7–4), 6–4
2023 Atp Finals  Rajeev Ram (2/2)
Atp Finals  Joe Salisbury (2/2)
Atp Finals  Marcel Granollers
Atp Finals  Horacio Zeballos
6–3, 6–4

List of champions

Singles

Titles Player Years
7 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic 2008, 12–15, 22–23
6 Atp Finals  Roger Federer 2003–04, 06–07, 10–11
5 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl 1981–82, 85–87
Atp Finals  Pete Sampras 1991, 94, 96–97, 99
4 Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase 1971–73, 75
3 Atp Finals  John McEnroe 1978, 83–84
Atp Finals  Boris Becker 1988, 92, 95
2 Atp Finals  Björn Borg 1979–80
Atp Finals  Lleyton Hewitt 2001–02
Atp Finals  Alexander Zverev 2018, 21
1 Atp Finals  Stan Smith 1970
Atp Finals  Guillermo Vilas 1974
Atp Finals  Manuel Orantes 1976
Atp Finals  Jimmy Connors 1977
Atp Finals  Stefan Edberg 1989
Atp Finals  Andre Agassi 1990
Atp Finals  Michael Stich 1993
Atp Finals  Àlex Corretja 1998
Atp Finals  Gustavo Kuerten 2000
Atp Finals  David Nalbandian 2005
Atp Finals  Nikolay Davydenko 2009
Atp Finals  Andy Murray 2016
Atp Finals  Grigor Dimitrov 2017
Atp Finals  Stefanos Tsitsipas 2019
Atp Finals  Daniil Medvedev 2020

Doubles

Titles Player Years
7
1978–84
5 Atp Finals  Mike Bryan 2003–04, 09, 14, 18
4 Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor 2007–08, 10–11
Atp Finals  Bob Bryan 2003–04, 09, 14
3 Atp Finals  Anders Järryd 1985–86, 91
Atp Finals  Rick Leach 1988, 97, 2001
2 Atp Finals  Stefan Edberg 1985–86
1992, 96
1993, 98
Atp Finals  Jonas Björkman 1994, 2006
Atp Finals  Nenad Zimonjić 2008, 10
Atp Finals  Max Mirnyi 2006, 11
2016–17
2019, 21
2022–23
1 1970
1975
1976
1977
1987
Atp Finals  Jim Pugh 1988
1989
1990
Atp Finals  John Fitzgerald 1991
Atp Finals  Jan Apell 1994
1995
Atp Finals  Jonathan Stark 1997
1999
2000
Atp Finals  Ellis Ferreira 2001
2005
Atp Finals  Mark Knowles 2007
2012
2013
2015
Atp Finals  Jack Sock 2018
2020

Records and statistics

Singles

# Titles
7 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic
6 Atp Finals  Roger Federer
5 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl
Atp Finals  Pete Sampras
4 Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase
# Consecutive titles
4 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic
3 Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase
Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl
2 Atp Finals  Björn Borg
Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl
Atp Finals  John McEnroe
Atp Finals  Pete Sampras
Atp Finals  Lleyton Hewitt
Atp Finals  Roger Federer (3x)
Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic
# Finals
10 Atp Finals  Roger Federer
9 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl
Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic
8 Atp Finals  Boris Becker
6 Atp Finals  Pete Sampras
5 Atp Finals  Ilie Năstase
# Matches won
59 Atp Finals  Roger Federer
50 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic
39 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl
36 Atp Finals  Boris Becker
35 Atp Finals  Pete Sampras
# Editions played
17 Atp Finals  Roger Federer
16 Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic
13 Atp Finals  Andre Agassi
12 Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl
11 Atp Finals  Jimmy Connors
Atp Finals  Boris Becker
Atp Finals  Pete Sampras
Atp Finals  Rafael Nadal

Doubles

# Titles
7 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming
Atp Finals  John McEnroe
5 Atp Finals  Mike Bryan
4 Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor
Atp Finals  Bob Bryan
# Consecutive titles
7 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming
Atp Finals  John McEnroe
2 Atp Finals  Stefan Edberg
Atp Finals  Anders Järryd
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan
Atp Finals  Bob Bryan
Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor (2x)
Atp Finals  Henri Kontinen
Atp Finals  John Peers
Atp Finals  Rajeev Ram
Atp Finals  Joe Salisbury
# Finals
7 Atp Finals  Peter Fleming
Atp Finals  John McEnroe
Atp Finals  Mike Bryan
6 Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor
Atp Finals  Bob Bryan
5 Atp Finals  Anders Järryd
# Matches won
42 Atp Finals  Mike Bryan
38 Atp Finals  Bob Bryan
34 Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor
29 Atp Finals  Todd Woodbridge
25 Atp Finals  Anders Järryd
Atp Finals  Mark Woodforde
# Editions played
16 Atp Finals  Mike Bryan
15 Atp Finals  Daniel Nestor
Atp Finals  Bob Bryan
14 Atp Finals  Leander Paes
12 Atp Finals  Mark Knowles
Atp Finals  Mahesh Bhupathi

Youngest & oldest champions

Singles Youngest Atp Finals  John McEnroe 19 years, 10 months 1978
Oldest Atp Finals  Novak Djokovic 36 years, 5 months 2023
Doubles Youngest Atp Finals  John McEnroe 19 years, 10 months 1978
Oldest Atp Finals  Mike Bryan 40 years, 6 months 2018

Year-end championships triple & double

Double crown

  • Winning the year-end championships in both singles and doubles in the same year.
Player Year
Atp Finals  John McEnroe 1978 (SD), 1983 (SD), 1984 (SD)
Atp Finals  Stan Smith 1970 (SD)

Year-end championships triple

  • ATP YEC (active); played since 1970.
  • WCT YEC (defunct); played from 1971 to 1989.
  • ITF YEC (defunct); played from 1990 to 1999.
Player ATP Finals WCT Finals Grand Slam Cup
Atp Finals  Boris Becker 1988 1988 1996

ATP Finals – WCT Finals double

Player ATP Finals WCT Finals
Atp Finals  Stan Smith 1970 1973
Atp Finals  Jimmy Connors 1977 1977
Atp Finals  John McEnroe 1978 1979
Atp Finals  Björn Borg 1979 1976
Atp Finals  Ivan Lendl 1981 1982
Atp Finals  Boris Becker 1988 1988

ATP Finals – Grand Slam Cup double

Player ATP Finals Grand Slam Cup
Atp Finals  Pete Sampras 1991 1990
Atp Finals  Michael Stich 1993 1992
Atp Finals  Boris Becker 1988 1996

Generations double

Player Next Gen Finals ATP Finals
Atp Finals  Stefanos Tsitsipas 2018 2019

Titles by country

Singles

11 
Atp Finals  United States (5 players)
Atp Finals  Serbia (1 player)
Atp Finals  West Germany / Germany (3 players), Atp Finals   Switzerland (1 player)
Atp Finals  Czechoslovakia (1 player)
Atp Finals  Romania (1 player)
Atp Finals  Sweden (2 players)
Atp Finals  Argentina (2 players), Atp Finals  Australia (1 player), Atp Finals  Russia (2 players), Atp Finals  Spain (2 players)
Atp Finals  Brazil, Atp Finals  Bulgaria, Atp Finals  Great Britain, Atp Finals  Greece

Doubles

Note: Titles, won by a team of players from same country, count as one title, not two.

23 
Atp Finals  United States (18 players)
Atp Finals  Canada (3 players)
Atp Finals  Australia (4 players), Atp Finals  Sweden (4 players)
Atp Finals  France (5 players), Atp Finals  Netherlands (4 players)
Atp Finals  South Africa (4 players), Atp Finals  Spain (6 players)
Atp Finals  Belarus (1 player), Atp Finals  Finland (1 player), Atp Finals  Great Britain (1 player), Atp Finals  Serbia (1 player)
Atp Finals  Bahamas, Atp Finals  Croatia, Atp Finals  Czechoslovakia (2 players), Atp Finals  Romania, Atp Finals   Switzerland

See also

References

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Atp Finals TournamentAtp Finals Prize money, ranking points and trophiesAtp Finals Past finalsAtp Finals List of championsAtp Finals Records and statisticsAtp Finals Year-end championships triple & doubleAtp Finals Titles by countryAtp FinalsATP TourGrand Slam (tennis)Tennis

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