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Big Four career statistics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of the combined career statistics of the Big Four, the four players who have dominated men's tennis in singles for the majority of the first quarter of the 21st century. The Big Four consists of Roger Federer,[1] Rafael Nadal,[2] Novak Djokovic,[3] and Andy Murray.[4]

The Big Four
Prize moneyUS$ 515 million
Singles
Career record4194–987 (81.0%)[a]
Career titles340
Highest rankingNo. 1 (2 Feb 2004F, 18 August 2008N, 4 July 2011D, 7 November 2016M)
Current rankingNo. 7 (18 November 2024D)[5]
Grand Slam singles results
Australian OpenW (2004F, 2006F, 2007F, 2008D, 2009N, 2010F, 2011D, 2012D, 2013D, 2015D, 2016D, 2017F, 2018F, 2019D, 2020D, 2021D, 2022N, 2023D)
French OpenW (2005N, 2006N,2007N, 2008N, 2009F, 2010N, 2011N, 2012N, 2013N, 2014N, 2016D, 2017N, 2018N, 2019N, 2020N, 2021D, 2022N, 2023D)
WimbledonW (2003F, 2004F, 2005F, 2006F, 2007F, 2008N, 2009F, 2010N, 2011D, 2012F, 2013M, 2014D, 2015D, 2016M, 2017F, 2018D, 2019D, 2021D, 2022D)
US OpenW (2004F, 2005F, 2006F, 2007F, 2008F, 2010N, 2011D, 2012M, 2013N, 2015D, 2017N, 2018D, 2019N, 2023D)
Other tournaments
Tour FinalsW (2003F, 2004F, 2006F, 2007F, 2008D, 2010F, 2011F, 2012D, 2013D, 2014D, 2015D, 2016M, 2022D, 2023D)
Olympic GamesW (2008N, 2012M, 2016M, 2024D)
Doubles
Career record420–336 (55.6%)
Career titles23
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian Open3R (2003F, 2004N, 2005N)
French Open2R (2006M)
WimbledonQF (2000F)
US OpenSF (2004N)
Other doubles tournaments
Olympic GamesW (2008F, 2016N)
Team competitions
Davis CupW (2004N, 2008N, 2009N, 2010D, 2011N, 2014F, 2015M, 2019N)
Hopman CupW (2001F, 2018F, 2019F)
Medal record
Olympic Games – Tennis
Gold medal – first place 2008 Beijing SinglesN
Gold medal – first place 2012 London SinglesM
Gold medal – first place 2016 Rio de Janeiro SinglesM
Gold medal – first place 2024 Paris SinglesD
Gold medal – first place 2008 Beijing DoublesF
Gold medal – first place 2016 Rio de Janeiro DoublesN
Silver medal – second place 2012 London SinglesF
Silver medal – second place 2012 London Mixed DoublesM
Bronze medal – third place 2008 Beijing SinglesD
Last updated on: 11 November 2024.

Overall dominance

[edit]

Grand Slam tournaments

[edit]

For two decades, from 2003 Australian Open to 2024 US Open, the Big Four have won a combined 69 Grand Slam singles titles.[b] Djokovic with a record 24 titles including a triple Career Grand Slam, Nadal with 22 including a double Career Grand Slam, Federer with 20 including a Career Grand Slam and Murray with 3.

The dominance does not just consist of winning the events, with all four members regularly making it to the latter stages of tournaments. 87 majors between the 2003 Australian Open to 2024 US Open, the only 8 finals not to include any member of the Big Four were those of 2003,[6] 2005,[7] 2024[8] Australian Open and 2003,[9] 2014,[10] 2020,[11] 2022,[12] 2024[13] US Open and 2003,[14] 2004,[15] 2024[16] French Open. They occupied 10 consecutive major finals (winner and runner-up) from the 2010 US Open to the 2013 Australian Open. Since 2008, they have occupied all 4 semi-final spots on 4 occasions, at the 2008 US Open, 2011 French Open, 2011 US Open and 2012 Australian Open, as well as taking 3 of 4 spaces on 9 other separate occasions. In 2011, they occupied 14 of a possible 16 Grand Slam semifinal slots. In the same period, only twice did 2 or more not made the semifinal stage (2009 and 2010 French Open), while in 2012 they took 13 of 16 Grand Slam semifinal slots.

The Big Four, along with Rod Laver, Tony Roche and Ivan Lendl, are the only men in Open Era to reach the semifinals at all four majors in a single year.[17] Djokovic has achieved this a record 6 times in his career so far. Similarly, the Big Four make up 4 of the 7 players (along with Andre Agassi, Ken Rosewall and Ivan Lendl) to have made the semifinals 3 or more times at each of the four majors.[18] Additionally, the Big Four make up 4 of the 10 players to have reached the final at each of the four majors. Finally, prior to 2009, no player had made 20 Grand Slam singles finals, with Ivan Lendl leading the way with 19. However, since Big Three ascent, Djokovic with a record 37, Federer with 31, and Nadal with 30 have each surpassed Lendl's mark.[19]

Key
W  F  SF QF #R RR Q# DNQ A NH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
To avoid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

Combined Grand Slam tournament performance timeline (best result)

[edit]
Grand Slam 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 SR
Australian Open 4RF WF SFF WF WF WD WN WF WD WD WD FN WD WD WF WF WD WD WD WN WD SFD 18/22
French Open 1RF 3RF WN WN WN WN WF WN WN WN WN WN FD WD WN WN WN WN WD WN WD QFD 18/22
Wimbledon WF WF WF WF WF WN WF WN WD WF WM WD WD WM WF WD WD NH[c] WD WD FD FD 19/21
US Open 4RF WF WF WF WF WF FF WN WD WM WN SFDF WD FD WN WD WN 4RD FD 4RN WD 3RD 14/22

Big Four Head-to-Head Grand Slam finals: 33

[edit]
No. Year Championship Surface Winner Runner-up Score
1. 2006 French Open Clay Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 1–6, 6–1, 6–4, 7–6(7–4)
2. 2006 Wimbledon Grass Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 6–0, 7–6(7–5), 6–7(2–7), 6–3
3. 2007 French Open Clay Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 6–3, 4–6, 6–3, 6–4
4. 2007 Wimbledon Grass Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 7–6(9–7), 4–6, 7–6(7–3), 2–6, 6–2
5. 2007 US Open Hard Switzerland Roger Federer Serbia Novak Djokovic 7–6(7–4), 7–6(7–2), 6–4
6. 2008 French Open Clay Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 6–1, 6–3, 6–0
7. 2008 Wimbledon Grass Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 6–4, 6–4, 6–7(5–7), 6–7(8–10), 9–7
8. 2008 US Open Hard Switzerland Roger Federer United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–2, 7–5, 6–2
9. 2009 Australian Open Hard Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 7–5, 3–6, 7–6(7–3), 3–6, 6–2
10. 2010 Australian Open Hard Switzerland Roger Federer United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–3, 6–4, 7–6(13–11)
11. 2010 US Open Hard Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–4, 5–7, 6–4, 6–2
12. 2011 Australian Open Hard Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–4, 6–2, 6–3
13. 2011 French Open Clay Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 7–5, 7–6(7–3), 5–7, 6–1
14. 2011 Wimbledon Grass Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–4, 6–1, 1–6, 6–3
15. 2011 US Open Hard Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–2, 6–4, 6–7(3–7), 6–1
16. 2012 Australian Open Hard Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 5–7, 6–4, 6–2, 6–7(5–7), 7–5
17. 2012 French Open Clay Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–4, 6–3, 2–6, 7–5
18. 2012 Wimbledon Grass Switzerland Roger Federer United Kingdom Andy Murray 4–6, 7–5, 6–3, 6–4
19. 2012 US Open Hard United Kingdom Andy Murray Serbia Novak Djokovic 7–6(12–10), 7–5, 2–6, 3–6, 6–2
20. 2013 Australian Open Hard Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–7(2–7), 7–6(7–3), 6–3, 6–2
21. 2013 Wimbledon Grass United Kingdom Andy Murray Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–4, 7–5, 6–4
22. 2013 US Open Hard Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–2, 3–6, 6–4, 6–1
23. 2014 French Open Clay Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 3–6, 7–5, 6–2, 6–4
24. 2014 Wimbledon Grass Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 6–7(7–9), 6–4, 7–6(7–4), 5–7, 6–4
25. 2015 Australian Open Hard Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 7–6(7–5), 6–7(4–7), 6–3, 6–0
26. 2015 Wimbledon Grass Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 7–6(7–1), 6–7(10–12), 6–4, 6–3
27. 2015 US Open Hard Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 6–4, 5–7, 6–4, 6–4
28. 2016 Australian Open Hard Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–1, 7–5, 7–6(7–3)
29. 2016 French Open Clay Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 3–6, 6–1, 6–2, 6–4
30. 2017 Australian Open Hard Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 6–4, 3–6, 6–1, 3–6, 6–3
31. 2019 Australian Open Hard Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 6–2, 6–3
32. 2019 Wimbledon Grass Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 7–6(7–5), 1–6, 7–6(7–4), 4–6, 13–12(7–3)
33. 2020 French Open Clay Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–0, 6–2, 7–5

ATP Masters tournaments

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Similarly, ATP Masters events have been dominated by the Big Four. Djokovic with a record 40 titles including a double Career Golden Masters, Nadal with 36, Federer with 28 and Murray with 14. They have won a combined 118 titles. Between the 2005 Indian Wells and 2017 Madrid they collectively won 96 of 112 events (85.7%), however, their most dominant period was from the 2011 Indian Wells to the 2017 Madrid where they won 54 of 58 (93.1%). This includes all 9 in 2011, 2013 and 2015. Moreover, from the 2014 Cincinnati to the 2016 Toronto, they won 18 consecutive ATP Masters events. From the beginning of 2013 through the first 6 events of 2017, they had a streak of 42 consecutive Masters events where at least one of the four reached the final, winning a combined 37 titles (88.1%). Strangely, only two times (2009, 2011) did all four win at least one event during the same calendar year.

Combined Masters performance timeline (best result)

[edit]
ATP Masters 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 SR
Indian Wells Masters 3RF 2RF WF WF WF WN WD WN SFN WD WF WN WD WD WD WF FF FF NH[c] 3RM FN 3RM 3RD 13/22
Miami Open FF QFF 4RN WF WF WD FN WM SFN WD WD WM WD WD WD WF 2RDF WF A 2RM 1RM 3RM 12/21
Monte-Carlo Masters 2RF 3RN A WN WN WN WN WN WN WN WN WD FF WD WN WN WN SFN QFN 2RD 3RD SFD 13/22
Madrid Open[d] WF 3RNF WF WF 2RMD WF WN WF WN WD WF WN WN WM WD WN QFN WD QFN SFD 1RM 4RN 15/23
Italian Open 1RF FF 2RF WN WN WN WD WN WN WD WN WN WD WD WM FD WN WN WD WN WD QFD 3RD 17/23
Canadian Open 1RF SFF WF WN WF WD WN WM WM WD WD WN FF WM WD FF WN WN NH[c] A 1RM 3RM A 14/20
Cincinnati Masters 1RF 2RF 1RFN WF QFNM WF WM WF WF WM WF WN WF WF FM QFN WD SFD WD 2RM 2RNM WD A 13/22
Shanghai Masters[e] QFF SFF 2RN WN WF FF WM FN WM WM WD WD WF WD WM WF WD QFDF NH[c] 1RM FD 12/22
Paris Masters QFF QFF A 3RD 3RM FN QFNFM WD SFF WF 3RM WD WD WD WM QFN FD WD SFN WD FD WD A 9/22
Big Four ATP Masters finals: 48
[edit]

The four have met one another at least twice in Masters finals. Their head-to-head records are: Federer 5–7 Nadal; Federer 3–5 Djokovic; Federer 0–2 Murray; Nadal 7–7 Djokovic; Nadal 1–1 Murray; Djokovic 5–5 Murray. Overall, in 48 'Big 4' Masters finals, Federer is 8–14; Nadal 15–13; Djokovic 17–15 and Murray 8–6.

No. Year Surface Tournament Winner Runner-up Score
1. 2005 Hard Miami Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 2–6, 6–7(4–7), 7–6(7–5), 6–3, 6–1
2. 2006 Clay Monte Carlo Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 6–2, 6–7(2–7), 6–3, 7–6(7–5)
3. 2006 Clay Rome Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 6–7(0–7), 7–6(7–5), 6–4, 2–6, 7–6(7–5)
4. 2007 Hard Indian Wells Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–2, 7–5
5. 2007 Clay Monte Carlo Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 6–4, 6–4
6. 2007 Clay Hamburg Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 2–6, 6–2, 6–0
7. 2007 Hard Canada Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 7–6(7–2), 2–6, 7–6(7–2)
8. 2008 Clay Monte Carlo Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 7–5, 7–5
9. 2008 Clay Hamburg Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 7–5, 6–7(3–7), 6–3
10. 2008 Hard Cincinnati United Kingdom Andy Murray Serbia Novak Djokovic 7–6(7–4), 7–6(7–5)
11. 2009 Hard Indian Wells Spain Rafael Nadal United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–1, 6–2
12. 2009 Hard Miami United Kingdom Andy Murray Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–2, 7–5
13. 2009 Clay Monte Carlo Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–3, 2–6, 6–1
14. 2009 Clay Rome Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 7–6(7–2), 6–2
15. 2009 Clay Madrid Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 6–4, 6–4
16. 2009 Hard Cincinnati Switzerland Roger Federer Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–1, 7–5
17. 2010 Clay Madrid Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 6–4, 7–6(7–5)
18. 2010 Hard Canada United Kingdom Andy Murray Switzerland Roger Federer 7–5, 7–5
19. 2010 Hard Shanghai United Kingdom Andy Murray Switzerland Roger Federer 6–3, 6–2
20. 2011 Hard Indian Wells Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 4–6, 6–3, 6–2
21. 2011 Hard Miami Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 4–6, 6–3, 7–6(7–4)
22. 2011 Clay Madrid Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 7–5, 6–4
23. 2011 Clay Rome Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–4, 6–4
24. 2011 Hard Cincinnati United Kingdom Andy Murray Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–4, 3–0 ret.
25. 2012 Hard Miami Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–1, 7–6(7–4)
26. 2012 Clay Monte Carlo Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–3, 6–1
27. 2012 Clay Rome Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 7–5, 6–3
28. 2012 Hard Cincinnati Switzerland Roger Federer Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–0, 7–6(9–7)
29. 2012 Hard Shanghai Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 5–7, 7–6(13–11), 6–3
30. 2013 Clay Monte Carlo Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–2, 7–6(7–1)
31. 2013 Clay Rome Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 6–1, 6–3
32. 2014 Hard Indian Wells Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 3–6, 6–3, 7–6(7–3)
33. 2014 Hard Miami Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 6–3
34. 2014 Clay Rome Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 4–6, 6–3, 6–3
35. 2015 Hard Indian Wells Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 6–3, 6–7(5–7), 6–2
36. 2015 Hard Miami Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 7–6(7–3), 4–6, 6–0
37. 2015 Clay Madrid United Kingdom Andy Murray Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 6–2
38. 2015 Clay Rome Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 6–4, 6–3
39. 2015 Hard Canada United Kingdom Andy Murray Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–4, 4–6, 6–3
40. 2015 Hard Cincinnati Switzerland Roger Federer Serbia Novak Djokovic 7–6(7–1), 6–3
41. 2015 Hard (i) Paris Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–2, 6–4
42. 2016 Clay Madrid Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–2, 3–6, 6–3
43. 2016 Clay Rome United Kingdom Andy Murray Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–3, 6–3
44. 2017 Hard Miami Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 6–4
45. 2017 Hard Shanghai Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 6–4, 6–3
46. 2018 Hard Cincinnati Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 6–4, 6–4
47. 2019 Clay Rome Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–0, 4–6, 6–1
48. 2021 Clay Rome Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 7–5, 1–6, 6–3

From 2007 until 2022, the Big Four (Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, and Andy Murray) have combined to win 98 of 112 ATP Masters finals. Djokovic won 38 titles, Nadal won 30 titles, Federer won 16, and Murray 14 titles. The remaining 31 titles were won by 24 different players, with only Alexander Zverev, Daniil Medvedev, David Nalbandian, and Nikolay Davydenko winning multiple titles during that period of time, five, four, two, and two titles respectively.

Only 13 players outside the Big Four have reached 3 or more Masters finals during 2007–2022. David Ferrer made it to 7 finals between 2010 and 2015, winning a title at the 2012 Paris.[20] John Isner has made it to 5 finals between 2012 and 2019, and won the 2018 Miami title.[21] Tomáš Berdych made 3 finals from 2010 to 2015, and had also previously won the 2005 Paris title.[22] Juan Martín del Potro reached 4 finals between 2009 and 2018, and won the 2018 Indian Wells title.[23] Kei Nishikori and Milos Raonic have also made it to 4 finals but won none. Dominic Thiem has made it to 3 finals and won the 2019 Indian Wells title.[24] Jo-Wilfried Tsonga made 3 finals and won the 2014 Toronto title (2008 Paris was Tsonga's first Masters title).[25][26] Stan Wawrinka made it to 3 finals and won the 2014 Monte Carlo title.[27] Stefanos Tsitsipas made it to 3 finals and won the 2021 Monte Carlo title.[28] Gaël Monfils made it to 3 finals but won none. Between 2017 and 2021, Alexander Zverev made it to 9 finals and won 5 titles (2017 Rome, 2017 Montreal, 2018 Madrid, 2021 Madrid, 2021 Cincinnati),[29][30][31][32][33] while Daniil Medvedev made it to 6 finals and won 4 titles (2019 Cincinnati, 2019 Shanghai, 2020 Paris, 2023 Rome).[34][35][36][37]

Only David Nalbandian (2007 Madrid, 2007 Paris),[38][39] Nikolay Davydenko (2008 Miami, 2009 Shanghai)[40][41] made it to 2 finals and won all two. Andy Roddick (2010 Miami)[42] made it to 2 finals and won one. Mardy Fish and Andrey Rublev also made it to 2 finals but won none.

Only 11 players during 2007–2022 outside of the Big Four won a title by beating a member of the Big Four in the final:

The Big Four had a streak of 42 consecutive finals appearances (from 2013 Indian Wells to 2017 Montreal). They won 18 consecutive titles from the 2014 Cincinnati to the 2016 Toronto event. Nadal and Djokovic together held all 9 Masters singles titles starting with the 2013 Monte Carlo tournament through the 2014 Miami event.

Combined ATP Finals performance timeline (best result)

[edit]
  • Since the year of first ATP Finals qualification.
ATP Finals 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 SR
SFF WF WF FF WF WF WD SFF WF WF WD WD WD WD WM SFF FD SFF SFDN SFD WD WD A 14/22

Big Four ATP Finals finals: 6

[edit]
Year Location Surface Winner Runner-up Score
2010 London Hard (i) Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 3–6, 6–1
2012 London Hard (i) Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 7–6(8–6), 7–5
2013 London Hard (i) Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 6–4
2014 London Hard (i) Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer Walkover
2015 London Hard (i) Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 6–3, 6–4
2016 London Hard (i) United Kingdom Andy Murray Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–3, 6–4

Combined Olympic Games singles performance timeline (best result)

[edit]

Olympic Games
2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2021 2024 SR
4thF 2RF GN GM GM 4thD GD 4/7

Big Four Olympic finals

[edit]
Year Games Surface Winner Runner-up Score
2012 London Grass United Kingdom Andy Murray Switzerland Roger Federer 6–2, 6–1, 6–4

Big Four finals in ATP 500 & ATP 250: 15

[edit]
No. Year Surface Tournament Winner Runner-up Score
1. 2005 Hard (i) Bangkok Switzerland Roger Federer United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–3, 7–5
2. 2006 Hard Dubai Spain Rafael Nadal Switzerland Roger Federer 2–6, 6–4, 6–4
3. 2008 Grass Queen's Club Spain Rafael Nadal Serbia Novak Djokovic 7–6(8–6), 7–5
4. 2009 Hard (i) Rotterdam United Kingdom Andy Murray Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 4–6, 6–0
5. 2009 Hard (i) Basel Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 6–4, 4–6, 6–2
6. 2010 Hard (i) Basel Switzerland Roger Federer Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–4, 3–6, 6–1
7. 2011 Hard Dubai Serbia Novak Djokovic Switzerland Roger Federer 6–3, 6–3
8. 2011 Hard Tokyo United Kingdom Andy Murray Spain Rafael Nadal 3–6, 6–2, 6–0
9. 2012 Hard Dubai Switzerland Roger Federer United Kingdom Andy Murray 7–5, 6–4
10. 2013 Hard Beijing Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 6–4
11. 2015 Hard Dubai Switzerland Roger Federer Serbia Novak Djokovic 6–3, 7–5
12. 2015 Hard Beijing Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–2, 6–2
13. 2015 Hard (i) Basel Switzerland Roger Federer Spain Rafael Nadal 6–3, 5–7, 6–3
14. 2016 Hard Doha Serbia Novak Djokovic Spain Rafael Nadal 6–1, 6–2
15. 2017 Hard Doha Serbia Novak Djokovic United Kingdom Andy Murray 6–3, 5–7, 6–4

Big Titles

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The Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP Masters tournaments and the ATP Finals are considered the top tier events of the ATP Tour annual calendar, in addition to the quadrennial Olympics. They make up the most coveted titles in men's tennis and are collectively known as the 'Big Titles'. Djokovic, uniquely, won all titles of the annual calendar, Federer won all four majors and the year end championship, Nadal won all four majors and the olympics and Murray won at least a title in the four categories, majors, masters, the year end championship and the olympics.

Between 2004 and 2024, all other tennis players won 15 Grand Slam titles of 83, 64 ATP Masters of 181, 7 ATP Finals of 20, 1 Olympics gold of 5.

Current as of 2024 Shanghai.
Titles Player Grand Slams ATP Finals ATP Masters Olympics[f] Career
Grand Slam
Career
Super Slam
Career
Golden Slam
Career Golden
Masters
W–L (%)
AO RG WIM USO IW MIA MON MAD[d] ROM CAN CIN SHA[e] PAR
72 Serbia Novak Djokovic W (10) W (3) W (7) W (4) W (7) W (5) W (6) W (2) W (3) W (6) W (4) W (3) W (4) W (7) 2016, 2021, 2023 2024 2024 2018, 2020 855–165 (83.8%)
59 Spain Rafael Nadal W (2) W (14) W (2) W (4) F (2) W (3) F (5) W (11) W (5) W (10) W (5) W (1) W (1) F (1) 2010, 2022 × 2010 × 756–155 (83%)
54 Switzerland Roger Federer W (6) W (1) W (8) W (5) W (6) W (5) W (4) F (4) W (6)§ F (4) W (2) W (7) W (3)§ W (1) 2009 × × × 822–190 (81.2%)
20 United Kingdom Andy Murray F (5) F (1) W (2) W (1) W (1) F (1) W (2) SF (3) W (1) W (1) W (3) W (2) W (4)§ W (1) × × × × 458–170 (72.9%)
205 Total 69 14 118 6 6 1 2 2 2891–680 (81%)

Other feats: Djokovic achieved a Non-calendar Grand Slam. Nadal and Djokovic both achieved a Surface Slam. Nadal, Djokovic and Federer achieved a Channel Slam and a Three-Quarter Slam.

^ Outright active tournament record underlined (§ = title(s) in different tournament(s))

Rivalries

[edit]

The respective rivalries between the Big Four are considered to be some of the greatest of all time.[47][48][49][50] Amongst the four of them they have played 235 matches against each other, 74 of which were at Grand Slam events. This includes 33 Grand Slam tournament finals, as well as 26 Grand Slam semifinal meetings, more than any other group of four players. Currently, Djokovic leads the head to head record against all members of the Big Four.[51] Djokovic has also won 20+ matches against all three of his peers, while Nadal has won 20+ matches against two of his peers. The Djokovic–Nadal and Djokovic–Federer rivalries are the only two in the Open Era to reach 50 matches. With five, Federer has recorded most bagels against all three of his peers, while receiving only one.

Head-to-Head records

[edit]
Player Serbia Djokovic Spain Nadal Switzerland Federer United Kingdom Murray Overall Win %
Serbia Novak Djokovic 31–29 27–23 25–11 83–63 56.8%
Spain Rafael Nadal 29–31 24–16 17–7 70–54 56.5%
Switzerland Roger Federer 23–27 16–24 14–11 53–62 46.1%
United Kingdom Andy Murray 11–25 7–17 11–14 29–56 34.1%

Big Four vs. the rest of the field

[edit]

The Big Four have collectively won 69 major titles (Djokovic winning a record 24, Nadal 22, Federer 20, and Murray 3) since 2003 Australian Open. Since Big Four's dominance in 2004 Australian Open, the only other players who have a major title are Gastón Gaudio (2004 French Open),[15] Marat Safin (2005 Australian Open),[7] Juan Martín del Potro (2009 US Open),[52] Stan Wawrinka (2014 Australian Open, 2015 French Open, 2016 US Open),[53][54][55] Marin Čilić (2014 US Open),[10] Dominic Thiem (2020 US Open),[11] Daniil Medvedev (2021 US Open),[56] Carlos Alcaraz (2022 US Open, 2023 Wimbledon, 2024 French Open, 2024 Wimbledon)[12][57][16][58] and Jannik Sinner (2024 Australian Open, 2024 US Open).[8][13] Their combined record at Grand Slam tournaments against everyone else is 1218–193 (86.3%).[59] Moreover, only 6 times has a player outside the group beaten two of them in the same Grand Slam (Safin at the 2005 Australian Open, Tsonga at the 2008 Australian Open, del Potro at the 2009 US Open, Berdych at the 2010 Wimbledon and Wawrinka at the 2014 Australian Open and the 2015 French Open). Stan Wawrinka, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Tomáš Berdych are the only players to have beaten each member of the Big Four at a Grand Slam event.

Wins over each member of the Big Four at a Grand Slam event

  • Stan Wawrinka, 10 wins (defeated Murray at the 2010 and 2013 US Open and 2017 and 2020 French Open; Nadal at the 2014 Australian Open; Federer at the 2015 French Open; and Djokovic at the 2014 Australian Open, 2015 French Open and 2016 and 2019 US Open).
  • Tomáš Berdych, 6 wins (defeated Murray at the 2010 French Open; Federer at the 2010 Wimbledon and 2012 US Open; Djokovic at the 2010 and 2017 Wimbledon; and Nadal at the 2015 Australian Open)
  • Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, 5 wins (defeated Murray and Nadal at the 2008 Australian Open; Djokovic at the 2010 Australian Open; and Federer at the 2011 Wimbledon and at the 2013 French Open)

Wins over three members of the Big Four at a Grand Slam event

  • Fernando Verdasco, 4 wins (defeated Djokovic at the 2005 US Open; Murray at the 2009 Australian Open and the 2018 US Open; and Nadal at the 2016 Australian Open)
  • Andy Roddick, 3 wins (defeated Nadal at the 2004 US Open; Djokovic at the 2009 Australian Open; and Murray at the 2009 Wimbledon)
  • Marin Čilić, 3 wins (defeated Murray at the 2009 US Open; Federer at the 2014 US Open; and Nadal at the 2018 Australian Open)

Wins over two members of the Big Four at a Grand Slam event

  • Juan Martín del Potro, 4 wins (defeated Nadal and Federer at the 2009 US Open; Federer at the 2017 US Open; and Nadal at the 2018 US Open)
  • Marat Safin, 2 wins (defeated Djokovic and Federer at the 2005 Australian Open)
  • Tomáš Berdych, 2 wins (defeated Federer and Djokovic at the 2010 Wimbledon)

Only 4 players have defeated three of the Big Four at the same tournament. Two of these players are members of the Big Four: Nadal who defeated Murray in the round of 16, Djokovic in the semifinals, and Federer in the final to win the 2008 Hamburg; and Federer who defeated Murray in the round robin round, Djokovic in the semifinals, and Nadal in the finals to win the 2010 ATP Finals. Only two other players to have achieved this trifecta are:

  • David Nalbandian (defeated Nadal in the quarterfinals, Djokovic in the semifinals, and Federer in the finals to win the 2007 Madrid)
  • Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (defeated Djokovic in the round of 16, Murray in the quarterfinals, and Federer in the finals to win the 2014 Toronto)

Only 4 players have beaten a member of the Big Four in a major final. The first to do so was del Potro when he defeated Federer in the 2009 US Open final. Wawrinka defeated Nadal in the 2014 Australian Open final, and Djokovic in the 2015 Roland Garros final and the 2016 US Open final. Medvedev defeated Djokovic in the 2021 US Open final, and Alcaraz beat Djokovic in the 2023 and 2024 Wimbledon final. In all cases, except Alcaraz, they defeated the world No. 1 in the process.

The Big Four have played in 100 tournaments where all four have competed. Collectively, they have won 88 of these 100 tournaments (88%). Of the 12 tournaments they failed to win, they were runner-up in 6 of them, and 5 of these 12 tournaments occurred prior to them first being seeded as the top four players (later 2008 US Open). Since then, the Big Four have won 59 of 66 tournaments (89.4%). And starting with the 2010 Rome Masters, they had won 31 consecutive tournaments where all four were present, until the 2014 Australian Open.

Only 7 players have managed to win a tournament where all four of the Big Four have competed:

The Big Four's dominance is also high when only three of the Big Four have competed in the same tournament. Of 49 events where this has occurred, they have won 43 of them (87.8%). Since 2008, they have won 32 of 37 tournaments (86.5%).

Only 14 players have recorded at least 1 victory over each member of the Big Four. These players who have won at least once against each of the Big Four. Of these players, 8 have recorded 10 or more victories, and none have a lead record against all four combined.

Top-level tournament records (2004 Australian Open2024 ATP Finals)

Player Grand Slams ATP Masters ATP Finals Olympics Total
Big Four 68 117 13 4 202 (69.2%)
Rest of the field 16 65 8 1 90 (30.8%)

Rankings

[edit]

Between 8 September 2008 and 28 January 2013, the top four positions in the ATP rankings were occupied by all members of the Big Four for all but 16 weeks. Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Novak Djokovic were consistently in the top four for this period, with Andy Murray dropping to No. 5 during all 16 of those weeks. The only two other players who entered the top four in this period were Juan Martín del Potro (3 weeks) and Robin Söderling (13 weeks). This run was ended when David Ferrer replaced Nadal in the top four following a period of injury for Nadal, and retained his place in the top four for much of 2013 as Roger Federer dropped down the rankings due to his own back injury problems.[65]

All four have been world number one. Federer first reached number one in 2004 after winning his first Australian Open,[66] whereas Nadal did in 2008 following his Olympics victory after three straight years of ending the year ranked world No. 2, behind Federer.[67] Similarly, Djokovic achieved world No. 1 status following his Wimbledon victory in 2011,[68] after four consecutive years at No. 3, in a season which is regarded as one of the greatest in the history of the sport.[69][70][71] Murray reached the number one position after the 2016 Paris on 7 November 2016, towards the end of a season in which he had made three Grand Slam tournament finals (winning one, Wimbledon), as well as winning the Olympic Games and three Masters tournaments.[72]

Combined ranking timeline (best result)

[edit]
  • Since the first year-end No. 1 finish.
ATP rankings 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Total
Years
Total
Weeks
1F 1F 1F 1F 1N 1F 1N 1D 1D 1N 1D 1D 1M 1N 1D 1N 1D 1D 2N 1D 7D 19 988
Year-ends at No. 1 5F 1M 5N 8D
Weeks at No. 1

41M

310F

209N 428D

^ Outright records indicated in bold.

Year-end ranking timeline by year

[edit]

Note: rank is at the end of the season or when the player is last ranked in the season.

Year-end ranking 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Switzerland Roger Federer 301 64 29 13 6 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 3 2 6 2 3 16 2 3 3 5 16 97^ retired
Spain Rafael Nadal none 811 200 49 51 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 4 1 3 5 9 1 2 1 2 6 2 670 155^ retired
Serbia Novak Djokovic none 679 186 78 16 3 3 3 3 1 1 2 1 1 2 12 1 2 1 1 5 1 7
United Kingdom Andy Murray none 540 411 63 17 11 4 4 4 4 3 4 6 2 1 16 240 125 122 134 49 42 160^ retired

^ On 23 September 2022, Federer retired from professional tennis at the 2022 Laver Cup. He played this last ATP event with protected ranking 9, however he was last ranked 97 at the starting week of 2022 Wimbledon in the ATP rankings.[73]

^ On 27 July 2024, Murray retired from professional tennis at the 2024 Olympics. Last ranking recorded on 12 August 2024.

^ On 19 November 2024, Nadal retired from professional tennis at the 2024 Davis Cup. Last ranking recorded on 25 November 2024.

Year-end ranking timeline by age at end of season

[edit]
Year-end ranking 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41
Switzerland Roger Federer 301 64 29 13 6 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 3 2 6 2 3 16 2 3 3 5 16 97^
Spain Rafael Nadal 49 51 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 4 1 3 5 9 1 2 1 2 6 2 670 155^ retired
Serbia Novak Djokovic 186 78 16 3 3 3 3 1 1 2 1 1 2 12 1 2 1 1 5 1 7
United Kingdom Andy Murray 411 63 17 11 4 4 4 4 3 4 6 2 1 16 240 125 122 134 49 42 160^ retired

Big Four ATP world No. 1 era

[edit]
Correct as of 9 June 2024.
Player Start date End date Weeks Total
Switzerland Roger Federer 2 February 2004 17 August 2008 237 237
Spain Rafael Nadal 18 August 2008 5 July 2009 46 283
Switzerland Roger Federer (2) 6 July 2009 6 June 2010 48 331
Spain Rafael Nadal (2) 7 June 2010 3 July 2011 56 387
Serbia Novak Djokovic 4 July 2011 8 July 2012 53 440
Switzerland Roger Federer (3) 9 July 2012 4 November 2012 17 457
Serbia Novak Djokovic (2) 5 November 2012 6 October 2013 48 505
Spain Rafael Nadal (3) 7 October 2013 6 July 2014 39 544
Serbia Novak Djokovic (3) 7 July 2014 6 November 2016 122 666
United Kingdom Andy Murray 7 November 2016 20 August 2017 41 707
Spain Rafael Nadal (4) 21 August 2017 18 February 2018 26 733
Switzerland Roger Federer (4) 19 February 2018 1 April 2018 6 739
Spain Rafael Nadal (5) 2 April 2018 13 May 2018 6 745
Switzerland Roger Federer (5) 14 May 2018 20 May 2018 1 746
Spain Rafael Nadal (6) 21 May 2018 17 June 2018 4 750
Switzerland Roger Federer (6) 18 June 2018 24 June 2018 1 751
Spain Rafael Nadal (7) 25 June 2018 4 November 2018 19 770
Serbia Novak Djokovic (4) 5 November 2018 3 November 2019 52 822
Spain Rafael Nadal (8) 4 November 2019 2 February 2020 13 835
Serbia Novak Djokovic (5) 3 February 2020 23 March 2020 7 842
Rankings frozen
23 March 2020 23 August 2020 22 22
Serbia Novak Djokovic (5) 24 August 2020 27 February 2022 79 921
Serbia Novak Djokovic (6) 21 March 2022 12 June 2022 12 933
Serbia Novak Djokovic (7) 30 January 2023 19 March 2023 7 940
Serbia Novak Djokovic (8) 3 April 2023 21 May 2023 7 947
Serbia Novak Djokovic (9) 12 June 2023 25 June 2023 2 949
Serbia Novak Djokovic (10) 11 September 2023 9 June 2024 39 988
Total Weeks 2 February 2004 9 June 2024 988

Represents ATP rankings record.

Top 4 time spans

[edit]

Top 1

[edit]

Time spans Big 4 held the Top 1 ATP ranking position.

Start date End date Weeks
2 February 2004 27 February 2022 921
Total 921

After Federer became No. 1 on 2 February 2004, the Big 4 member holding the No. 1 ranking changed 24 times.

Top 2

[edit]

Time spans Big 4 held the Top 2 ATP ranking positions.

Start date End date Weeks
25 July 2005 18 March 2013 396
13 May 2013 8 March 2021 397
Total 793

Spans per pair:

Pair Start date End date Weeks Total Weeks
Nadal–Federer 25 July 2005 6 September 2010 267 267
Djokovic–Federer 13 September 2010 7 March 2011 25 293
Djokovic–Nadal 21 March 2011 25 June 2012 66 360
Djokovic–Federer 9 July 2012 18 March 2013 36 396
Murray 13 May 2013 12 August 2013 13 409
Nadal–Djokovic 19 August 2013 23 June 2014 44 444
Nadal–Federer 7 July 2014 5 October 2015 65 511
Murray–Federer 12 October 2015 2 November 2015 3 515
Murray–Djokovic 9 November 2015 29 May 2017 81 597
Nadal–Murray 12 June 2017 28 August 2017 11 610
Federer–Nadal 11 September 2017 19 March 2018 27 639
Federer–Nadal 2 April 2018 18 June 2018 11 652
Federer–Djokovic 25 June 2018 29 October 2018 18 671
Nadal–Djokovic 5 November 2018 20 January 2020 63 735
Nadal 3 February 2020 8 March 2021 57 793

Top 3

[edit]

Time spans Big 4 held the Top 3 ATP ranking positions.

Start date End date Weeks
13 August 2007 28 June 2010 148
16 August 2010 11 October 2010 8
18 October 2010 7 May 2012 80
21 May 2012 24 June 2013 57
12 August 2013 7 October 2013 8
7 July 2014 23 March 2015 37
24 August 2015 26 October 2015 9
9 November 2015 15 August 2016 39
17 July 2017 30 October 2017 15
10 September 2018 14 January 2019 18
Total 419

Spans per pair:

Pair Start date End date Weeks Total Weeks
Djokovic–Murray 13 August 2007 10 August 2009 104 104
Nadal–Murray 17 August 2009 12 October 2009 8 113
Djokovic–Murray 19 October 2009 8 February 2010 16 130
Nadal–Murray 15 February 2010 29 March 2010 6 137
Nadal–Djokovic 5 April 2010 28 June 2010 11 149
Djokovic–Federer 16 August 2010 11 October 2010 8 157
Djokovic–Federer 18 October 2010 10 October 2011 51 208
Murray–Federer 17 October 2011 7 May 2012 29 238
Federer–Nadal 21 May 2012 27 August 2012 14 252
Murray–Federer 10 September 2012 24 June 2013 41 293
Nadal–Murray 12 August 2013 7 October 2013 8 301
Federer–Nadal 7 July 2014 23 March 2015 37 338
Murray–Federer 24 August 2015 26 October 2015 9 347
Federer–Murray 9 November 2015 9 May 2016 26 373
Federer 16 May 2016 15 August 2016 13 386
Federer–Murray 17 July 2017 30 October 2017 15 401
Djokovic–Federer 10 September 2018 14 January 2019 18 419

Top 4

[edit]

Time spans Big 4 held the Top 4 ATP ranking positions.

Start date End date Weeks
8 September 2008 4 January 2010 69
18 January 2010 12 April 2010 12
4 April 2011 14 January 2013 93
2 February 2015 23 February 2015 4
9 March 2015 23 March 2015 3
22 August 2016 3 October 2016 6
3 April 2017 24 July 2017 16
Total 203

Spans per pair:

Pair Start date End date Weeks Total Weeks
Djokovic–Murray 8 September 2008 4 January 2010 69 69
Murray–Nadal 18 January 2010 12 April 2010 12 81
Murray–Federer 4 April 2011 21 November 2011 33 114
Murray–Nadal 28 November 2011 14 January 2013 59 174
Federer–Murray 2 February 2015 23 March 2015 7 181
Federer–Nadal 22 August 2016 3 October 2016 6 187
Federer–Nadal 3 April 2017 29 May 2017 8 195
Djokovic 12 June 2017 24 July 2017 6 203

Weeks in Top 4

[edit]
Correct as of 11 November 2024.
Player No. 1 No. 2 No. 3 No. 4 Total
Switzerland Roger Federer 310 218 2223 54 8045
Spain Rafael Nadal 209 3872 90 70 756
Serbia Novak Djokovic 4281 171 157 42 798
United Kingdom Andy Murray 41 79 106 1814 407

1 Most weeks at No. 1 record
2 Most weeks at No. 2 record
3 Most weeks at No. 3 record
4 Most weeks at No. 4 record
5 Most weeks in Top 4 record

Career Grand Slam tournament 1st seedings

[edit]

Djokovic has been seeded 1st in 33 Grand Slam tournaments, followed by Federer (24), Nadal (16) and Murray (3).

Year Australia Australian Open France French Open United Kingdom Wimbledon United States US Open
2004 United States Roddick (1) Switzerland Federer (1) Switzerland Federer (2) Switzerland Federer (3)
2005 Switzerland Federer (4) Switzerland Federer (5) Switzerland Federer (6) Switzerland Federer (7)
2006 Switzerland Federer (8) Switzerland Federer (9) Switzerland Federer (10) Switzerland Federer (11)
2007 Switzerland Federer (12) Switzerland Federer (13) Switzerland Federer (14) Switzerland Federer (15)
2008 Switzerland Federer (16) Switzerland Federer (17) Switzerland Federer (18) Spain Nadal (1)
2009 Spain Nadal (2) Spain Nadal (3) Spain Nadal1 (4) Switzerland Federer (19)
2010 Switzerland Federer (20) Switzerland Federer (21) Switzerland Federer2 (22) Spain Nadal (5)
2011 Spain Nadal (6) Spain Nadal (7) Spain Nadal (8) Serbia Djokovic (1)
2012 Serbia Djokovic (2) Serbia Djokovic (3) Serbia Djokovic (4) Switzerland Federer (23)
2013 Serbia Djokovic (5) Serbia Djokovic (6) Serbia Djokovic (7) Serbia Djokovic (8)
2014 Spain Nadal (9) Spain Nadal (10) Serbia Djokovic2 (9) Serbia Djokovic (10)
2015 Serbia Djokovic (11) Serbia Djokovic (12) Serbia Djokovic (13) Serbia Djokovic (14)
2016 Serbia Djokovic (15) Serbia Djokovic (16) Serbia Djokovic (17) Serbia Djokovic (18)
2017 United Kingdom Murray (1) United Kingdom Murray (2) United Kingdom Murray (3) Spain Nadal (11)
2018 Spain Nadal (12) Spain Nadal (13) Switzerland Federer2 (24) Spain Nadal (14)
2019 Serbia Djokovic (19) Serbia Djokovic (20) Serbia Djokovic (21) Serbia Djokovic (22)
2020 Spain Nadal (15) Serbia Djokovic (24) Tournament cancelled [c] Serbia Djokovic (23)
2021 Serbia Djokovic (25) Serbia Djokovic (26) Serbia Djokovic (27) Serbia Djokovic (28)
2022 Serbia Djokovic 3 (29) Serbia Djokovic (30) Serbia Djokovic (31) Russia Medvedev (1)
2023 Spain Nadal (16) Spain Alcaraz (1) Spain Alcaraz (2) Spain Alcaraz (3)
2024 Serbia Djokovic (32) Serbia Djokovic (33) Italy Sinner (1) Italy Sinner (2)

[1] Nadal was seeded #1 but withdrew from the tournament after the draw was released.
[2] Seeded first ahead of Nadal despite their world rankings being reversed, this was due to Wimbledon's grass seedings formula.
[3] Djokovic was seeded #1 but withdrew from the tournament after the draw was released.
Bolded name indicates that the tournament was Big 4 by the top seed.

Overall performances

[edit]

Current as of 2024 Davis Cup

Player Singles Doubles and Mixed Doubles Total
Titles Finals Match Win % Titles Finals Match Win % Titles Finals Match Win %
Switzerland Roger Federer 103 157 81% (1316–312) 8 14 61% (178–113) 111 171 78% (1494–425)
Spain Rafael Nadal 92 131 82% (1180–264) 11 15 64% (154–86) 103 146 79% (1334–350)
Serbia Novak Djokovic 99 140 83% (1239–249) 1 3 47% (86–97) 100 143 79% (1325–346)
United Kingdom Andy Murray 46 71 74% (856–305) 3 6 50% (104–103) 49 77 70% (960–408)
Total 340 499 80% (4591–1130) 23 38 57% (522–399) 363 537 77% (5113–1529)

Grand Slam performances

[edit]

Current as of 2024 US Open

Player AO RG WIM USO
Titles Finals Win % Titles Finals Win % Titles Finals Win % Titles Finals Win %
Switzerland Roger Federer 6 7 87% (102–15) 1 5 81% (73–17) 8 12 88% (105–14) 5 7 86% (89–14)
Spain Rafael Nadal 2 6 83% (77–16) 14 14 97% (112–4) 2 5 83% (58–12) 4 5 85% (67–12)
Serbia Novak Djokovic 10 10 91% (94–9) 3 7 86% (96–16) 7 10 89% (97–12) 4 10 87% (90–14)
United Kingdom Andy Murray 0 5 76% (51–16) 0 1 76% (39–12) 2 3 82% (61–13) 1 2 75% (49–16)
Total 18 28 85% (324–56) 18 27 87% (320–49) 19 29 86% (321–51) 14 24 84% (295–56)

Grand Slam tournament performance comparison

[edit]

Before 2005, Murray and Djokovic had not competed in a Grand Slam tournament. Nadal had made four appearances during 2003 and 2004, reaching the third round at 2003 Wimbledon and 2004 Australian Open. Federer had been competing in Grand Slam tournaments since 1999, and had won Wimbledon in 2003 and 2004, as well as the 2004 Australian Open and 2004 US Open.

2003–2008

[edit]
Player
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US
Switzerland Roger Federer 4R 1R W 4R W 3R W W SF SFN W W W FN WN W WD FN WN WD SFD FN FN WDM
Spain Rafael Nadal A A 3R 2R 3R A A 2R 4R WF 2R 3R A WDF FF QF QFM WDF FDF 4R SF WDF WF SFM
Serbia Novak Djokovic A A A A A A A A 1R 2R 3R 3R 1R QFN 4R 3R 4RF SFN SFN FF WF SFN 2R SFF
United Kingdom Andy Murray A A A A A A A A A A 3R 2R 1R 1R 4R 4R 4RN A A 3R 1R 3R QFN FNF

2009–2014

[edit]
Player
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US
Switzerland Roger Federer FN W W FD WM QF QF SFD SFD FDN QF SFD SFN SFD WDM QF SFM QF 2R 4R SFMN 4R FD SF
Spain Rafael Nadal WF 4R A SF QFM W WM WD QF WMF FMD FMD FFD WD 2R A A WD 1R WD FF WMD 4R A
Serbia Novak Djokovic QF 3R QF SFF QF QF SF FFN WFM SFF WN WFN WMN FFN SFF FM WM SFN FM FN QF FN WF SFM
United Kingdom Andy Murray 4R QF SF 4R FNF 4R SFN 3R FD SFN SFN SFN SFD QF FF WD FFD A WD QF QFF SFN QF QFD

2015–2020

[edit]
Player
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS WIM US RG
Switzerland Roger Federer 3R QF FMD FD SFD A SF A WN A W QF W A QF 4R 4R SFN FND QF SFD NH[c] A A
Spain Rafael Nadal QF QFD 2R 3R 1R 3R A 4R FF W 4R W QF W SFD SF FD WF SFF W QF A WD
Serbia Novak Djokovic WM FNM WF WF WFM WM 3R F 2R QF QF A 4R QF WN W WN SF WF 4R WF 4R FN
United Kingdom Andy Murray FD SFD SFF 4R FD FD W QF 4R SF QF A A A A 2R 1R A A A A 2R 1R

2021–2026

[edit]
Player
2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026
AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US
Switzerland Roger Federer A 4R QF A A A A A retired
Spain Rafael Nadal QF SFD A A W WD SF 4R 2R A A A A 1R A A retired
Serbia Novak Djokovic W WN W F A QFN W A W W F W SF QF F 3R
United Kingdom Andy Murray A A 3R 1R 2R A 2R 3R 3R A 2R 2R 1R 1R A retired

D indicates the player met Novak Djokovic at that tournament.
F indicates the player met Roger Federer at that tournament.
M indicates the player met Andy Murray at that tournament.
N indicates the player met Rafael Nadal at that tournament.

Grand Slam tournament performance comparison by age

[edit]

Note: age is at the end of the season

17–22

[edit]
Player 17 18 19 20 21 22
AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US
Switzerland Roger Federer A A A A A 1R 1R A 3R 4R 1R 4R 3R QF QF 4R 4R 1R 1R 4R 4R 1R W 4R
Spain Rafael Nadal A A 3R 2R 3R A A 2R 4R WF 2R 3R A WDF FF QF QFM WDF FDF 4R SF WDF WF SFM
Serbia Novak Djokovic A A A A 1R 2R 3R 3R 1R QFN 4R 3R 4RF SFN SFN FF WF SFN 2R SFF QF 3R QF SFF
United Kingdom Andy Murray A A A A A A 3R 2R 1R 1R 4R 4R 4RN A A 3R 1R 3R QFN FNF 4R QF SF 4R

23–28

[edit]
Player 23 24 25 26 27 28
AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US
Switzerland Roger Federer W 3R W W SF SFN W W W FN WN W WD FN WN WD SFD FN FN WDM FN W W FD
Spain Rafael Nadal WF 4R A SF QFM W WM WD QF WMF FMD FMD FFD WD 2R A A WD 1R WD FF WMD 4R A
Serbia Novak Djokovic QF QF SF FFN WFM SFF WN WFN WMN FFN SFF FM WM SFN FM FN QF FN WF SFM WM FNM WF WF
United Kingdom Andy Murray FNF 4R SFN 3R FD SFN SFN SFN SFD QF FF WD FFD A WD QF QFF SFN QF QFD FD SFD SFF 4R

29–34

[edit]
Player 29 30 31 32 33 34
AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US
Switzerland Roger Federer WM QF QF SFD SFD FDN QF SFD SFN SFD WDM QF SFM QF 2R 4R SFMN 4R FD SF 3R QF FMD FD
Spain Rafael Nadal QF QFD 2R 3R 1R 3R A 4R FF W 4R W QF W SFD SF FD WF SFF W QF WD NH[c] A
Serbia Novak Djokovic WFM WM 3R F 2R QF QF A 4R QF WN W WN SF WF 4R WF FN NH[c] 4R W WN W F
United Kingdom Andy Murray FD FD W QF 4R SF QF A A A A 2R 1R A A A A 1R 2R A A 3R 1R

35–41

[edit]
Player 35 36 37 38 39 40 41
AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US AUS RG WIM US
Switzerland Roger Federer SFD A SF A WN A W QF W A QF 4R 4R SFN FND QF SFD A NH[c] A A 4R QF A A A A A
Spain Rafael Nadal QF SFD A A W WD SF 4R 2R A A A A 1R A A retired
Serbia Novak Djokovic A QFN W A W W F W SF QF F 3R
United Kingdom Andy Murray 2R A 2R 3R 3R A 2R 2R 1R 1R A retired

D indicates the player met Novak Djokovic at that tournament.
F indicates the player met Roger Federer at that tournament.
M indicates the player met Andy Murray at that tournament.
N indicates the player met Rafael Nadal at that tournament.

Career finals performance comparison

[edit]
Current as of 2024 US Open.
Player Grand Slams ATP Finals ATP Masters ATP Tour 500 ATP Tour 250 Olympics Total
Titles Finals Titles Finals Titles Finals Titles Finals Titles Finals Titles Finals Titles Finals
Switzerland Roger Federer 20 31 6 10 28 50 24 31 25 34 0 1 103 157
Spain Rafael Nadal 22 30 0 2 36 53 23 29 10 16 1 1 92 131
Serbia Novak Djokovic 24 37 7 9 40 59 15 18 12 17 1 1 99 141
United Kingdom Andy Murray 3 11 1 1 14 21 9 10 17 26 2 2 46 71

^ Outright record indicated in bold.

National and international representation

[edit]

ITF team competitions: Olympics, Davis Cup, Hopman Cup and ATP team competitions: Laver Cup, ATP Cup, United Cup

Current as of 2024 Davis Cup.
  • The United Cup, a mixed-gender team event from 2023, directly replaced now defunct ATP Cup (2020-22).
  • A player being considered as a part of Davis Cup winning team, if he is nominated for the Finals.

Overall performance in all competitions

[edit]
Player Olympics Davis Cup Hopman Cup Laver Cup ATP Cup United Cup Overall Win % Years Titles
Switzerland Roger Federer 20–7 52–18 27–9 8–4 107–38 73.8% 1999–2022 8
Spain Rafael Nadal 19–6 37–6 3–4 6–1 0–2 65–20 76.5% 2004–2024 8
Serbia Novak Djokovic 22–10 46–16 20–8 2–3 11–1 3–1 104–39 72.7% 2004–2024 4
United Kingdom Andy Murray 21–8 42–10 18–8 0–2 81–28 74.3% 2005–2024 3

Performance comparison by events representation

[edit]
Player Olympics Davis Cup Hopman Cup Laver Cup ATP Cup/United Cup
Events Medals Match
wins
Win
 %
Nominations Ties Titles Match
wins
Win
 %
Events Titles Match
wins
Win
 %
Events Titles Match
wins
Win
 %
Events Titles Match
wins
Win
 %
Switzerland Roger Federer 7 2 20 74% (20–7) 27 27 1 52 74% (52–18) 5 3 27 75% (27–9) 4 3 8 67% (8–4) not participated
Spain Rafael Nadal 8 2 19 76% (19–6) 21 24 4 37 86% (37–6) not participated 3 2 3 43% (3–4) 3 0 6 67% (6–3)
Serbia Novak Djokovic 9 2 22 69% (22–10) 30 37 1 46 74% (46–16) 4 0 20 71% (20–8) 2 1 2 40% (2–3) 3 1 14 88% (14–2)
United Kingdom Andy Murray 9 3 21 72% (21–8) 24 25 1 42 81% (42–10) 4 0 18 69% (18–8) 1 0 0 0% (0–2) not participated

Combined achievements

[edit]

All four

[edit]
  1. Won 69 of the last 87 Grand Slam events (as of the 2024 US Open), this is 79.3% of the majors won since the Australian Open in 2003.
  2. Represented in the final of 76 of the last 87 Grand Slam events. This is 87.4% of the majors won (2003 Australian Open to 2024 US Open).
  3. Won every Wimbledon from 2003 to 2022 (19 consecutive titles); furthermore 9 of 16 Wimbledon finals from 2006 to 2022 have been contested by two of the Big Four.
  4. 8 of 9 Australian Open finals from 2009 to 2017 (all except 2014) have been contested by two of the Big Four.
  5. 33 Grand Slam tournament finals featured two from the Big Four, the most of any four players.
  6. Occupied at least 7 of 8 Grand Slam finalist slots in 6 seasons (2007, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2015), including all 20 from the 2010 US Open until the 2013 Australian Open.
  7. Occupied all four semifinal slots on 4 Grand Slam tournament occasions (2008 US Open, 2011 French Open, 2011 US Open and 2012 Australian Open).
  8. Along with Stefan Edberg, they are the only players to reach 5 or more Australian Open finals in the Open Era.
  9. Consecutively have held the world No. 1 ranking since 2 February 2004 to 27 February 2022.
  10. Occupied the world No. 1 and 2 rankings between 25 July 2005 to 18 March 2013, 13 May 2013 to 8 March 2021.
  11. Won 96 of the 112 Masters tournaments (85.7%) from 2005 Indian Wells – 2017 Madrid.
  12. Won 18 consecutive Masters tournaments from the 2014 Cincinnati – 2016 Toronto.
  13. All 9 Masters tournaments won in 2011, 2013, and 2015.
  14. Won every Grand Slam and Masters tournament as well as the ATP World Tour Finals in 2011 and 2013.
  15. Won 6+ of the 9 Masters tournaments for 12 consecutive years. (2005–2016)
  16. Occupied top four places in the rankings for 5 years, all consecutive. (2008–2012)
  17. The only four players to have reached the semifinals or better at all nine ATP Masters series events at least once.[75]
  18. Were ranked in the year-end top 6 every year at age 21 through to 29.
  19. Top four prize money leaders of all time.
  20. Consecutively have held the year-end No. 1 ranking since 2004 to 2021.

Three of the four

[edit]

Djokovic, Federer and Nadal

[edit]
  1. The top three players of all time in terms of Grand Slam titles won.
  2. The only three players in history to win 8+ titles at a single Grand Slam event.
  3. Won 66 of the last 87 majors as of the 2024 US Open, which is 75.9% of majors won since the Australian Open in 2003.
  4. Won 29 out of 32 Grand Slam events from the 2005 Australian Open up to and including 2012 US Open, which is 90.6% of majors won.
  5. Represented in 75 of the last 87 major finals, which is 86.2% of majors won from the 2003 Australian Open up to the 2024 Wimbledon.
  6. Won 18 of the last 22 Australian Open titles, which is 81.8% of majors won since 2003.
  7. Only three players in history to play 20 or more major finals. Djokovic has reached 37 finals, Federer 31 and Nadal 30.
  8. Only three players in history to play 38 or more major semifinals.
  9. Only three players in the Open Era to have reached the final of every Grand Slam tournament at least five times.
  10. Only three players in the Open Era to have played 5 or more consecutive Grand Slam tournament finals.
  11. Consecutively held the world No. 1 ranking from 2 February 2004 to 7 November 2016 (12 years 9 month), and also from 20 August 2017 to the 27 February 2022 (4 years 6 month).
  12. Occupied the top 3 places in the year end rankings for 8 seasons, 5 consecutively (2007–2011, 2014, 2018–2019).
  13. The only era in men's tennis where three players have won double digit majors and the Career Grand Slam while playing in the same time period.
  14. Set or tied the Open Era record for most titles won in all four Grand Slam events – Djokovic with 10 Australian Open titles, Federer with 8 Wimbledon titles and 5 US Open titles (tied), and Nadal with 14 French Open titles.
  15. Only three players in tennis history to simultaneously hold major titles on grass, hard court, and clay. Nadal achieved this feat from 2008 to 2009 and again in 2010, Federer in 2008–2009, and Djokovic from 2015 to 2016 and again from 2019 to 2021 (with no Wimbledon held in 2020).
  16. All won ATP Player of the Year, ITF Men's Singles Champion, Laureus World Sports Award for Sportsman of the Year and ESPY Award for Best Male Tennis player.
  17. Hold the all-time top 3 for match wins at the Australian Open and the French Open.
  18. Hold the Open Era top 3 for number of semifinals and quarterfinals reached at the French Open.
  19. Hold the top three for number of match wins against top 10 ranked opponents.
  20. Hold the top 11 spots for number of match wins against top 10 ranked opponents in a single season.
  21. Top three earliest to clinch year end No. 1 leaders since the ATP rankings started in 1973.
  22. Held the year end number 1 ranking for 12 consecutive years (2004–2015).
  23. All three have simultaneously appeared in 13 major semifinals (Australian Open 2008, 2012; Roland Garros 2007, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2019; Wimbledon 2007, 2019; US Open 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011).

Djokovic, Murray and Nadal

[edit]
  1. Won every Grand Slam tournament, Masters tournament and the ATP World Tour Finals in 2013.
  2. Won a combined 12 consecutive Rome Masters titles from 2005 to 2016. During this period Nadal has won 7, Djokovic 4 and Murray 1.

Djokovic, Federer and Murray

[edit]
  1. Won every Masters tournament and ATP World Tour Finals in 2015.
  2. Won the ATP World Tour Finals at least once from 2010 to 2016, a record 7 consecutive titles. During this period Djokovic won 4, Federer won 2 and Murray won 1.

Main tennis and sports awards

[edit]
Award 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
ATP Awards
Player of the Year F F F F N F N D D N D D M N D N D D D
Sportsmanship Award F F F F F F N F F F F F F F N N N N
Fan Favorite F F F F F F F F F F F F F F F F F F N
Arthur Ashe Humanitarian of the Year F N D F M M
ITF World Champions
Men's Singles F F F F N F N D D D D D M N D N not held D N D
Laureus World Sports Awards1
Sportsman of the Year F F F F N D D D F D N D D
Breakthrough of the Year N M
Comeback of the Year N F
ESPY Award
Best International Athlete F N
Best Male Tennis Player F F F F F F N D D N D D F F F not held D N D
BBC Sports Personality of the Year
Sports Personality of the Year M M M
Overseas Sports Personality of the Year F F F N D F
L'Équipe Champion of Champions
International F F F N N F / N N D D
La Gazzetta dello Sport
World Sportsman of the Year F F F F
Marca
Marca Leyenda F N D
Flag bearer at the Summer Olympics
Opening ceremony F not held F not held D not held M, N not held not held N

1Award shown in the year it honored, not the year it was presented.

Career evolution

[edit]

This table lists end of season statistics for each member of the Big Four, allowing for comparison at the same age.

  • () = active record (updated on 18 November 2024).

Bold = age leader in completed years.

Current or former record of the Open Era
Age (end of season) 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41
Switzerland Federer's season 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
Spain Nadal's season 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027
Serbia Djokovic/United Kingdom Murray's season 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028
Grand Slam titles Federer 0 0 0 0 1 4 6 9 12 13 15 16 16 17 17 17 17 17 19 20 20 20 20 20
Nadal 0 1 2 3 5 6 9 10 11 13 14 14 14 16 17 19 20 20 22 22 (22)
Djokovic 0 0 0 1 1 1 4 5 6 7 10 12 12 14 16 17 20 21 24 (24)
Murray 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 (3)
Grand Slam match wins Federer 0 7 20 26 39 61 85 112 138 162 188 208 228 247 260 279 297 307 325 339 357 362 369 369
Nadal 6 19 36 56 80 95 120 143 157 171 187 198 203 226 247 271 282 291 313 314 (314)
Djokovic 5 14 33 51 66 85 110 134 158 180 207 228 237 258 280 296 323 334 361 (377)
Murray 3 9 14 26 41 57 78 100 117 134 153 176 188 189 189 190 192 196 200 (200)
Masters titles Federer 0 0 0 1 1 4 8 12 14 14 16 17 18 21 21 23 24 24 27 27 28 28 28 28
Nadal 0 4 6 9 12 15 18 19 21 26 27 27 28 30 33 35 35 36 36 36 (36)
Djokovic 0 0 2 4 5 5 10 13 16 20 26 30 30 32 34 36 37 38 40 (40)
Murray 0 0 0 2 4 6 8 8 9 9 11 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 (14)
All titles Federer 0 0 1 4 11 22 33 45 53 57 61 66 70 76 77 82 88 88 95 99 103 103 103 103
Nadal 1 12 17 23 31 36 43 46 50 60 64 67 69 75 80 84 86 88 92 92 (92)
Djokovic 0 2 7 11 16 18 28 34 41 48 59 66 68 72 77 81 86 91 98 (99)
Murray 0 1 3 8 14 16 21 24 28 31 35 44 45 45 46 46 46 46 46 (46)
Ranking Federer 64 29 13 6 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 3 2 6 2 3 16 2 3 3 5 16 97^
Nadal 51 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 4 1 3 5 9 1 2 1 2 6 2 670 (154)^
Djokovic 78 16 3 3 3 3 1 1 2 1 1 2 12 1 2 1 1 5 1 (7)
Murray 63 17 11 4 4 4 4 3 4 6 2 1 16 240 125 122 134 49 42 160^
Weeks at number 1 Federer 0 0 0 0 0 48 100 152 204 237 262 285 285 302 302 302 302 302 302 310 310 310 310 310
Nadal 0 0 0 0 19 46 76 102 102 115 141 141 141 160 196 205 209 209 209 209 (209)
Djokovic 0 0 0 0 0 0 26 62 101 127 179 223 223 232 275 301 353 373 405 (428)
Murray 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 (41)
Win percentage Federer 42.86 50.50 58.48 62.95 68.21 72.77 76.52 79.44 80.44 80.55 80.81 81.03 81.27 81.60 81.11 81.44 81.65 81.51 81.94 81.99 82.08 82.09 81.98 81.98
Nadal 60.81 76.07 78.21 79.31 81.31 81.50 82.37 82.34 82.70 83.61 83.45 82.74 82.24 82.45 82.87 83.22 83.11 83.10 83.10 82.92 (82.63)
Djokovic 48.15 62.35 70.35 73.12 75.14 75.52 78.02 79.22 80.44 81.18 82.45 82.89 82.77 82.61 82.68 82.95 83.25 83.35 83.62 (83.51)
Murray 58.33 60.67 66.44 70.45 74.41 73.96 75.12 75.50 76.31 76.11 76.99 78.36 78.07 77.79 77.44 77.26 76.35 75.47 74.57 (73.83)
Match wins Federer 15 51 100 158 236 310 391 483 551 617 678 743 807 878 923 996 1059 1080 1134 1184 1237 1242 1251 1251
Nadal 45 124 183 253 335 401 472 541 583 658 706 767 806 874 919 977 1004 1028 1067 1068 (1080)
Djokovic 13 53 121 185 263 324 394 469 543 604 686 751 783 836 893 934 989 1031 1087 (1124)
Murray 14 54 97 155 221 267 323 379 422 481 552 630 655 662 672 676 691 717 733 (739)
Top 10 wins Federer 1 4 9 19 28 46 61 80 97 104 119 135 145 161 165 182 197 198 212 216 224 224 224 224
Nadal 4 9 19 30 47 61 72 88 99 123 129 136 140 152 162 171 174 178 186 186 (186)
Djokovic 1 3 9 20 35 39 60 84 108 127 158 179 181 196 205 215 229 240 257 (259)
Murray 0 4 9 21 35 42 49 61 66 71 83 99 101 101 101 102 104 105 105 (105)
Matches played Federer 35 101 171 251 346 426 511 608 685 766 839 917 993 1076 1138 1223 1297 1325 1384 1444 1507 1513 1526 1526
Nadal 74 163 234 319 412 492 573 657 705 787 846 927 980 1060 1109 1174 1208 1237 1284 1288 (1307)
Djokovic 27 85 172 253 350 429 505 592 675 744 832 906 946 1012 1080 1126 1188 1237 1300 (1346)
Murray 24 89 146 220 297 361 430 502 553 632 717 804 839 851 869 876 905 950 983 (1001)
Prize money ($M) Federer 0.3 0.9 1.7 3.7 7.7 14.1 20.2 28.6 38.7 44.6 53.4 61.0 67.4 76.0 79.2 88.6 97.3 98.8 111.9 120.5 129.2 129.9 130.6 130.6
Nadal 0.7 4.6 8.3 14.0 20.8 27.2 37.4 45.1 50.1 64.6 71.4 75.9 78.7 91.4 103.3 119.6 123.5 125.0 134.3 134.7 (134.9)
Djokovic 0.2 0.9 4.8 10.5 16.0 20.3 32.9 45.7 58.1 72.4 94.1 107.7 109.8 125.8 139.2 145.6 154.7 164.7 180.6 (185.1)
Murray 0.2 0.9 1.8 5.5 9.9 14.0 19.1 24.9 30.3 34.2 42.4 58.7 60.8 61.0 61.5 61.8 62.3 63.2 64.2 (64.7)
Age (end of season) 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41
Switzerland Federer's season 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
Spain Nadal's season 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027
Serbia Djokovic/United Kingdom Murray's season 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028

Titles by tournaments played comparison

[edit]

Another way to view their respective careers and evolution is to look at the progression of titles won by the number of tournaments played to win each of their titles at each level of competition including the four Majors, the nine ATP Masters, the ATP Finals (formerly Tennis Masters Cup), and the Olympic Games.

Singles title no. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 SR
Federer won at Grand Slam no. 17 19 21 22 25 26 27 29 30 31 33 34 38 40 41 43 53 69 70 72 20/81
Nadal 6 9 13 17 18 20 24 25 26 28 32 34 36 38 48 50 52 56 58 60 63 64 22/68
Djokovic 13 25 27 28 29 33 39 41 43 44 45 46 54 55 56 58 60 63 64 65 68 69 70 72 24/75
Murray 28 30 42 3/60
Federer won at ATP Masters no. 22 35 38 39 41 42 44 45 46 47 50 52 57 59 75 77 84 94 95 97 99 112 113 119 124 125 127 133 28/138
Nadal 10 11 12 14 17 18 22 24 25 33 35 36 40 42 43 51 52 53 59 67 69 70 72 73 74 75 81 95 102 103 109 111 112 116 117 123 36/130
Djokovic 11 15 19 23 36 45 46 47 48 49 53 57 59 63 68 69 70 71 73 77 78 79 80 81 84 85 86 87 89 91 104 105 110 114 115 116 119 122 126 127 40/131
Murray 25 26 29 33 39 41 51 52 63 79 81 89 91 92 14/119
Federer won at Tour Finals no. 2 3 5 6 9 10 6/17
Nadal 0/11
Djokovic 2 6 7 8 9 15 16 7/16
Murray 8 1/8
Federer won at Olympic Games no. 0/4
Nadal 1 1/3
Djokovic 5 1/5
Murray 2 3 2/3
^ Correct as of 2024 Paris.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ In ATP Tour and Grand Slam main draw matches, Olympics, Davis Cup, Laver Cup, ATP Cup and United Cup; Open Era tennis records
  2. ^ The exceptions were Andre Agassi's wins at the 2003 Australian Open, Juan Carlos Ferrero's wins at the 2003 French Open, Andy Roddick's wins at the 2003 US Open, Gastón Gaudio's wins at the 2004 French Open, Marat Safin's wins at the 2005 Australian Open, Juan Martín del Potro's win at the 2009 US Open, Stan Wawrinka's wins at the 2014 Australian Open, 2015 French Open and 2016 US Open, Marin Čilić's win at the 2014 US Open, Dominic Thiem's win at the 2020 US Open, Daniil Medvedev's win at the 2021 US Open, Carlos Alcaraz's win at the 2022 US Open, 2023 Wimbledon, 2024 French Open and 2024 Wimbledon, Jannik Sinner's wins at the 2024 Australian Open and 2024 US Open.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  4. ^ a b Held as Hamburg Masters until 2008, and Madrid Masters 2009–present.
  5. ^ a b Held as Madrid Masters from 2002 to 2008, and Shanghai Masters 2009–present.
  6. ^ The Olympics gold medal entered the Big Titles list in 2019.

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