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Australian Open: Prize money tops £38m with bigger share for earlier rounds

  • Posted: Dec 24, 2019

Australian Open organisers have increased the prize money to more than £38m with the biggest gains for those losing in the earlier rounds.

The overall prize fund for the tournament has increased by 14% to 71m Australian dollars (£38.1m).

Players who exit in the first round will receive 20% more than last year while money for losers in the opening qualifying round is up by a third.

The tournament proper begins in Melbourne on 20 January.

Tournament director Craig Tiley says the Australian Open is committed to “improving the pay and conditions for a deeper pool of international tennis players”.

“We worked with the tours to establish the weighting for prize money increases round by round, and we pushed to reward players competing early in the tournament in both singles and doubles,” added Tiley.

“We strongly believe in growing prize money at all levels of the game and we will continue to work with the playing group to create viable career paths in the sport and enable more players to make more money.”

Singles champions at the 2020 tournament will take home 4.12m Australian dollars (£2.21m).

The prize money for losing in the first round of qualifying is 20,000 Australian dollars (£10,707) and 90,000 Australian dollars (£48,183) for exiting in the first round main draw.

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ATP Cup Bracket Challenge Game Opens

  • Posted: Dec 24, 2019

ATP Cup Bracket Challenge Game Opens

Play against fans from across the globe, with your own friends, or both

Fans counting down the days to the inaugural ATP Cup beginning 3 January can get a jumpstart on the excitement with today’s launch of the ATP Cup Bracket Challenge Game.

FanHub, a global leader of digital gaming platforms, developed the game with ATP to increase engagement and awareness of the 24-country event played in three Australian cities that will kickstart the 2020 ATP Tour season.

Sign Up to play ATP Cup Bracket Challenge at ATPTour.com

Fans will be tasked with picking the six group winners and two best second-place teams who will advance to the Final Eight in Sydney, when the tournament switches from group play to a knockout format. From there, fans will pick winners from the quarter-finals semi-finals and final.

Picks must be made before the tournament begins but can be modified during the 10-day event. Correct unchanged picks made before the tournament earn more points in the game than picks made once the tournament is underway.

ATP Cup, featuring the likes of World No. 1 Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Dominic Thiem, will be held 3-12 January in Brisbane, Perth and Sydney, with the Final Eight played exclusively in Sydney.

“We have always enjoyed the best in class work provided by FanHub, and we believe that this new project will help us elevate the ATP Cup and enhance the fan engagement around our major season launch event to a new level through casual gaming,” said Ross Hutchins, Managing Director, ATP Cup. “While our core fans will enjoy the competition, the ability to gamify the event leads us to a bigger goal, which is having casual fans more engaged, and this will be a solid step in helping reach that point.”

“Tennis has long been one of the sports where fans have enjoyed competitive gaming and being able to work with the ATP in building this bracket challenge will be a great way to expose this unique, first-time event to a global audience,” said Andrew Cronyn, Managing Director FanHub. “The free to play game enables the ATP to engage with fans throughout the tournament, giving them a reason to keep coming back to ATP’s digital platform and bringing the sport of tennis to the forefront.”

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Best Of The Decade: Records & Achievements

  • Posted: Dec 23, 2019

Best Of The Decade: Records & Achievements

ATPTour.com looks back at notable records and achievements of the 2010s

Another captivating decade of tennis has come and gone. And perhaps fittingly, the three players who began the decade in the top three spots of the ATP Rankings — Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer — finish the 2010s in the top three places.

Continuing our Best of the Decade series, ATPTour.com looks at some of the biggest records and achievements from the past 10 years.

Rafael Nadal

  • The Spaniard was the only player to finish inside the Top 10 of the year-end ATP Rankings all 10 years this decade.
  • In 2010, the lefty completed the ‘Clay Slam’, winning all three ATP Masters 1000 events (Monte-Carlo, Rome, Madrid) on clay and triumphing at Roland Garros in the same year.
  • Nadal became the only player to win five or more Grand Slams after turning 30, winning 13 this decade.
  • He won 34 clay-court titles in the 2010s, more than any other player.
  • Nadal became the oldest year-end No. 1 this season, doing so at 33.
  • The Spaniard set the record for most consecutive Masters 1000 titles in 2013 when he captured four straight crowns at the elite level, triumphing in Madrid, Rome, Montreal and Cincinnati.

    Nadal
    At Cincinnati in 2013, Nadal celebrates his fourth consecutive ATP Masters 1000 title.

    Novak Djokovic

  • The Serbian became the first player to complete the Career Golden Masters — winning all nine Masters 1000s — doing so in Cincinnati in 2018.
  • Lifted 45 hard-court tour-level trophies this decade to lead all players. Only one other player, Rafael Nadal (48), won that many titles on all surfaces in the 2010s.
  • Djokovic held all four Grand Slams at the same time, winning each of the four majors from 2015 Wimbledon through 2016 Roland Garros.
  • In 2015, Djokovic made the final of all four Slams, winning three of them (except Roland Garros).
  • Spent 275 weeks – more than half the decade – at World No. 1.
  • Reached seven consecutive Masters 1000 finals from 2015 Rome through 2016 Miami.
  • Finished atop the year-end ATP Rankings five times.
  • Earned the longest winning streak of the decade, winning 43 straight matches, finally losing against Federer at 2011 Roland Garros.
  • Set the record for most Masters 1000 titles in a season by capturing six in 2015.
  • Set the record for most ATP Ranking points in a season with 16,950 in 2015.
  • Reached a record 17 consecutive tour-level finals from the 2015 Australian Open through the 2016 Australian Open.
  • Roger Federer

  • Federer, at 36 years, 320 days, was the oldest World No. 1 in history on 24 June 2018.
  • Federer was the oldest titlist of the decade, winning Basel this year at 38. He is the third-oldest player to lift a trophy in the Open Era behind Pancho Gonzalez and Ken Rosewall.
  • Won eight tour-level grass-court titles, the most of any player this decade.
  • The Swiss entered the 2017 Australian Open as the No. 17 seed following a knee injury that kept him out after Wimbledon in 2016. But Federer won the title, his first Grand Slam victory in nearly five years.
  • Won 28 consecutive ATP 500 matches from 2014-16.  

    <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/roger-federer/f324/overview'>Roger Federer</a> celebrates winning his 10th Basel title
    Roger Federer lifts his seventh Basel title of the decade in October 2019.

    Big Three

  • Held World No. 1 for 480 weeks this decade (92% of the 2010s).
  • Won 33 of the decade’s 40 Grand Slam championships.
  • Captured 61 of the decade’s 90 Masters 1000s.
  • Appeared in 74 of the decade’s 90 Masters 1000 finals.
  • Andy Murray

  • Won Wimbledon in 2013 to become the first British man since 1936 to capture a Grand Slam singles title. He would win the grass-court major again in 2015.
  • Earned the men’s singles gold medal at back-to-back Olympics in 2012 and ’16.
  • In 2016, Murray won his final 24 matches of the season, completing his run by lifting the title at the Nitto ATP Finals. By defeating Novak Djokovic in the championship match at The O2, he also earned the year-end No. 1 ATP Ranking for the first time.
  • Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan

  • After winning Wimbledon in 2013, the American twins held all four Grand Slam titles and Olympic gold at the same time.
  • Won 63 tour-level doubles titles this decade, more than any other team.
  • Spent 139 consecutive weeks as the world’s No. 1 team from 25 February 2013 through 25 October 2015.
  • Captured 26 Masters 1000 titles this decade.
  • Stefanos Tsitsipas

  • Became the first player to win both the Next Gen ATP Finals and the Nitto ATP Finals.

    <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/stefanos-tsitsipas/te51/overview'>Stefanos Tsitsipas</a> is the first player to win the <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/tournaments/next-gen-atp-finals/7696/overview'>Next Gen ATP Finals</a> and the <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/tournaments/nitto-atp-finals/605/overview'>Nitto ATP Finals</a>.
    Stefanos Tsitsipas celebrates his victory at the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals.

  • Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut

  • Completed the Career Grand Slam in 2019 by winning the Australian Open.   
  • Milestones Reached During The Past Decade

  • Federer reached 100 career tour-level titles at 2019 Dubai.
  • Federer won his 1,000th career tour-level match against Milos Raonic in the final of 2015 Brisbane.
  • Federer became the first man in the Open Era to reach 20 career Grand Slam titles at the 2018 Australian Open. 
  • The Bryan Brothers won their 100th tour-level team title at the 2014 US Open. That was also their fifth US Open trophy.
  • Federer, Ivo Karlovic and John Isner all eclipsed 10,000 career aces during the past decade. Karlovic did it at 2015 Montreal, Federer accomplished the feat at 2017 Wimbledon and Isner joined them at 2018 Houston.
  • Did You Know?

  • Karlovic hit the most aces in a season this decade, striking 1,447 in 2015.
  • Isner and Nicolas Mahut played the longest match of all-time in 2010, with Isner emerging victorious at 2010 Wimbledon after 11 hours and five minutes, with the match taking place across three days. The American won 70-68 in the fifth set.
  • World No. 772 Marcus Willis won six matches in pre-qualifying and qualifying to reach the main draw of Wimbledon in 2016, including victories against Andrey Rublev and Daniil Medvedev. The Brit then thrilled his home crowd by ousting World No. 54 Ricardas Berankis in straight sets, setting a memorable match with Roger Federer on Centre Court in the second round.
  • Nadal, Djokovic, Federer and Isner were the only players to finish inside the Top 20 of the year-end ATP Rankings in all 10 years this decade.
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    ATP Cup: Schwartzman & Pella Ready To Lead Argentina

    • Posted: Dec 23, 2019

    ATP Cup: Schwartzman & Pella Ready To Lead Argentina

    Argentines prepare to begin their season in Sydney

    Diego Schwartzman and Guido Pella see each other every day in the off-season. But they are much more than just training partners making their joint preparations for 2020. The top two Argentine players in the ATP Rankings enjoy a friendship that goes back to the early days of their tennis dreams.

    They will now kick off their respective seasons by leading Argentina in the inaugural ATP Cup. Schwartzman and Pella seek to guide Argentina past Austria, Croatia and Poland in Group E action in Sydney. Juan Ignacio Londero, Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni will complete the team.

    “There are some very tough opponents in our group like Dominic Thiem, who I will have to play, and Borna Coric. I’m going to have to be ready to play and compete against them right at the start of the year,” Schwartzman said.

    Schwartzman prevailed this August in Los Cabos. (d. Fritz) and followed up with his first US Open quarter-final showing. The 27-year-old also finished runner up in Vienna (l. to Thiem) and Buenos Aires (l. to Cecchinato), in addition to reaching his first ATP Masters 1000 semi-final in Rome.

    “[My main focus is] to take it day by day. In anything you’re doing, the most important thing is for it not to be tedious. It’s a daily mental challenge to be able to continue competing as well as possible,” Schwartzman said. “Now we have to adapt. It’s partly in teams, there are [ATP Rankings] points available and there’s a lot of prize money.

    Buy Tickets At Official Tournament Website, ATPCup.com

    “Knowing that there are some very big points on offer and that you are representing Argentina is a bonus… Not just playing for yourself. It’s a competition that’s going to be very good. I have no doubt.”

    Schwartzman selected former World No. 5 and 2004 Roland Garros champion Gaston Gaudio to be the team captain for Argentina. However, he said it was a decision that the entire team approved of.

    “We chose him between all of us,” Schwartzman explained. “We thought he was the most logical choice because it’s difficult if I choose my coach for him to also be the captain of the other players. Gaston is a good choice for everyone.”

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    De Minaur Gets First Look At ATP Cup Trophy

    Pella looks to continue his momentum after completing a career-best season in 2019 that saw him finish inside the Top 25. He won his maiden ATP Tour crown in Sao Paulo (d. Garin), finished runner-up in Cordoba (l. to Londero) and advanced to his first Grand Slam quarter-final at Wimbledon. He’s eager to compete alongside Schwartzman and believes they can make an impact in Sydney.

    “Competing in a team at the start of the year is going to be a beautiful experience and I’m happy to be able to play for Argentina with my teammates,” Pella said. “Everyone knows Diego. He has one of the best backhands on tour and he is extremely solid. There are not many like him on Tour and he has a consistency that few can match. That’s why he’s been in the Top 30 for three years.”

    Pella spoke of his own plans for 2020 and said he has one clear goal: to stay on the same path.

    “I want to keep playing my best tennis, improve my ranking and validate what I did in 2019,” he explained. “To keep performing at good tournaments and beating good opponents would make me happy.”

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    Felix, Shapo March Team Canada Into Inaugural ATP Cup

    • Posted: Dec 23, 2019

    Felix, Shapo March Team Canada Into Inaugural ATP Cup

    Auger-Aliassime, Shapovalov will look to get off to good starts in Brisbane

    The 2019 season for Canadians Denis Shapovalov and Felix Auger-Aliassime might have been a preview for what tennis fans can expect for the next 10-15 years from the #NextGenATP stars. Shapovalov and Auger-Aliassime, who will represent Canada along with Steven Diez, Adil Shamasdin and Peter Polansky at next month’s ATP Cup, spent the year outdoing each other.

    Both players endured their highs and lows, but both also played for ATP Tour titles and finished the season inside the Top 25 of the ATP Rankings (Shapovalov, No. 15; Auger-Aliassime, No. 21).

    “These two guys really have almost fulfilled every expectation, at this stage to both be where they are,” said Tom Tebbutt, a longtime Canadian tennis writer.

    Four years ago, when Auger-Aliassime was 15 and Shapovalov 16, Tebbutt saw the two play for the Canadian 18-and-under boys championship. Since then, and especially in 2019, the two have been on a tear.

    <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/felix-auger-aliassime/ag37/overview'>Felix Auger-Aliassime</a> thanks the crowd for its support during his semi-final in Rio de Janeiro.

    In February, Auger-Aliassime, younger then Shapovalov by 16 months, became the youngest ATP 500 finalist in series history (since 2009) by making the Rio Open presented by Claro final (l. to Djere). The next month, Auger-Aliassime, then 18, also became the youngest Miami Open presented by Itau semi-finalist (l. to Isner) in the tournament’s 35-year history.

    At that same tournament in south Florida, Shapovalov also reached the semi-finals (l. to Federer), his third at the Masters 1000 level.

    But from there, Auger-Aliassime continued climbing while Shapovalov endured a slump. Auger-Aliassime made the final in Lyon (clay, l. to Paire) and Stuttgart (grass, l. to Berrettini) and reached the third round at Wimbledon (l. to Humbert), the first time he had won a match at a major championship.

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    For any player to get his first Grand Slam win is a big relief, and it’s a good achievement for me. At the same time, with the level I’m playing now and my ambitions, I look forward and I look to go even further than that,” Auger-Aliassime said.

    Shapovalov, meanwhile, went 2-9 after Miami, which included a straight-sets loss to Auger-Aliassime in Madrid. The left-hander began to turn his season around at his home Masters 1000 event in Montreal, where Shapovalov beat Pierre-Hugues Herbert of France and pushed Dominic Thiem to three sets.

    It put a smile to my face when I walked back on the court,” Shapovalov said. “Every point, [the crowd is] so engaged. Like I’ve always said, I feel that brings the best out of me. I’m able to play more freely and just enjoy myself. I had that fire back today that I’ve been missing, especially the last couple weeks. Maybe it’s been longer than that. It’s good to get back on the right track.”

    Two weeks later, he made the semi-finals in Winston-Salem, and the next week, he and Auger-Aliassime met in the first round of the US Open for the second consecutive year. Shapovalov, who won their first New York contest, beat Auger-Aliassime in straight sets.

    “Denis played really, really well against him at the US Open,” Tebbutt said.

    <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/denis-shapovalov/su55/overview'>Denis Shapovalov</a> competes at the 2019 <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/tournaments/us-open/560/overview'>US Open</a>

    From there, Shapovalov kept rising, making the semi-finals in Chengdu and winning his maiden title in Stockholm. The Canadian saved his best for the final week of the ATP regular season, reaching his first Masters 1000 final at the Rolex Paris Masters (l. to Djokovic).

    Auger-Aliassime, on the other hand, went 2-3 during the Asian swing and a sprained ankle limited his play in the final month.

    At the moment, Shapovalov has surged ahead. But, as Tebbutt has seen over the years, good luck predicting who will finish higher after the 2020 season, which starts at the inaugural ATP Cup. Canada will compete in Group F in Brisbane against Germany, Greece and Australia.

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    Ruuds Ready To Further Bolster Norway's Global Tennis Standing

    • Posted: Dec 23, 2019

    Ruuds Ready To Further Bolster Norway’s Global Tennis Standing

    Casper Ruud will lead Norway at the inaugural team event

    The Ruud family has been putting Norwegian tennis on the global map for the past 30 years, and they’ll have their biggest opportunity yet next month at the inaugural ATP Cup, to be held 3-12 January in Brisbane, Perth and Sydney.

    Casper Ruud, No. 54 in the ATP Rankings, will lead the team, and his father/coach Christian Ruud, who reached No. 39 in the ATP Rankings before retiring in 2001, will captain the team, which will face Russia, Italy and the U.S. in Group D in Perth.

    The Ruuds, who will be joined by Norwegian players Viktor Durasovic, Lukas Hellum Lilleengen, Leyton Rivera and Herman Hoeyeraal, spoke to ATPTour.com about competing at next month’s ATP Cup, what it’s like to be a travelling father-son duo on the ATP Tour and how they’ve brought recognition to tennis in Norway.

    Casper Ruud
    On being from Norway
    “It’s a little bit tough sometimes to be from a small tennis country like Norway because you don’t have too many people to practise with when you’re home and that kind of stuff. I think many people many times don’t quite understand where I’m from, because Norway is not a typical tennis country and they’re maybe thinking, ‘Norway, where is that?’

    “But if I had to choose things, I would like them to think that I of course play well, and I’m a nice guy, likable. That’s my goal and why I try to stay humble all the time and try to work hard and hopefully the results will come and as the results come, more fans will eventually come.”

    On growing tennis in Norway
    “I’m trying, definitely. It’s one of my goals, to try to make Norway a bigger tennis country. We’ve been talking a little bit if I have a big career, we can maybe try to bring an ATP event to Norway. That would be a huge goal for me in my career, to try to do that. In Sweden, they have two events. That would be nice for Norway and Norwegian tennis.”

    On being a part of the #NextGenATP, competing at the 2019 Next Gen ATP Finals
    “I’m not going to say that I feel old, but there are younger players that are doing better than me. It’s something to perhaps gain motivation from.

    “I’m a couple of steps behind them now, but I’ve built a good base this year and will hopefully be ready for an even better season next year.”

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    On having his father as a coach
    “I know that he cares about me and he wants everything in the best way for me. So, of course, he’s been a really big part of my success and my team, ever since I was little.

    “I’m from a small tennis country, and I don’t have too many people to look up to in my home country, except for him. He’s the only one who knows how it’s been and how the life on the Tour is. I think it’s been a huge advantage, even though I’m from Norway, to have my father so close to me and helping me with my tennis.”

    How his dad especially helped him when he was a teenager
    “He’s always been there for me and tried to guide me… When you’re 13 or 14, it’s easy to think about other things or want to go out to parties. My dad was strict with me in those ways because he knew you have to be serious from a young age if you want to be a professional tennis player. There were some sacrifices, but it’s paid off.”

    Christian Ruud
    O
    n Casper choosing tennis
    “He was the one that decided at age 11, ‘OK, this is what I want to do. I’m more into individual sports than team sports.’ Since then it’s just been about the tennis.”

    On separating the father-coach roles
    Maybe when he’s younger [it was harder], but now he’s a grown-up. I feel more like a coach and also a friend now because we travel and go out to dinners together. It’s not like I’m babysitting him.

    “We have a good relationship. He respects that I was a player on Tour and respects me as a coach. He was the one [who] wanted me to be his coach when his other coach quit 18 months ago. I’m just trying to help him be a good player and a good person.”

    On his son’s 2019 season
    “I think his lowest level has come up a lot. He’s been playing a lot better at ATP events and winning a lot more matches and also beating decent players when he’s not been playing his best, so I think his high level has increased as well as his low level.”

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    Decade In Review: Doubles

    • Posted: Dec 21, 2019

    Decade In Review: Doubles

    ATPTour.com reflects on a historic decade of doubles in the 2010s

    Doubles Team Titles Leaders (2010-2019)

    Americans Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan won 63 titles over the past 10 years, including 46 between 2010-2014, when they were year-end No. 1s. Colombians Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah, who contested the first of their 33 tour-level finals in May 2013 (at Nice), ended the decade on a high with five trophies in 2019.

    Team
    Titles Grand Slams
    Olympics
    ATP Finals
    Masters 1000s
    500s
    250s
    Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan
    63 9
    1
    2
    26
    7
    18
    Jean-Julien Rojer/Horia Tecau
    20 2
    0
    1
    2
    7
    8
    Juan Sebastian Cabal/Robert Farah
    16 2
    0
    0
    2
    3
    9
    Pierre-Hugues Herbert/Nicolas Mahut
    15 4
    0
    1
    7
    3
    0
    Henri Kontinen/John Peers
    13 1
    0
    2
    3
    4
    3
    Lukasz Kubot/Marcelo Melo
    13 1
    0
    0
    4
    5
    3

    Record-Breaking Twins

    • The Bryan brothers led the team game and compiled record numbers, including five straight year-end No. 1 finishes (2010-2014). They will contest their final season as a team in 2020.
    • The American twins went 63-21 in tour-level finals between 2010-2019, which included winning nine Grand Slam men’s doubles championships and 26 of their record-breaking 39 ATP Masters 1000 crowns. At Los Angeles, in July 2010, the pair captured their 62nd team crown to break a tie with Open Era titles record-holders Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde (61). Additionally, in September 2012 at the US Open, the Bryans passed the Australian team with their 12th major team title.
    • Between the 2012 US Open and 2013 Wimbledon, the Bryans were the holders of all four majors simultaneously in a non-calendar year and 2013 — when they won the Australian Open, Roland Garros and Wimbledon crowns — marking the first time since Anders Jarryd and John Fitzgerald in 1991 (Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the US Open) that a team had held three major titles.
    • In 2013, the Bryans won 22 matches at the four major championships, clinching year-end No. 1 in the ATP Doubles Team Rankings for a ninth time as early as 19 August (a record). They earned 11 titles from 14 finals — including three majors and five Masters 1000s.
    • During a record 139 consecutive weeks at No. 1, between 25 February 2013 and 25 October 2015, the Bryans won four consecutive ATP Masters 1000 titles in consecutive seasons (2013 and 2014), highlighted by clinching silverware in six of their seven Masters 1000 final appearances in 2014.
    • During that historic year, the Bryans won a 16th major team crown, and a record fifth US Open title, which also marked their 100th trophy together. In March, they became only the fourth team to complete the Indian Wells-Miami title double, following in the footsteps of Woodbridge and Woodforde (1996), Wayne Black and Sandon Stolle (1999), and Mark Knowles and Daniel Nestor (2002), and, later, in October, at the Rolex Shanghai Masters, the Bryans became the first team to complete the Career Golden Masters of all nine Masters 1000 trophies.
    • In October 2016 at the Erste Bank Open in Vienna, the Bryans became the first doubles team in the Open Era to reach the 1,000 match wins milestones.

    Records of Year-End No. 1 Teams (2010-2019)

    Take a closer look at the match and finals records (by season) of year-end No. 1 doubles teams between 2010 and 2019.

    Year
    Team Win-Loss Record
    Finals Record
    2010
    Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan 67-13
    11-0
    2011
    Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan 61-16
    8-3
    2012
    Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan 61-15
    6-3
    2013
    Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan 71-13
    11-3
    2014
    Bob Bryan/Mike Bryan 66-12
    10-3
    2015
    Jean-Julien Rojer/Horia Tecau 49-21
    3-2
    2016
    Jamie Murray/Bruno Soares 42-17
    3-2
    2017
    Lukasz Kubot/Marcelo Melo 51-18
    6-4
    2018
    Oliver Marach/Mate Pavic 54-21
    4-5
    2019
    Juan Sebastian Cabal/Robert Farah 50-19
    5-2

    Nestor First To Record 1,000 Doubles Match Wins

    • Daniel Nestor, who turned pro in 1991 and said farewell to the sport in 2018, became the first player in the Open Era to record 1,000 doubles match wins on 11 January 2016, when he partnered Marcelo Melo to reach the Sydney quarter-finals.
    • Six months later in Nottingham, as the proud owner of his 89th career title, the Canadian also extended his record of winning at least one tour-level title for 23 consecutive years.

    Paes, Herbert/Mahut Complete Career Grand Slam

    • Over the past decade, three players completed the career doubles Grand Slam. India’s Leander Paes, was the first to do so since Nestor in 2008, when the Indian partnered Radek Stepanek to the 2012 Australian Open title. Paes also became the sixth player to record 750 match wins or more on 7 April 2018. Paes will retire from professional tennis in 2020.
    • Seven years later, at the same championship, Frenchmen Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut became the eighth team in the sport’s history — and the first pair since the Bryan brothers in 2006 — to capture all four major titles.
    • Twenty three players have won the career doubles Grand Slam since Australia’s Adrian Quist in 1939.

    Perfect Weeks At Nitto ATP Finals

    • Two teams over the past 10 seasons swept to the Nitto ATP Finals title without the loss of a set in five matches at The O2 in London. Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau, clinched year-end No. 1 en route to the 2015 crown, while last month Herbert and Mahut capped a memorable season with the crown.
    • Max Mirnyi and Nestor (2011), Henri Kontinen and John Peers (2016) and Mike Bryan and Jack Sock (2018) also completed their title-winning weeks with 5-0 records. Mirnyi retired from professional tennis in 2018 with 780 match wins and 52 doubles crowns.

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    De Minaur Gets First Look At ATP Cup Trophy

    • Posted: Dec 21, 2019

    De Minaur Gets First Look At ATP Cup Trophy

    Made from sterling silver, the ATP Cup features 24 shards, representing each of the 24 competing countries

    Australian No. 1 Alex de Minaur has had the first glimpse of the silverware for the newest tournament in world tennis, the ATP Cup.

    The magnificent silver trophy was unveiled at Kangaroo Point in Brisbane by ATP Cup Tournament Director Tom Larner, marking 13 days until the inaugural event begins from 3 to 12 January 2020.

    The bespoke ATP Cup design is both a tribute to tennis’ past and a celebration of its future.

    Buy Tickets At Official Tournament Website

    The traditional shape is a nod to the history of the sport, with the contemporary shard construction symbolic of the innovative new format of the ATP Cup.

    “The ATP Cup will showcase the top male players from 24 countries and this is the trophy they’ll be playing for,” Tom Larner said.

    “Players have embraced this new team competition and we can’t think of a better way to kick start both the global tennis season and the Australian summer.”

    De Minaur, who will represent Australia alongside Nick Kyrgios, John Millman, John Peers, Chris Guccione and captain Lleyton Hewitt, said he was looking forward to competing at the first edition of the ATP Cup.

    “The Aussies are pumped to be starting the season in Brisbane and standing here in front of the ATP Cup, seeing the trophy up close for the first time, really brings to life what we are playing for in just a couple of weeks’ time,” he said.

    Made from sterling silver, the stunning symmetrical design of the ATP Cup consists of 24 shards, with each representing one of the 24 countries in competition. The shards support a silver stem adorned with a hand-blown glass silver sphere, replicating both a traditional tennis ball and the hemisphere logo of the event.

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    The trophy’s base is handcrafted from native Banksia hardwood and is finished with a silver plaque, which awaits the engraving of the first ATP Cup champion team.

    The ATP Cup has been designed and handcrafted by industry leaders in precious metals, ABC Bullion, who also craft the Australian Open men’s singles trophy, the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup, and the Melbourne Cup.

    “With Australia hosting the inaugural ATP Cup it is only appropriate the trophy is made in Australia and from Australian silver,” Darren May of ABC Bullion said.

    “It has been a true team effort to produce this team’s trophy in Australia – from the local miners, to the designers, fabricators and refinery workers.”

    ABC Bullion is also the proud manufacturer of the runner up plate and medallions for the Final Eight.

    The ATP Cup will tour the country, travelling to Perth next before heading to Sydney.

    ATP Cup – trophy fast facts

    • Made in Australia from locally sourced materials
    • Contains more than six kilograms of silver, hand-blown glass and native banksia hardwood
    • A team of six have dedicated more than 320 hours to designing and producing the ATP Cup
    • Stands 50 centimetres tall
    • As well as the ATP Cup, ABC Bullion are responsible for producing the Australian Open men’s singles trophy, the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup and the Melbourne Cup

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    Roger Federer Named GQ's Most Stylish Man Of The Decade

    • Posted: Dec 20, 2019

    Roger Federer Named GQ’s Most Stylish Man Of The Decade

    The Swiss wins contest based on fans’ votes

    Roger Federer has long been stylish with his game and his fashion, both on and off the court. And the Swiss superstar finished the 2010s with a big award in the style department, being named GQ’s Most Stylish Man of the Decade on Friday.

    The award was decided by the fans in an Instagram-based bracket contest. Every day, fans voted between two celebrities on GQ’s Instagram stories. The winner of each ‘match’ moved on. Federer advanced past A$AP Rockey, Jonah Hill and Harry Styles before defeating Timothée Chalamet for the title. The likes of LeBron James, Kanye West and Ryan Gosling also were part of the competition.

    The editors of GQ described each of the 16 celebrities in the bracket, and this is what they wrote about Federer:

    “Some of the guys on this list made their reputations on red carpets; others, in paparazzi shots. Roger Federer, on the other hand, has a case for most stylish man of the decade thanks to something as simple as this: When the guy puts on his Wimbledon whites, he stands basically alone. It’s not about his clothes so much as the righteously relaxed, preternaturally confident way he moves in them. (Also: Dude is a Bond-level tux wearer.)”

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    Players Of The Decade: Stan Wawrinka

    • Posted: Dec 20, 2019

    Players Of The Decade: Stan Wawrinka

    ATPTour.com looks back on Stan The Man’s strong decade

    To continue our Decade In Review series, ATPTour.com completes our look at the five players of the decade with Stan Wawrinka. 

    Stan Wawrinka must be viewing the passing of this decade with torn emotions. He is pleased to have recovered well from two 2017 knee surgeries and be nearing the level that won him three Grand Slam titles and an ATP Masters 1000 event during the past 10 years.

    But another part of Wawrinka likely wishes this prolific and unexpected decade of on-court greatness, in which he challenged the Big Four, could go on forever.

    In December 2009, Wawrinka, then 24 years old, was No. 21 in the year-end ATP Rankings. He had gone 1-5 in tour-level finals and, although he cracked the Top 10 for five weeks in 2008, consistency remained a weakness for the still-developing, yet already barrel-chested Wawrinka, who has long owned one of the finest one-handed backhands in the sport.

    In April 2013, however, Wawrinka, frustrated by his inability to beat the best – before 2013, he was 7-39 against the Big Four – paired with former World No. 2 Magnus Norman, who had already helped Robin Soderling, another mid-career power hitter, ascend to the top.

    players of the decade

    Fast forward to January 2014 at the Australian Open, and “Stan The Man” had arrived. The Big Four had won 16 consecutive major titles, but Wawrinka beat Djokovic in the quarter-finals, Tomas Berdych in the semi-finals and No. 1 Nadal in the final for his first Grand Slam title.

    Wawrinka’s overpowering one-handed backhand and improved mental strength, along with his willingness to not be satisfied with a Top 20 career, helped him beat the best. “I never expect to win a Grand Slam. I never dream about that because for me, I was not good enough to beat those guys,” Wawrinka said.

    I talk a lot with Magnus, who has been in that situation, to play a final. He told me it was important not to think about the result but think about the way you want to play, the way you want to win every point.”

    The Swiss pulled off the unexpected three months later as well, beating Roger Federer in the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters final for his first Masters 1000 title. And more Big Title glory came on the clay in 2015, when Wawrinka, with his plaid shorts, won his second major in as many years and denied Djokovic the elusive Roland Garros crown.

    <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/players/stan-wawrinka/w367/overview'>Stan Wawrinka</a> wins the 2014 <a href='https://www.atptour.com/en/tournaments/monte-carlo/410/overview'>Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters</a>

    In 2016, Wawrinka’s major championship streak stretched to three as he again beat Djokovic in a Grand Slam final and continued to challenge the Big Four’s reign at the biggest tournaments. The Swiss improved to 3-0 against World No. 1s in major finals; 0-16 everywhere else. 

    “If you want to beat the No. 1 player in the world, you have to give everything,” Wawrinka said. “You have to accept to suffer and you have to almost enjoy to suffer.”

    From January 2014 through mid-September 2016, Wawrinka won 11 consecutive finals, and from 2013-16, he qualified for the Nitto ATP Finals four consecutive times. 

    The 2017 season brought another Roland Garros final (l. to Nadal), but by August, Wawrinka could no longer manage his worsening left knee. After Wimbledon, he shut down his season and underwent two surgeries.

    His comeback, like most, has been loaded with stops and starts, good weeks and bad days. But in 2019, Wawrinka rekindled his glory days more than once. He made the Rotterdam final (l. to Monfils), his first title match in nearly two years, and the final in Antwerp (l. to Murray).

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    At Grand Slams, Wawrinka particularly showed that he’s back. He beat Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas in five hours, nine minutes, the fourth-longest match in Roland Garros history, to make the quarter-finals (l. to Federer), and he made his 17th Slam quarter-final at the US Open (l. to Medvedev).

    Wawrinka never stretched the Big Four to the Big Five, but he wasn’t interested in such labels and humbly deflected the notion that he belonged in the same category as Federer, Djokovic, Nadal and Murray. At 34 and with three surgeries behind him (right knee, 2007), his most consistent seasons might stay in the past. But doubt him at a big event, and Wawrinka, one of the best big-match players of this decade, might soon you have regretting that decision.

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