All-time tennis records – Men's singles

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This article covers the period from 1877 to present. Before the beginning of the Open Era in April 1968, only amateurs were allowed to compete in established tennis tournaments, including the four Grand Slam tournaments (also known as the majors). Wimbledon, the oldest of the majors, was founded in 1877, followed by the US Open in 1881, the French Open in 1891 and the Australian Open in 1905. Beginning in 1905 and continuing to the present day, all four majors have been played yearly, with the exception of during the two World Wars, 1986 for the Australian Open, and 2020 for Wimbledon. The Australian Open is the first major of the year (January), followed by the French Open (May–June), Wimbledon (June–July) and the US Open (August–September). There was no prize money and players were compensated for travel expenses only. A player who wins all four majors, in singles or as part of a doubles team, in the same calendar year is said to have achieved a "Grand Slam". If the player wins all four consecutively, but not in the same calendar year, it is called a "Non-Calendar Year Grand Slam". Winning all four at some point in a career, even if not consecutively, is referred to as a "Career Grand Slam". Winning the four majors and a gold medal in tennis at the Summer Olympics in the same calendar year has been called a "Golden Slam" since 1988.[1] Winning all four majors plus an Olympic gold at some point in a career, even if not consecutively, is referred to as a "Career Golden Slam". Winning the year-end championship while also having won a Golden Slam is referred to as a "Super Slam". Winning all four majors, an Olympic gold, and the year-end championships at some point in a career, even if not consecutively, is referred to as a "Career Super Slam".[2][3][4] Winning the four majors in all three disciplines a player is eligible for–singles, doubles and mixed doubles–is considered winning a "boxed set" of Grand Slam titles.

Prior to 1924, the major tennis championships, governed by the International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF), were the World Hard Court Championships, World Grass Court Championships (Wimbledon), and World Covered Court Championships.[5]

Many top tennis players turned professional before the Open Era to play legally for prize money. They played in separate professional events and were banned from competing any of the four Grand Slam tournaments. They mostly competed on pro tours involving head-to-head competition, but also in professional tournaments as the biggest events on the pro tour.[6] In addition to the head-to-head tours, there were the annual professional tournaments called "Championship tournaments" (known retrospectively as "professional majors"[7][8] or "professional Grand Slams"[9][10] where the world's top professional players usually played. These tournaments held a certain tradition and longevity.

The oldest of these three professional majors, was the U.S. Pro Tennis Championships, played at a variety of different venues and on a variety of different surfaces, between 1925 and 1999, although it was no longer a major after 1967. Between 1954 and 1962, the U.S. Pro was played indoors in Cleveland and was billed as the World Professional Championships. The most prestigious of the three was generally the Wembley Championships. Played between 1934 and 1990, at the Wembley Arena in England, it was unofficially usually considered the world's championship until 1967. The third professional major was the French Pro Championship, played between 1934 and 1968, on the clay courts of Roland Garros, apart from 1963 to 1967, when it was played on the indoor wood courts of Stade Coubertin.

The Open Era of tennis began in 1968, when the Grand Slam tournaments agreed to allow professional players to compete with amateurs. A professional tennis tour was created for the entire year, where everyone could compete. This meant that the division that had existed for many years between these two groups had finally come to an end, which made the tennis world into one unified competition. The first tournament to go "Open" started on 22 April 1968 was the British Hard Court Championships at The West Hants Club in Bournemouth, England.[11] The first Grand Slam tournament to do so was the 1968 French Open, starting on 27 May.[12]

Analysis of records[edit]

Today, the ultimate pursuit in tennis is to win the Grand Slam; winning all four Grand Slam tournaments in the same calendar year.[13] In 1982, the International Tennis Federation (ITF) broadened the definition of the Grand Slam as meaning any four straight major victories, including the ones spanning two calendar years that became known as the non-calendar year Grand Slam, though it later reversed its definition.

In the history of men's tennis, only two players have won the calendar Grand Slam, Don Budge (1938) and Rod Laver (1962 and 1969).[13] Budge remains the sole player to have won six majors in a row (1937–1938). In the Open Era, only one player has achieved the non-calendar year Grand Slam, Novak Djokovic (2015–2016). This is followed by a career Grand Slam, a feat achieved by a player winning each of the majors during their career, which eight players have done. Winning just one of these major tournaments in a year is a sought-after achievement but winning all four or more consecutively, if we apply Prochnow's (2018) analysis retrospectively in Budge's case, transforms a player into a legend.[13]

When we reflect on the modern era of the sport, tennis has clear separations during its history, such as the first official majors sanctioned by the world governing body of tennis its separate tours (amateur and professional), the eligibility to compete at Grand Slam majors or the surface aspects of the tournaments.[13] In 1913, the ILTF created its first tennis majors, three world championship tournaments that were abolished by 1923. In the history of those early majors, only one player won all three in the same year, Anthony Wilding, arguably the first world champion.[14] In 1927, the men's game was separated, leading to the creation of what are now referred to as the pro majors. During a period of 40 years, only two players achieved the calendar Pro Grand Slam in the history of the professional tour, Ken Rosewall (1963) and Laver (1967). Prior to 1968, only amateurs could enter the Grand Slam tournaments. This was changed in 1968, after which both professionals and amateurs could compete for the tennis majors.

There are also several other facets to take into consideration in defining great tennis players, such as winning all calendar year majors consecutively on offer at the time (World Champs and Pro Slams) on three different surfaces.[13] Three players achieved this distinction between 1913 and 1967, Wilding, Rosewall and Laver. Only those same three players did so not only by surface,[15] but also different environments (indoors and outdoors). When the professional majors were abolished in 1967, the Grand Slam majors were still only being played on two exclusive surfaces, grass and clay. In 1978, the US Open switched surface to a hardcourt thus re-creating a third unique surface. This is arguably the best date in defining the beginning of the modern era of tennis.[13] In this new modern era, only one player (Djokovic) has won all four majors in a row. Only two players have achieved the new term, a "Surface Slam", winning three consecutive majors on three distinct surfaces, that being Rafael Nadal in 2010 and Novak Djokovic in 2021.[13][16][17] To have accomplished any of these feats in a group of tournaments originating over 100 years ago underscores the degree of difficulty involved.[13]

These are some of the important records since the start of the first Grand Slam tournament held at the Wimbledon Championships. All statistics are based on data provided by the ATP Tour website,[18][19] the ITF[20] and other available sources, even if this isn't a complete list due to the time period involved.

Grand Slam tournaments[edit]

Career totals[edit]

Active players in boldface.

# Titles
24 Novak Djokovic
22 Rafael Nadal
20 Roger Federer
14 Pete Sampras
12 Roy Emerson
11 Rod Laver
Björn Borg
10 Bill Tilden
8 Fred Perry
Ken Rosewall
Jimmy Connors
Ivan Lendl
Andre Agassi
# Finals
37 Novak Djokovic
31 Roger Federer
30 Rafael Nadal
19 Ivan Lendl
18 Pete Sampras
17 Rod Laver
16 Ken Rosewall
Björn Borg
15 Bill Tilden
Roy Emerson
Jimmy Connors
Andre Agassi
# Semifinals
49 Novak Djokovic
46 Roger Federer
38 Rafael Nadal
31 Jimmy Connors
28 Ivan Lendl
26 Andre Agassi
25 Ken Rosewall
23 Pete Sampras
21 Andy Murray
20 Bill Tilden
# Quarterfinals
60 Novak Djokovic
58 Roger Federer
47 Rafael Nadal
41 Jimmy Connors
37 Roy Emerson
36 Andre Agassi
34 / Ivan Lendl
30 Ken Rosewall
Andy Murray
29 Pete Sampras
# Match wins
375 Novak Djokovic
369 Roger Federer
314 Rafael Nadal
233 Jimmy Connors
224 Andre Agassi
222 / Ivan Lendl
210 Roy Emerson
203 Pete Sampras
200 Andy Murray
minimum 200 wins
% W–L Match record[21]
89.76 114–13 Bill Tilden
89.24 141–17 Björn Borg
88.24 375–50 Novak Djokovic
87.71 314–44 Rafael Nadal
87.07 101–15 Fred Perry
86.01 369–60 Roger Federer
84.23 203–38 Pete Sampras
83.41 171–34 Ken Rosewall
82.94 141–29 Rod Laver
82.62 233–49 Jimmy Connors
minimum 100 wins
# Appearances
81 Roger Federer
Feliciano López
75 Novak Djokovic
74 Richard Gasquet
71 Fernando Verdasco
Stan Wawrinka
70 Fabrice Santoro
69 Mikhail Youzhny
68 Philipp Kohlschreiber
Rafael Nadal

Grand Slam achievements[edit]

Grand Slam[edit]

Grand Slam Player First–last tournament
Don Budge 1938 Australian ChampionshipsU.S. Championships
Rod Laver 1962 Australian ChampionshipsU.S. Championships
Rod Laver (2) 1969 Australian OpenUS Open
all four major titles consecutively (in a calendar year)

Non-Calendar Year Grand Slam[edit]

NCYGS Player First–last tournament
Novak Djokovic 2015 Wimbledon2016 French Open
all four major titles consecutively (not in a calendar year)

Career Grand Slam[edit]

CGS Player Event of completion
Fred Perry 1935 French Championships
Don Budge 1938 French Championships
Rod Laver 1962 U.S. Championships
Roy Emerson 1964 Wimbledon Championships
Roy Emerson (2) 1967 French Championships
Rod Laver (2) 1969 US Open
Andre Agassi 1999 French Open
Roger Federer 2009 French Open
Rafael Nadal 2010 US Open
Novak Djokovic 2016 French Open
Novak Djokovic (2) 2021 French Open
Rafael Nadal (2) 2022 Australian Open
Novak Djokovic (3) 2023 French Open
each Grand Slam title at least once

Consecutive totals[edit]

Grand Slam tournaments consecutive streaks[edit]

Active streaks in boldface.

# Titles
6 Don Budge
4 Bill Tilden
Rod Laver
Rod Laver (2)
Novak Djokovic
3 Laurence Doherty
Jack Crawford
Tony Trabert
Lew Hoad
Roy Emerson
Pete Sampras
Roger Federer
Roger Federer (2)
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic (2)
Novak Djokovic (3)
Novak Djokovic (4)
# Finals
10 Roger Federer
8 Roger Federer (2)
7 Jack Crawford
6 Don Budge
Rod Laver
Novak Djokovic
5 Fred Perry
Frank Sedgman
Fred Stolle
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic (2)
# Semifinals
23 Roger Federer
14 Novak Djokovic
10 Rod Laver
Ivan Lendl
9 Novak Djokovic (2)
8 Ashley Cooper
7 Jack Crawford
Rafael Nadal
6 Fred Perry
Don Budge
Tom Brown
Lew Hoad
Ivan Lendl (2)
# Quarterfinals
36 Roger Federer
28 Novak Djokovic
14 Roy Emerson
Ivan Lendl
12 Neale Fraser
11 Rafael Nadal
10 Vic Seixas
Rod Laver
Pete Sampras
David Ferrer
Rafael Nadal (2)
# Consecutive appearances
79 Feliciano López
67 Fernando Verdasco
66 Andreas Seppi
65 Roger Federer
56 Wayne Ferreira
54 Stefan Edberg
Grigor Dimitrov
52 Tomáš Berdych
51 Novak Djokovic
50 David Ferrer
Guillermo García López
Stan Wawrinka

Grand Slam tournaments non-consecutive streaks[edit]

Player skipped one or more Grand Slam tournaments during his streak.[clarification needed]

# Titles
8 Bill Tilden
6 William Renshaw
5 Laurence Doherty
William Larned
Anthony Wilding
4 Richard Sears
Reginald Doherty
# Finals
10 Bill Tilden
8 Jack Crawford
Rod Laver
7 Don Budge
6 William Renshaw
Wilfred Baddeley
Anthony Wilding
Maurice McLoughlin
Gottfried von Cramm
Jimmy Connors
Björn Borg
# Semifinals
14 Jack Crawford
12 Rod Laver
11 Jimmy Connors
10 Bill Tilden
Bill Tilden (2)
9 Fred Perry
Ken Rosewall
8 Don Budge
# Quarterfinals
27 Jimmy Connors
21 Bill Tilden
18 Andy Murray
17 Jack Crawford
16 Rafael Nadal
13 William Larned
12 Fred Perry
Rod Laver
Björn Borg

Grand Slam matches/finals streaks[edit]

Streaks can be across non-consecutive tournaments.

Matches Player Years
51 Bill Tilden 1920–1926
37 Don Budge[22] 1937–1938
31 Rod Laver[22] 1962–1968
30 Novak Djokovic 2015–2016
29 Rod Laver[22] (2) 1969–1970
27 Roger Federer 2005–2006
Roger Federer (2) 2006–2007
Novak Djokovic (2) 2011–2012
Novak Djokovic (3) 2021
Novak Djokovic (4) 2022–2023
Finals Player Years
10 Roy Emerson 1963–1967
8 Bill Tilden 1920–1925
Pete Sampras 1995–2000
7 Richard Sears 1881–1887
William Renshaw 1881–1889
Roger Federer 2003–2006
Rafael Nadal 2008–2011
6 Laurence Doherty 1902–1906
Don Budge 1937–1938
Novak Djokovic 2015–2016
5 William Larned 1907–1911
Anthony Wilding 1909–1913
Jack Crawford 1931–1933
Tony Trabert 1953–1955
Rod Laver 1968–1969
John Newcombe 1970–1975
Rafael Nadal (2) 2017–2022

Match win streak per Grand Slam tournament[edit]

# Australian Years
33 Novak Djokovic 2019–24
30 Roy Emerson 1963–68
26 Andre Agassi 2000–04
25 Novak Djokovic (2) 2011–14
20 Ivan Lendl 1989–91
# French Years
39 Rafael Nadal 2010–15
35 Rafael Nadal (2) 2016–21
31 Rafael Nadal (3) 2005–09
28 Björn Borg 1978–81
20 Jim Courier 1991–93
# Wimbledon Years
41 Björn Borg 1976–81
40 Roger Federer 2003–08
34 Novak Djokovic 2018–23
31 Rod Laver 1961–70
Pete Sampras 1997–2001
# United States Years
42[23] Bill Tilden 1920–26
40 Roger Federer 2004–09
27 Ivan Lendl 1985–88
25 John McEnroe 1979–83
20[23] Maurice McLoughlin 1912–14

Per Grand Slam tournament totals[edit]

Titles per Grand Slam tournament (3+ titles)[edit]

# Australian
10 Novak Djokovic
6 Roy Emerson
Roger Federer
4 Jack Crawford
Ken Rosewall
Andre Agassi
3 James Anderson
Adrian Quist
Rod Laver
Mats Wilander
# French
14 Rafael Nadal
6 Björn Borg
4 Henri Cochet
3 René Lacoste
Ivan Lendl
Mats Wilander
Gustavo Kuerten
Novak Djokovic
# Wimbledon
8 Roger Federer
7 William Renshaw
Pete Sampras
Novak Djokovic
5 Laurence Doherty
Björn Borg
4 Reginald Doherty
Anthony Wilding
Rod Laver
3 Wilfred Baddeley
Arthur Gore
Bill Tilden
Fred Perry
John Newcombe
John McEnroe
Boris Becker
# United States
7 Richard Sears
William Larned
Bill Tilden
5 Jimmy Connors
Pete Sampras
Roger Federer
4 Robert Wrenn
John McEnroe
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic
3 Oliver Campbell
Malcolm Whitman
Fred Perry
Ivan Lendl

Consecutive titles per Grand Slam tournament[edit]

# Australian
5 Roy Emerson
3 Jack Crawford
Novak Djokovic
Novak Djokovic (2)
2 James Anderson
Frank Sedgman
Ashley Cooper
Ken Rosewall
Guillermo Vilas
/ Johan Kriek
Mats Wilander
Stefan Edberg
Ivan Lendl
Jim Courier
Andre Agassi
Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic (3)
Roger Federer (2)
# French
5 Rafael Nadal
4 Björn Borg
Rafael Nadal (2)
Rafael Nadal (3)
2 Frank Parker
Jaroslav Drobný
Tony Trabert
Nicola Pietrangeli
Jan Kodeš
Björn Borg (2)
Ivan Lendl
Jim Courier
Sergi Bruguera
Gustavo Kuerten
# Wimbledon
6 William Renshaw
5 Laurence Doherty
Björn Borg
Roger Federer
4 Reginald Doherty
Anthony Wilding
Pete Sampras
Novak Djokovic
3 Fred Perry
Pete Sampras (2)
2 John Hartley
Wilfred Baddeley
Joshua Pim
Arthur Gore
Bill Tilden
Don Budge
Lew Hoad
Rod Laver
Roy Emerson
Rod Laver (2)
John Newcombe
John McEnroe
Boris Becker
Novak Djokovic (2)
Carlos Alcaraz
# United States
7 Richard Sears[24]
6 Bill Tilden
5 William Larned
Roger Federer
3 Oliver Campbell
Malcolm Whitman
John McEnroe
Ivan Lendl
2 Henry Slocum
Robert Wrenn
Robert Wrenn (2)
William Larned (2)
Maurice McLoughlin
Robert Lindley Murray
René Lacoste
Ellsworth Vines
Fred Perry
Don Budge
Frank Parker
Jack Kramer
Pancho Gonzales
Frank Sedgman
Neale Fraser
Jimmy Connors
Stefan Edberg
Pete Sampras
Patrick Rafter

Finals per Grand Slam tournament[edit]

# Australian
10 Novak Djokovic
7 Jack Crawford
John Bromwich
Roy Emerson
Roger Federer
6 Rafael Nadal
5 Ken Rosewall
Stefan Edberg
Andy Murray
4 Gerald Patterson
Horace Rice
Adrian Quist
Rod Laver
Arthur Ashe
Mats Wilander
Ivan Lendl
Andre Agassi
# French
14 Rafael Nadal
7 Novak Djokovic
6 Björn Borg
5 René Lacoste
Henri Cochet
/ Jaroslav Drobný
Ivan Lendl
Mats Wilander
Roger Federer
4 Nicola Pietrangeli
Guillermo Vilas
# Wimbledon
12 Roger Federer
10 Novak Djokovic
8 William Renshaw
Arthur Gore
7 Boris Becker
Pete Sampras
6 Herbert Lawford
Wilfred Baddeley
Laurence Doherty
Rod Laver
Björn Borg
Jimmy Connors
# United States
10 Bill Tilden
Novak Djokovic
9 William Larned
8 Bill Johnston
Ivan Lendl
Pete Sampras
7 Richard Sears
Jimmy Connors
Roger Federer
6 Andre Agassi

Runners-up per Grand Slam tournament[edit]

# Australian
5 John Bromwich
Andy Murray
4 Rafael Nadal
3 Horace Rice
Gerald Patterson
Harry Hopman
Jack Crawford
Neale Fraser
Arthur Ashe
Stefan Edberg
Daniil Medvedev
# French
4 Roger Federer
Novak Djokovic
3 Jaroslav Drobný
Guillermo Vilas
2 Jean Borotra
Bill Tilden
René Lacoste
Eric Sturgess
Sven Davidson
Luis Ayala
Nicola Pietrangeli
Tony Roche
Ivan Lendl
Mats Wilander
Andre Agassi
Àlex Corretja
Robin Söderling
Dominic Thiem
Casper Ruud
# Wimbledon
5 Herbert Lawford
Arthur Gore
4 Ernest Renshaw
Ken Rosewall
Jimmy Connors
Boris Becker
Roger Federer
3 Wilfred Baddeley
Frank Riseley
Jean Borotra
Gottfried von Cramm
Fred Stolle
Goran Ivanišević
Andy Roddick
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic
# United States
6 Bill Johnston
Novak Djokovic
5 Ivan Lendl
4 Björn Borg
Andre Agassi
3 Frederick Hovey
Beals Wright
Maurice McLoughlin
Bill Tilden
Pete Sampras

Match wins per Grand Slam tournament[edit]

# Australian
102 Roger Federer
94 Novak Djokovic
77 Rafael Nadal
56 Stefan Edberg
52 Jack Crawford
51 Andy Murray
48 / Ivan Lendl
Andre Agassi
47 Tomáš Berdych
46 Roy Emerson
John Newcombe
# French
112 Rafael Nadal
96 Novak Djokovic
73 Roger Federer
56 Guillermo Vilas
53 / Ivan Lendl
51 Andre Agassi
50 Nicola Pietrangeli
49 Björn Borg
47 Mats Wilander
46 / Jaroslav Drobný
Stan Wawrinka
# Wimbledon
105 Roger Federer
97 Novak Djokovic
84 Jimmy Connors
71 Boris Becker
64[25] Arthur Gore
63 Pete Sampras
62 Major Ritchie
61 Andy Murray
60 Roy Emerson
59 John McEnroe
# United States
98[26] Jimmy Connors
89 Roger Federer
88 Novak Djokovic
79 Andre Agassi
75[26] Vic Seixas
73 / Ivan Lendl
71 Bill Tilden
Pete Sampras
69[26] R. Norris Williams
67 Rafael Nadal

Match winning percentage per Grand Slam tournament[edit]

Australian % W–L
James Anderson 91.30 21–2
Novak Djokovic 91.26 94–9
Andre Agassi 90.57 48–5
Guillermo Vilas 88.46 23–3
Roger Federer 87.18 102–15
Stefan Edberg 84.85 56–10
Arthur Ashe 83.87 26–5
Mats Wilander 83.72 36–7
Roy Emerson 83.64 46–9
Rafael Nadal 82.80 77–16
minimum 30 wins
French % W–L
Rafael Nadal 96.55 112–4
Björn Borg 96.08 49–2
Gottfried von Cramm 90.91 20–2
René Lacoste 90.63 29–3
Henri Cochet 90.24 37–4
Ken Rosewall 88.89 24–3
Novak Djokovic 85.71 96–16
Manuel Santana 85.37 35–6
Mats Wilander 83.93 47–9
Eric Sturgess 83.33 30–6
minimum 30 wins
Wimbledon % W–L
Björn Borg 92.73 51–4
Don Budge 92.31 24–2
Bill Tilden 91.18 31–3
Pete Sampras 90.00 63–7
Novak Djokovic 88.99 97–12
Norman Brookes 88.89 24–3
Roger Federer 88.24 105–14
William Renshaw 88.00 22–3
Fred Perry 87.80 36–5
Rod Laver 87.72 50–7
minimum 30 wins
United States # * W–L
Bill Tilden[27] 91.02 71–7
Fred Perry 89.47 34–4
Pete Sampras 88.75 71–9
Don Budge 88.46 23–3
Maurice McLoughlin 87.72 50–7
Robert Wrenn 87.50 21–3
Robert Lindley Murray 21–3
Novak Djokovic 87.13 88–13
Bobby Riggs 87.10 27–4
Frank Sedgman 86.96 20–3
minimum 30 wins

Court type totals[edit]

Match wins in Grand Slam tournaments per court type[edit]

# Hardcourt
191 Roger Federer
182 Novak Djokovic
144 Rafael Nadal
127 Andre Agassi
116 Pete Sampras
105 Ivan Lendl
100 Andy Murray
89 Stan Wawrinka
84 Stefan Edberg
81 Andy Roddick
# Clay
112 Rafael Nadal
96 Novak Djokovic
73 Guillermo Vilas
Roger Federer
63 Björn Borg
59 Jimmy Connors
53 Ivan Lendl
52 Jan Kodeš
51 Andre Agassi
50 Nicola Pietrangeli
# Grass
166 Roy Emerson
145 Ken Rosewall
136 John Newcombe
113 Rod Laver
112 Vic Seixas
107 Jimmy Connors
106 Arthur Ashe
105 Roger Federer
100 Bill Tilden
99 Neale Fraser
97 Novak Djokovic

Winning percentage in Grand Slam tournaments per court type[edit]

Hardcourt % W–L
Novak Djokovic 89.22 182–22
Roger Federer 86.82 191–29
Pete Sampras 86.57 116–18
Jimmy Connors 85.90 67–11
Ivan Lendl 85.37 105–18
Björn Borg 84.62 22–4
Andre Agassi 84.11 127–24
John McEnroe 83.91 73–14
Rafael Nadal 83.72 144–28
Carlos Alcaraz 82.14 23–5
minimum 20 wins
Clay % W–L
Rafael Nadal 96.55 112–4
Björn Borg 92.65 63–5
René Lacoste 90.63 29–3
Henri Cochet 90.24 37–4
Ken Rosewall 86.67 26–4
Novak Djokovic 85.71 96–16
Mats Wilander 83.93 47–9
Eric Sturgess 83.33 30–6
Gustavo Kuerten 81.82 36–8
Jim Courier 81.63 40–9
minimum 20 wins
Grass % W–L
Don Budge 91.22 52–5
Bill Tilden 90.91 100–10
Pete Sampras 90.00 63–7
Novak Djokovic 88.99 97–12
Björn Borg 88.89 56–7
Fred Perry 88.76 79–10
Roger Federer 88.24 105–14
Jack Crawford 87.25 89–13
Henri Cochet 84.51 60–11
Rod Laver 83.70 113–22
minimum 20 wins

Season totals[edit]

Four majors in one calendar year[edit]

4 Slam wins Years
Rod Laver 2 1962, 1969[28]
Don Budge 1 1938
3 Slam wins & 1 final Years
Novak Djokovic 3 2015, 2021, 2023
Roger Federer 2 2006, 2007
Jack Crawford 1 1933
Lew Hoad 1956
2 Slam wins & 2 finals Years
Frank Sedgman 1 1952
Roger Federer 2009
All 4 finals Years
Roger Federer 3 2006, 2007, 2009
Novak Djokovic 2015, 2021, 2023
Rod Laver 2 1962, 1969
Jack Crawford 1 1933
Don Budge 1938
Frank Sedgman 1952
Lew Hoad 1956
All 4 semifinals Years
Novak Djokovic 6 2011–13, 15, 21, 23
Roger Federer 5 2005–09
Rod Laver 3 1961–62, 69
Ashley Cooper 2 1957–58
Rafael Nadal 2008, 19
Jack Crawford 1 1933
Fred Perry 1935
Don Budge 1938
Frank Sedgman 1952
Vic Seixas 1953
Tony Trabert 1955
Lew Hoad 1956
Tony Roche 1969
Ivan Lendl 1987
Andy Murray 2011
All 4 quarterfinals Years
Roger Federer 8 2005–12
Novak Djokovic 2010–15, 21, 23
Roy Emerson 5 1959, 61, 64–66
Rafael Nadal 2008, 2010–11, 18–19
Andy Murray 4 2011–12, 14, 16
Neale Fraser 3 1958–60
Rod Laver 1961–62, 69
Ivan Lendl 1983, 87–88
Fred Perry 2 1934–35
Dick Savitt 1951–52
Frank Sedgman 1951–52
Vic Seixas 1953–54
Ashley Cooper 1957–58
Andre Agassi 1995, 01
David Ferrer 2012–13
Jack Crawford 1 1933
Don Budge 1938
Vic Seixas 1953
Ken Rosewall 1953
Tony Trabert 1955
Lew Hoad 1956
John Newcombe 1969
Tony Roche 1969
John McEnroe 1985
Mats Wilander 1988
Stefan Edberg 1991
Pete Sampras 1993
Stan Wawrinka 2015

Three majors[edit]

3 slam wins Years
Novak Djokovic 4 2011, 15, 21, 23
Roger Federer 3 2004, 06–07
Jack Crawford 1 1933
Fred Perry 1934
Tony Trabert 1955
Lew Hoad 1956
Ashley Cooper 1958
Roy Emerson 1964
Jimmy Connors 1974
Mats Wilander 1988
Rafael Nadal 2010
2 slam wins & 1 final Years
Fred Perry 2 1935–36
Björn Borg 1978, 80
Ivan Lendl 1986–87
Rafael Nadal 2017, 19
Henri Cochet 1 1928
Bobby Riggs 1939
Alex Olmedo 1959
Neale Fraser 1960
Guillermo Vilas 1977
John McEnroe 1984
Pete Sampras 1995
Andre Agassi 1999
Novak Djokovic 2016
1 slam win & 2 finals Years
Rod Laver 2 1960–61
Novak Djokovic 2012–13
Vic Seixas 1 1953
Ken Rosewall 1956
Ashley Cooper 1957
Fred Stolle 1965
Björn Borg 1981
Jim Courier 1993
Roger Federer 2008
Rafael Nadal 2011
Andy Murray 2016
3 slam finals (all losses) Years
Jack Crawford 1 1934
Roy Emerson 1962
Fred Stolle 1964
Jimmy Connors 1975

Other[edit]

Consecutive majors[edit]

Four consecutive[edit]
Australian / French / Wimbledon / United States Years
Rod Laver 2 1962, 69
Don Budge 1 1938

Djokovic got one as well. "2015 wimbledon through to 2016 french open he win all four in a row

Three consecutive[edit]
Australian / French / Wimbledon Years
Jack Crawford 1 1933
Lew Hoad 1956
Novak Djokovic 2021
French / Wimbledon / United States Years
Tony Trabert 1 1955
Rafael Nadal 2010
Two consecutive[edit]

Players who won three or four consecutive titles are not listed here.

Australian/French Years
Roy Emerson 2 1963, 67

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