Who has won the most tennis titles in the Open Era?
Table of Contents
Who has won the most tennis titles in the Open Era?
John McEnroe
John McEnroe won the most titles overall. Jimmy Connors won the most singles titles. Bob and Mike Bryan won 119 doubles titles together….Men.
Player | Bob Hewitt |
---|---|
Span | 1968–83 |
Sing. | 7 |
Doub. | 65 |
Mix. | 6 |
Who is World No 1 in tennis?
Novak Djokovic
Player Results
Ranking | Player | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Novak Djokovic (SRB) | 11,540 |
34 Age Next Best 14 Tourn Played Move Points Dropping | ||
2 | Daniil Medvedev (RUS) | 8,640 |
25 Age Next Best 23 Tourn Played Move Points Dropping |
Who is better Rafa or Roger?
The Federer–Nadal rivalry is a modern-day tennis rivalry between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. A total of 14 matches have been in majors with Nadal leading 10–4. Nadal leads 6–0 at the French Open and 3–1 at the Australian Open, while Federer leads 3–1 at Wimbledon.
Who was the most successful tennis player before the Open Era?
Roy Emerson have gone down in history as the most talented and successful tennis player before the Open Era. He had his prime in the 60s and was ranked No.1 in the world during the 1964-65 season and no-one was even near his level back then.
Is Roger Federer the greatest tennis player of all time?
The greatest tennis player of all time is Roger Federer. He have proven his talent for over 20 years and is still competing at the very highest level. Federer is the player that have the most Grand Slam titles in the world (20) and have the world record of most weeks at the World No.1 spot in the open era with 310 weeks.
Who are the top 10 tennis players of all time?
1 Rod Laver (AUS) 2 Bjorn Borg (SWE) 3 Roger Federer (SUI) 4 Pete Sampras (USA) 5 Andre Agassi (USA) 6 John McEnroe (USA) 7 Jimmy Connors (USA) 8 Ivan Lendl (CZE) 9 Ken Rosewall (AUS) 10 Rafael Nadal (ESP)
Who has the fastest serve in tennis history?
Roddick is the prototype Power Era player. He plays his points short and holds the ATP World Record for fastest serve, clocked at a ridiculous 155 mph. He captured his first and only Grand Slam title to date when he defeated Juan Carlos Ferrero in straight sets at the US Open in 2003.