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Top Seven Men by Win Percentage in ATP Tour Finals: Djokovic Leads, Nadal Ranked Sixth

The seven male tennis players with the highest win percentages in ATP Tour finals during the Open Era.

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In the Open Era of tennis, seven male players stand out for having the most impressive win rates in ATP Tour finals, each having contested at least 50 finals. Leading the pack is Novak Djokovic, whose win-loss record in finals is a remarkable 99-43. Djokovic has claimed 100 titles, though a walkover he received from Roger Federer in the 2014 ATP Finals final does not factor into this record. His performance across tournament categories includes 24-13 at Grand Slams, a perfect 1-0 at the Olympics, 6-2 at the ATP Finals, 40-20 at Masters 1000 events, 15-3 at ATP 500s, and 13-5 at ATP 250s. On various surfaces, Djokovic’s finals record stands at 71-23 on hard courts, 21-14 on clay, and 8-6 on grass.

Rafael Nadal holds a 92-39 finals record from the 131 ATP championship matches he has reached. His success spans 22-8 at Grand Slams, 1-0 at the Olympics, though he stands 0-2 at ATP Finals, 36-17 at Masters 1000, 23-6 at ATP 500, and 10-6 at ATP 250 tournaments. Notably dominant on clay, Nadal’s finals record by surface is 63-9 on clay, 25-27 on hard courts, and 4-3 on grass.

John McEnroe’s career saw him finish with a 76-31 record in completed finals. His surface performance includes 42-14 on carpet, 22-8 on hard courts, 8-5 on grass, and an even 4-4 on clay. McEnroe recorded a 7-4 record in Grand Slam finals and went 3-1 in year-end championships finals.

Bjorn Borg compiled a 66-26 record in finals, with surface results of 32-7 on clay, 22-11 on carpet, 7-1 on grass, and 5-7 on hard courts. In majors, he holds an 11-5 finals record and stands 2-2 in year-end championships.

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Rod Laver reached 96 finals in the Open Era, securing 69 wins against 27 losses. He won five of six Grand Slam finals in this period, famously completing the 1969 Calendar Grand Slam.

Pete Sampras achieved a 64-24 finals record over 88 championship matches. His finals successes by tournament category include 14-4 at Grand Slams, 5-1 at ATP Finals, 2-1 at the Grand Slam Cup, 11-8 at Masters Series, 12-1 at the 500 level, and 20-9 at the 250 level. Surface-wise, he triumphed 35-12 on hard courts, 16-7 on carpet, 10-3 on grass, and 3-2 on clay.

Thomas Muster stands apart with a 44-10 record, making him the only player with over 50 finals and an over 80% winning percentage. Muster contested 55 finals but withdrew before the 1989 Miami Open final, which is excluded from his record. Muster won his sole Grand Slam final at the 1995 French Open and posted 8-2 in Masters finals, 4-0 at ATP Championship Series (now 500), and 31-9 at the 250 level. His commanding clay record is 40-5, with 3-2 on hard courts and 1-3 on carpet.

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Analytics & Stats Player News Tennis Coaching

Alcaraz’s off-hand: the hidden engine behind his forehand

Alcaraz’s extended off-hand increases shoulder coil, storing energy that fuels his explosive forehand

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Watch almost any top-level player hit a forehand and you will notice the off-hand is not idle. During the takeback it helps position the racquet and rotate the upper body, creating structure and stored energy to release into the shot. For most players the hands separate during the takeback and the off-arm stays parallel to the net.

The current men’s No. 1 takes a different route. Where most players let go of the racquet’s throat when the off-arm is just about parallel to the net, he holds it until his left hand is even with his hitting shoulder. That retained contact changes how his stroke loads and unloads.

Keeping the off-hand on the racquet longer creates greater upper body tension. Mimic his turn and you can feel the stretch in the lats. The added shoulder rotation builds more stored energy that can be transferred into the swing. Yet the result is not a bigger, slower motion. He turns his shoulders more while maintaining a compact geometry: a bent hitting elbow and the racquet head level with the chest, similar to players who use a more modest shoulder turn.

That combination lets him generate faster swing speed without an exaggerated path. He uncoils with a relatively loose arm and so produces immense racquet head speed without relying on an extreme loop or oversized swing.

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He is not a template everyone can copy. Few players can replicate his range of motion, upper body flexibility or world-class timing. Even so, approximating a deeper shoulder coil and delaying the separation of the off-hand can measurably increase the amount of energy available to a forehand. For players and coaches focused on adding speed and consistency, the lesson is clear: the off-hand is an active tool for storing rotation-based power, not merely a balancing aid.

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Analytics & Stats Tennis Coaching

Why Numbers Help but Do Not Decide Tennis Matches

Analytics show tendencies, not fate: coaches say context, timing and feel decide tight matches. Now!

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Ivan Lendl was an early practitioner of match charting, and his work remains a useful reminder of the long relationship between coaching and numbers. “Ivan would do [the math] himself,” Jimmy Arias recently said. “Somehow, Ivan would get video tapes of the matches of the guys he was most worried about and chart them to figure it all out. It had to be a lot of work.”

The modern game has multiplied those tools. Stats now record everything from break point conversion to first-serve percentages and biomechanical details such as body rotation and height of bounce. Those measures can expose tendencies. Rafael Nadal, for example, posts a career best Under Pressure break point conversion of 44.9 percent, while Novak Djokovic sits at 44.1 percent. Over 300 break-point chances that amounts to roughly 134.7 conversions for Nadal and 132.3 for Djokovic, a difference of just over two points.

Numbers can be revealing and also misleading. “To really get a good sense of what a stat means,” veteran coach Craig Boynton told me, “You really have to drill down into it, see what factors are in play, including other stats.” Paul Annacone put it another way: “People sometimes go wrong by looking at the numbers in isolation…They don’t always look at when things happen in a match, or why they happen. I think it’s really important to understand why the numbers are what they are.”

Arias offered a practical frustration: “I used to get annoyed at a player I [worked with] because he would get 80% of his first serves in—the tour leader in 2025 at the moment is Alexander Zverev, at 71.5%—but he won a relatively low percentage of them because he was just spinning the first ball in.” He also highlighted the value of second-serve points won. “That one tells you who is winning the neutral rallies,” he said. “Generally, I’d like that person to have a better chance to win.”

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Coaches caution against rigid reliance on analytics. Annacone warned that too much data can blunt instinct: “In individual sports, players have innate skills and with too much data they’re just not going to feel it, or get that instinctive sense of, ‘This is going to happen,’ or, ‘This is what I’m going to do.’” Boynton described how he frames tendencies as options rather than mandates: “Hey, look, if you can’t get a feel, or some tell, about what your opponent’s doing to bother you, here’s a tendency. Don’t make it non-negotiable. You want the player to make the judgement and the final decision.”

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Analytics & Stats ATP WTA

Time to End the ‘Do-Over’ Serve Toss?

Proposal to ban ‘do-over’ tosses gains traction as bigger serves and aces change modern tennis. now.

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Tennis faces a recurring question as serving grows more dominant: should players be allowed to catch a tossed ball and try their toss again? The practice, often called the do-over toss or DOT, lets servers reset a flawed toss before the point and can occur multiple times in succession.

Critics argue DOTs compound an already server-friendly format. Two serves per point already favor the server; repeated tosses add additional advantage, disrupt returners and can be used to stall. “It is beyond ridiculous,” Gilbert said as early as the spring of 2024. He highlighted how several DOTs affect fairness and noted that genuine trials of adverse conditions could be handled away from the baseline before a point begins.

David Macpherson was blunt: “I would make every (caught) ball toss a fault. Catching ball tosses these days, it drives me nuts.” He also criticized tennis governance for resisting routine rule review: “It’s bizarre to me,” Macpherson said. “Innovation, I think, is good. We see it all the time in my football that I love in Australia. They’re always tweaking the rules to try and make it more attractive and fair. So, I don’t know why we’re so stodgy in tennis where we don’t look at things. We don’t have an independent panel that looks at the rules each year and says, “How can we make the game more attractive, singles and doubles?””

The fragmented rulemaking process — where the ITF, ATP and WTA issue rules that apply to the events they control — slows adoption of uniform changes. Tournaments have experimented with slower courts or balls that fluff up, though that strategy has been linked with increased arm injuries. Some coaches push further. Patrick Mouratoglou said, “The high number of aces and serve winners is detrimental to tennis. We want more rallies and less of these quick points—boom, serve, winner, ace, missed return. An occasional ace is fine, but not too many.”

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Serving power and player size have risen: the current ATP Top 10 is, on average, an inch taller than it was a decade ago. An AI trawl found that there are 17 men 6-3 or taller in the ATP Top 50. This trend is evident in the WTA as well: At least 11 women in the Top 50, including top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka and former Wimbledon Elena Rybakina, are 6-feet tall or over.

The elimination of the first serve is probably too drastic a measure at this stage of the game’s evolution. Doing so could also yield unpredictable results. Players with less potent or consistent serves might be punished even more severely than big-serve specialists. But it would certainly be worth trialing at some level of the competitive game.

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