List of male singles tennis players

This is a list of top international male singles tennis players, both past and present.

It includes players who have been officially ranked among the top 25 singles players in the world during the "Open Era"; been ranked in the top 10 prior to the Open Era; have been a singles quarterfinalist or better at a Grand Slam tournament; have reached the finals of or won the season-ending event; or have been singles medalists at the Olympics.

Players who have won more than one Grand Slam singles title or have been ranked world no. 1 in singles have been put in bold font. Players who are still active on the tour have been put in italics.

List

NameBirthDeathNationalityHoFCriteria for inclusion
Robert Abdesselam19202006France France1949 French Championships quarterfinalist
José Acasuso1982Argentina ArgentinaRanked world no. 20 in 2006
András Ádám-Stolpa19212010Hungary Hungary1947 French Championships quarterfinalist
Andre Agassi1970United States United States2011Winner of 8 Grand Slam singles titles and a career Golden Grand Slam completed in 1999 + 1 Olympic singles gold medal → 1992 Wimbledon champion, 1999 finalist, 1995/2000/2001 semifinalist, 1991/1993 quarterfinalist • 1994/1999 US Open champion, 1990/1995/2002/2005 finalist, 1988/1989/1996/2003 semifinalist, 1992/2001/2004 quarterfinalist • 1995/2000/2001/2003 Australian Open champion, 1996/2004 semifinalist, 2005 quarterfinalist • 1999 French Open champion, 1990/1991 finalist, 1988/1992 semifinalist, 1995/2001/2002/2003 quarterfinalist • 1996 Olympic gold medalist • 1990 ATP Tour World Championships winner • ranked world no. 1 for 101 weeks
Ronald Agénor1964Haiti Haiti1989 French Open singles quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 22 in 1989
Juan Aguilera1962Spain SpainRanked world no. 7 in 1984
Roberto Bautista Agut1988Spain SpainRanked world no. 13 in 2016 • 2016 Olympics quarterfinals
Karim Alami1973Morocco MoroccoRanked world no. 25 in 2000
Fred Alexander18801969United States United States1961Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1908 Australasian Championships winner (results most likely incomplete as U.S. National drawsheets for time unavailable)
John Alexander1951Australia Australia1977 (December) Australian Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 8 in 1975
Wilmer Allison, Jr.19041977United States United States1963Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1935 United States champion, 1934 finalist • 1930 Wimbledon singles finalist • ranked amateur world no. 4 in 1932 and 1935
Nicolás Almagro1985Spain Spain2008/2010/2012 French Open quarterfinalist •2013 Australian Open quarterfinalist• ranked world no. 9 in 2011
Manuel Alonso18951984Spain Spain19771921 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1927 United States quarterfinalist • rated world no. 5 in 1927
Felicisimo Ampon19201997Philippines Philippines1952, 1953 French Championships singles quarterfinalist
Vijay Amritraj1953India India1973 and 1981 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1973 and 1974 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 16 in 1980
Mario Ančić1984Croatia Croatia2004 Wimbledon semifinalist • 2006 French Open and Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 2006
James Anderson18941973Australia Australia2013Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1922, 1924 and 1925 Australasian champion, 1919 1926 semifinalist, 1920 quarterfinalist(?) (list perhaps incomplete - a few results appear unavailable) • rated world no. 3 in 1924 and 1925
Kevin Anderson1986South Africa South Africa2018 Wimbledon finalist • 2017 US Open finalist • ranked world no. 5 in 2018
Mal Anderson1935Australia Australia2000Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1957 United States champion, 1958 runner-up • 1958 and 1972 Australian (Open) runner-up, 1957 semifinalist, 1956 quarterfinalist • 1956 and 1958 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • rated amateur world no. 2 in 1957 and 1958
Igor Andreev1983Russia Russia2007 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 18 in 2008
John Andrews1952United States United States1975 French Open quarterfinalist
Matt Anger1963United States United StatesRanked world no. 23 in 1986
Paul Annacone1963United States United States1984 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 12 in 1986
Hicham Arazi1973Morocco Morocco1997 and 1998 French Open quarterfinalist • 2000 and 2004 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 22 in 2001
Jimmy Arias1964United States United States1983 U.S. Open semifinalist • 1984 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 1984
Jordi Arrese1964Spain Spain1992 Olympic silver medalist • ranked world no. 23 in 1991
József Asbóth19171986Hungary HungaryWinner of 1 Grand Slam title → 1947 French champion • 1948 Wimbledon semifinalist
Arthur Ashe19431993United States United States1985Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1968 U.S. Open champion, 1972 finalist, 1969 and 1971 semifinalist, 1970/1974 quarterfinalist; 1965 U.S. National semifinalist • 1970 Australian Open champion, 1971 finalist, 1978 semifinalist, 1977 (January) quarterfinalist; 1966 and 1967 Australian Championships finalist • 1975 Wimbledon champion, 1968/1969 semifinalist • 1970/1971 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 2 in 1975
Bunny Austin19062000United Kingdom Great Britain19971932 and 1938 Wimbledon finalist, 1936 and 1937 semifinalist, 1931, 1933, 1934 and 1935 quarterfinalist • 1937 French finalist, 1935 semifinalist, 1934 and 1936 quarterfinalist • 1929 Australian quarterfinalist (U.S. National drawsheets prior to 1933 unavailable) • rated world no. 4 in 1938
Luis Ayala1932Chile Chile1958 and 1960 French finalist, 1959 semifinalist • 1957 and 1959 United States quarterfinalist • 1959 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 1958
Wilfred Baddeley18721929United Kingdom Great Britain2013Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1891, 1892 and 1895 Wimbledon champion, 1893, 1894 and 1896 runner-up • rated world no. 1 for 4 years jointly for 1891, 1892, 1895 and solely for 1896
Marcos Baghdatis1985Cyprus Cyprus2006 Australian Open finalist • 2006 Wimbledon semifinalist • ranked world no. 8 in 2006
Corrado Barazzutti1953Italy Italy1977 U.S. Open semifinalist • 1978 French Open semifinalist • 1980 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1978
Herbert Roper Barrett18731943United Kingdom Great Britain1908, 1909 and 1911 Wimbledon finalist • 1908 Olympic gold medalist singles
Pierre Barthès1941France FranceRanked a world top-20 player for 1971
Alfred Beamish18791944United Kingdom Great Britain1912 Australasian championships singles finalist
Boris Becker1967West Germany West Germany/Germany2003Winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles → 1985/1986/1989 Wimbledon champion, 1988, 1990, 1991 and 1995 finalist • 1989 U.S. Open champion1991/1996 Australian Open champion, 1984 quarterfinalist • 1987/1989/1991 French Open semifinalist • 1988 Masters Grand Prix champion, 1989 runner-up; 1992/1995 ATP Tour World champion, 1994/1996 finalist • ranked world no. 1 for 12 weeks in 1991
Karl Behr18851949United States United States19691906 U.S. Championship finalist
Mike Belkin1945Canada Canada1968 Australian Championships quarterfinalist
Thomaz Bellucci1987Brazil BrazilRanked world no. 21 in 2010
Eduardo Bengoechea1959Argentina ArgentinaRanked world no. 21 in 1987
Julien Benneteau1981France France2006 French Open singles quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 25 in 2014
Alberto Berasategui1973Spain Spain1994 French Open finalist • 1998 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1994
Tomáš Berdych1985Czech Republic Czech Republic2010 Wimbledon finalist, 2016 semifinalist, 2007/2013 quarterfinalist • 2014/2015 Australian Open semifinalist, 2011/2012/2013/2016 quarterfinalist • 2010 French Open semifinalist, 2014/2016 quarterfinalist • 2012 U.S. Open semifinalist, 2014 quarterfinalist • 2011 Tour Finals semifinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 2015
Lennart Bergelin19252008Sweden Sweden1946/1948/1951 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Jay Berger1966United States United States1989 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 1989 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1990
Christian Bergström1967Sweden Sweden1993 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Marcel Bernard19141994France FranceWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1946 French Championships champion
Paolo Bertolucci1951Italy Italy1973 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 12 in 1973
Henry Billington19091980United Kingdom Great Britain1939 French Championships quarterfinalist
Jonas Björkman1972Sweden Sweden1997 U.S. Open semifinalist • 2006 Wimbledon semifinalist, 2003 quarterfinalist • 1998/2002 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1997
Byron Black1969Zimbabwe Zimbabwe1995 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2000 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 22 in 1996
James Blake1979United States United States2005/2006 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2008 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2006 Tour Finals finalist • ranked world no. 4 in 2006
Galo Blanco1976Spain Spain1997 French Open quarterfinalist
Arnaud Boetsch1969France FranceRanked world no. 12 in 1996
Björn Borg1956Sweden Sweden1987Winner of 11 Grand Slam singles titles → 1974/1975/1978/1979/198/1981 French Open champion, 1976 quarterfinalist • 1976/1977/1978/1979/1980 Wimbledon champion, 1981 finalist, 1973/1975 quarterfinalist • 1976/1978/1980/1981 U.S. Open finalist, 1975 semifinalist, 1979 quarterfinalist • 1979/1980 Masters Grand Prix champion, 1975/1977 finalist • ranked world no. 1 for 109 weeks → for 1 week in 1977, 32 in 1979, 49 in 1980 and 27 in 1981
Jean Borotra18981994France France1976Winner of 5 Grand Slam singles titles → 1924 and 1931 French champion, 1925 and 1929 finalist • 1924 and 1926 Wimbledon champion, 1925, 1927 and 1929 finalist • 1928 Australian champion • 1926 United States finalist (other tournament drawsheets unavailable) • rated world no. 2 for 1926
Jeff Borowiak1949United States United StatesRanked world no. 25 in 1977
William Bowrey1943Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1968 Australian champion, 1967 finalist, 1965 and 1966 quarterfinalist; 1969 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1966 U.S. National quarterfinalist
Christian Boussus19082003France France1931 French Championships singles finalist, 1928 Wimbledon singles semifinalist
Jacques Brichant19302011Belgium Belgium1958 French Championships singles semifinalist
Godfrey Brinley18641939United States United States1885 U.S. Championships singles finalist
John Bromwich19181999Australia Australia1984Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1939 and 1946 Australian champion, 1937, 1938, 1940, 1947, 1948 and 1949 finalist, 1940 semifinalist, 1936, 1950 and 1951 quarterfinalist • 1948 Wimbledon finalist, 1949 semifinalist • 1939 United States semifinalist • 1950 French quarterfinalist
Norman Brookes18771968Australia Australia1977Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1907 and 1914 Wimbledon champion, 1905, 1909 and 1919 finalist (drawsheets for 1910 through 1921 unavailable) • 1911 Australasian championrated world no. 1 for two years 1907 and jointly for 1911
Geoff Brown1924United Kingdom Great Britain1946 Wimbledon finalist, 1947 quarterfinalist • rated world no. 3 amateur in 1946
Tom Brown19222011United States United States1946 United States finalist • 1947 Wimbledon finalist, 1946 semifinalist, 1948 quarterfinalist
Sergi Bruguera1971Spain SpainWinner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1993/1994 French Open champion, 1997 finalist, 1995 semifinalist • 1996 Olympic silver medalist • ranked world no. 3 in 1994
Butch Buchholz1940United States United States2005[lower-alpha 1]1960 U.S. National semifinalist; 1969 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 1960 and 1969 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1969 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 5 amateur in 1960
Don Budge19152000United States United States1964Winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles → 1937 and 1938 Wimbledon champion, 1935 and 1936 semifinalist • 1937 and 1938 United States champion, 1936 finalist, 1935 quarterfinalist • 1938 French champion1938 Australian championrated amateur world no. 1 for 4 years, 1937 through 1940
Pablo Carreño Busta1991Spain SpainRanked world no. 10 in 2017 ◌ Singles: 2017 U.S. Open semifinalist • 2017 French Open quarterfinalist
Darren Cahill1965Australia AustraliaRanked world no. 22 in 1989 ◌ Singles: 1988 U.S. Open semifinalist •
Oliver Campbell18711953United States United States1955Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1890, 1891 and 1892 United States champion (drawsheets for other years unavailable)
Agustín Calleri1976Argentina ArgentinaRanked world no. 16 in 2003
Omar Camporese1968Italy ItalyRanked world no. 18 in 1992
Francesco Cancellotti1963Italy ItalyRanked world no. 21 in 1985
Guillermo Cañas1977Argentina ArgentinaRanked world no. 8 in 2005 ◌ Singles: 2002/2005/2007 French Open quarterfinalist
Cristiano Caratti1970Italy ItalyRanked world no. 26 in 1991 ◌ Singles: 1991 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Kent Carlsson1968Sweden SwedenRanked world no. 6 in 1988
Ross Case1951Australia AustraliaRanked world no. 13 in 1976 ◌ Singles: 1974 Australian Open semifinalist ◌ Doubles: 1974 Australian Open champion • 1977 Wimbledon champion
Pat Cash1965Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1987 Wimbledon champion, 1984 semifinalist, 1982, 1986 and 1988 quarterfinalist • 1987 and 1988 Australian Open finalist, 1984 quarterfinalist • 1984 U.S. Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1988
Marco Cecchinato1992Italy Italy2018 French Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 22 in 2018
František Cejnar19171965Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia1937, 1938 French Championships singles quarterfinalist • 1938 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist
Malcolm Chace18751955United States United States19611894 United States semifinalist (drawsheets for other years unavailable)
Thierry Champion1966France France1990 French Open quarterfinalist • 1991 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Michael Chang1972United States United States2008Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1989 French Open champion, 1995 finalist • 1996 Australian Open finalist • 1996 U.S. Open finalist • ranked world no. 2 in 1996
Jérémy Chardy1987France France2013 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 25 in 2013
Juan Ignacio Chela1979Argentina Argentina2004/2011 French Open quarterfinalist • 2007 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 15 in 2004
Andrei Cherkasov1970Soviet Union Soviet Union/Russia Russia1990 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1990 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 13 in 1991
Andrei Chesnokov1966Soviet Union Soviet Union/Russia Russia1989 French Open semifinalist, 1986 and 1988 quarterfinalist • 1988 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 9 in 1991
Herbert Chipp18501903United Kingdom Great Britain1884 Wimbledon singles semifinalist
Marin Čilić1988Croatia CroatiaWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2014 U.S. Open champion, 2015 semi-finalist, 2009/2012 quarterfinalist • 2017 Wimbledon finalist, 2014/2015/2016 quarterfinalist • 2018 Australian Open finalist, 2010 semifinalist • 2017/2018 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 2018
Francisco Clavet1968Spain SpainRanked world no. 18 in 1992
Arnaud Clément1977France France2001 Australian Open finalist • 2000 US Open quarterfinalist • 2008 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2007 Wimbledon doubles champion (partnering Michaël Llodra) • ranked world no. 10 in 2001
José Luis Clerc1958Argentina Argentina1981 and 1982 French Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1981
William Clothier18811962United States United States1956Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1906 United States champion, 1904 and 1909 finalist (results likely incomplete as drawsheets are unavailable)
Henri Cochet19011987France France1976Winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1922, 1926, 1928, 1930 and 1932 French champion, 1933 finalist, 1927 and 1929 semifinalist, 1925 quarterfinalist (drawsheets for before 1925 unavailable) • 1927 and 1929 Wimbledon champion, 1928 finalist, 1925 and 1933 semifinalist, 1930 quarterfinalist • 1928 United States champion, 1932 finalist (drawsheets before 1933 unavailable) • rated world no. 1 amateur for 3 years, 1928 through 1930
Jimmy Connors1952United States United States1998Winner of 8 Grand Slam singles titles → 1974 Australian Open champion, 1975 finalist • 1974 and 1982 Wimbledon champion, 1975, 1977, 1978 and 1984 finalis; 1979, 1980, 1981, 1985 and 1987 semifinalist; 1972, 1973 and 1975 quarterfinalist • 1974, 1976, 1978, 1982 and 1983 U.S. Open champion, 1975, 1977 finalist; 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1987 and 1991 semifinalist; • 1979, 1980, 1984 and 1985 French Open semifinalist; 1981, 1982, 1983 and 1987 quarterfinalist • 1977 Masters Grand Prix champion • ranked world no. 1 for 268 weeks → 22 weeks in 1974, 52 weeks in 1975, 52 weeks in 1976, 51 weeks in 1977, 52 weeks in 1978, 22 weeks in 1979, 8 weeks in 1982 and 9 weeks in 1983
Elwood Cooke19132004United States United States1939 Wimbledon finalist • 1939 French semifinalist • 1945 United States semifinalist, 1940 and 1943 quarterfinalist
Ashley Cooper1936Australia Australia1991Winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles → 1957 and 1958 Australian champion, 1954, 1955 and 1956 quarterfinalist • 1958 Wimbledon champion, 1957 finalist • 1958 United States champion, 1957 finalist, 1956 quarterfinalist • 1956, 1957 and 1958 French Championship semifinalist
John Cooper1946Australia Australia1971 and 1972 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Patricio Cornejo1944Chile Chile1974 French Open quarterfinalist
Guillermo Coria1982Argentina Argentina2004 French Open finalist, 2003 semifinalist • 2003 and 2005 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 2004
Àlex Corretja1974Spain Spain1998/2001 French Open finalist, 2002 semifinalist, 1999/2000 quarterfinalist • 1996 US Open quarterfinalist • 1998 Masters champion • ranked world no. 2 in 1999
Albert Costa1975Spain SpainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2002 French Open champion, 2003 semifinalist, 1995/2000 quarterfinalist • 1997 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 6 in 2002
Carlos Costa1968Spain SpainRanked world no. 10 in 1992
Jim Courier1970United States United States2005Winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles → 1991 and 1992 French Open champion, 1993 finalist, 1994 semifinalist, 1996 quarterfinalist • 1992 and 1993 Australian Open champion, 1994 semifinalist, 1995 and 1996 quarterfinalist • 1991 U.S. Open finalist, 1992 and 1995 semifinalist • 1993 Wimbledon finalist, 1991 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 58 weeks in 1992
Mark Cox1943United Kingdom Great Britain1971 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 13 in 1977
Gottfried von Cramm19091976Germany/Germany Germany1977Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1934/1936 French champion, 1935 finalist • 1935/1936/1937 Wimbledon finalist • 1937 U.S. finalist
Jack Crawford19081991Australia Australia1979Winner of 6 Grand slam singles titles → 1931, 1932, 1933 and 1935 Australian champion, 1931 and 1940 finalist, 1928, 1930, 1936, 1937 and 1939 semifinalist, 1927 and 1929 quarterfinalist • 1933 French champion, 1934 finalist, 1935 semifinalist, 1928 quarterfinalist • 1933 Wimbledon champion • 1933 United States finalist • rated world no. 1 amateur for 1 year, 1933
Dick Crealy1944Australia Australia1970 Australian Open finalist, 1975 semifinalist, 1972 and 1976 quarterfinalist; 1968 Australian Championship quarterfinalist - winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1968 Australian champion, partnering Allan Stone • 1974 French Open, partnering Onny Parun - winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1968 Australian champion, partnering Billie Jean King
Gianni Cucelli19161977Italy Italy1947, 1948 and 1949 French Championships singles quarterfinalist
Pablo Cuevas1986Uruguay UruguayWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2008 French Open champion, partnering Luis Horna • ranked world no. 19 in 2016
Kevin Curren1958South Africa South Africa/United States United States1984 Australian Open finalist • 1985 Wimbledon finalist, 1983 semifinalist, 1990 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 1985
Sven Davidson19282008Sweden Sweden2007Winner of 1 Grand slam singles title → 1957 French champion, 1955 and 1956 finalist, 1953 quarterfinalist • 1957 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1953, 1955 and 1958 quarterfinalist • 1957 United States semifinalist, 1953 quarterfinalist - winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1958 Wimbledon champion, partnering Ulf Schmidt
Dwight Davis18791945United States United States19561898 United States finalist - winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1899, 1900 and 1901 United States champion, partnering Holcombe Ward
Scott Davis1962United States United States1984 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 11 in 1985 - winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1991 Australian Open, partnering David Pate
Franco Davín1970Argentina Argentina1991 French Open quarterfinalist
Nikolay Davydenko1981Russia Russia2005/2007 French Open semifinalist, 2006/2009 quarterfinalist • 2006/2007 U.S. Open semifinalist • 2005/2006/2007/2010 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2009 Tour Finals champion, 2008 finalist, 2005 semifinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 2006
Max Decugis18821978France France1911, 1912 Wimbledon singles semifinalist • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1911 Wimbledon doubles champion • 1906 Olympic gold medalist singles, doubles and mixed doubles • 1920 Olympic gold medalist mixed doubles
Juan Martín del Potro1988Argentina ArgentinaWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2009 U.S. Open champion • 2009 French Open semifinalist • 2009 and 2012 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2013 Wimbledon semifinalist • 2009 Tour finals finalist • 2016 Olympics silver medalist • ranked world no. 4 in 2010
Phil Dent1950Australia Australia1974 Australian Open finalist, 1977(Jan) and 1979 quarterfinalist; 1968 Australian Championships quarterfinalist • 1977 French Open semifinalist • 1977 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 17 in 1977
Taylor Dent1981United States United StatesRanked world no. 21 in 2005
Steve Denton1956United States United States1981 and 1982 Australian Open finalist • ranked world no. 12 in 1983
Bernard Destremau19172002France France1937 French Championships singles semifinalist • Winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1938 French champion, partnering Yvon Petra
Filip Dewulf1972Belgium Belgium1997 French Open semifinalist, 1998 quarterfinalist
Colin Dibley1944Australia Australia1979 Australia Open semifinalist, 1973 quarterfinalist • 1971 and 1972 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Eddie Dibbs1951United States United States1975 and 1976 French Open semifinalist, 1978 and 1979 quarterfinalist • 1975, 1976 and 1979 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 1978
Mark Dickson1959United States United States1983 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Keith Diepraam1942South Africa South Africa1965 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Grigor Dimitrov1991Bulgaria Bulgaria2014 Wimbledon semifinalist • 2017 Australian Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 3 in November 2017
Charles P. Dixon18731939United Kingdom Great Britain1901, 1911 Wimbledon finalist • winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1912 Australian champion, 1912 and 1913 Wimbledon champion • 1912 Olympic gold medalist mixed doubles
Arnaud Di Pasquale1979France France2000 Olympic bronze medalist
Novak Djokovic1987Serbia SerbiaWinner of 13 Grand Slam singles titles including a Career Grand Slam achieved in 2016 → 2008/2011/2012/2013/2015/2016 Australian Open champion (6), 2009/2010 quarterfinalist •2011/2014/2015/2018 Wimbledon champion (4), 2007/2010 semifinalist, 2009 quarterfinalist •2011/2015 U.S. Open champion (2), 2007/2010/2013 finalist, 2008/2009 semifinalist •2016 French Open champion, 2012/2014/2015 French Open finalist, 2007/2008/2011 semifinalist, 2006/2010 quarterfinalist • 2008/12/13/14/15 Tour finals champion (5) • 2008 Olympic Singles bronze medalist • ranked world no. 1 for 223 weeks (2011-2016)
John Doeg19081978United States United States19621930 United States champion - winner of two doubles Grand Slam titles → 1929, 1930 United States champion, partnering George Lott
Laurence Doherty18751919United Kingdom Great Britain1980Winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles and 1 Olympic singles gold medal → 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905 and 1906 Wimbledon champion, 1898 runner-up • 1903 United States champion1900 Olympic gold medalistrated world no. 1 for 5 years; jointly for 1902, 1903, 1904 and 1905, and solely for 1906 - winner of 10 Grand Slam doubles titles and 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904 and 1905 Wimbledon champion, all partnering Reginald Doherty • 1902 and 1903 United States champion, both partnering Doherty • 1900 Olympic gold medalist, partnering Doherty
Reginald Doherty18721910United Kingdom Great Britain1980Winner of 4 Grand Slam titles → 1897, 1898, 1899 and 1900 Wimbledon champion, 1901 runner-up • 1902 United States runner-up - winner of 10 Grand Slam doubles titles and 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904 and 1905 Wimbledon champion, all partnering Laurence Doherty • 1902 and 1903 United States champion, both partnering Doherty • 1900 Olympic gold medalist, partnering Doherty
Alexandr Dolgopolov1988Ukraine Ukraine2011 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 13 in 2012
Irvin Dorfman19262006United States United States1950 French Championships singles quarterfinalist
Sláva Doseděl1970Czech Republic Czech Republic1999 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Stanley Doust18791961Australia Australia1913 Wimbledon singles finalist • 1909 Wimbledon doubles finalist
Scott Draper1974Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles champion → 2005 Australian Open champion, partnering Samantha Stosur
Hendrik Dreekmann1975Germany Germany1994 French Open quarterfinalist
Brad Drewett19582013Australia Australia1975 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Jaroslav Drobný19212001Czechoslovakia/Egypt/Egypt Czechoslovakia/Egypt1983Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1951 and 1952 French champion, 1946, 1948 and 1950 finalist, 1953 semifinalist • 1954 Wimbledon champion, 1949 and 1952 finalist, 1946 semifinalist, 1947 quarterfinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1948 French champion, partnering Lennart Bergelin — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1948 French champion, partnering Patricia Canning Todd
Cliff Drysdale1941South Africa South Africa2013[lower-alpha 1]1968 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 1969 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1971 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 13 in 1974 — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1972 U.S. Open champion, partnering Roger Taylor
Robin Drysdale1952United Kingdom Great Britain1977 (December) Australian Open quarterfinalist
Pat Du Pré1954United States United States1979 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1979 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 14 in 1980
James Dwight18521917United States United States19551883 U.S. Championship finalist • winner of 5 Grand Slam doubles title → 1882–1884, 1886, 1887 U.S. Champion
Wilberforce Eaves18671920United Kingdom Great Britain1895, 1896, 1897 Wimbledon finalist • 1897(Ch) U.S. Championships finalist • 1908 Olympic bronze medalist
Stefan Edberg1966Sweden Sweden2004Winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles → 1985 and 1987 Australian Open champion, 1990, 1992 and 1993 finalist, 1988, 1991 and 1994 semifinalist, 1984 and 1989 quarterfinalist • 1988 and 1990 Wimbledon champion, 1989 finalist, 1987, 1991 and 1993 semifinalist, 1992 quarterfinalist • 1991 and 1992 U.S. Open champion, 1986 and 1987 semifinalist, 1996 quarterfinalist • 1989 French Open finalist, 1985, 1991 and 1993 quarterfinalist • 1989 Masters Grand Prix champion • ranked world no. 1 for 72 weeks → 21 weeks in 1990, 40 in 1991 and 11 in 1992 — winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1987 and 1996 Australian Open champion, partnering Anders Järryd and Petr Korda respectively • 1987 U.S. Open champion, partnering Järryd •
Mark Edmondson1954Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand slam singles title → 1976 Australian Open champion • ranked world no. 15 in 1982 — winner of 5 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1980, 1981, 1983 and 1984 Australian Open champion, partnering Kim Warwick for the first two, Paul McNamee, and Sherwood Stewart respectively • 1985 French Open champion, partnering Warwick
Kyle Edmund1995United Kingdom Great Britain2018 Australian Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 16 in 2018
Younes El Aynaoui1971Morocco Morocco2000 and 2003 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2002 and 2003 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 14 in 2003
Ismail El Shafei1947Egypt Egypt1974 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Jacco Eltingh1970Netherlands NetherlandsWinner of 6 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1994 and 1998 Australian Open champion, partnering Paul Haarhuis and Jonas Björkman respectively • 1994 U.S. Open champion, partnering Haarhuis • 1995 and 1998 French Open champion, both partnering Haarhuis • 1998 Wimbledon champion, partnering Haarhuis • ranked doubles world no. 1 for 18 weeks, in 1995
Roy Emerson1936Australia Australia1982Winner of 12 Grand Slam singles titles → 1961, 1963, 1965, 1966 and 1967 Australian champion, 1962 finalist, 1960 semifinalist, 1958 and 1959 quarterfinalist • 1961 and 1964 United States champion, 1962 finalist, 1966 semifinalist, 1956, 1959, 1965, 1967 and 1969 quarterfinalist • 1963 and 1967 French champion, 1962 finalist, 1965 semifinalist, 1959, 1961, 1964, 1966 and 1968 quarterfinalist • 1964 and 1965 Wimbledon champion, 1959 semifinalist, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1966 and 1970 quarterfinalist • rated world no. 1 amateur for two years, 1964 and 1965 — winner of 16 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1959, 1961 and 1971 Wimbledon champion, partnering Neale Fraser for the first two and Rod Laver for the third • 1959, 1960, 1965 and 1966 United States champion, partnering Fraser for the first two and Fred Stolle for the latter two • 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964 and 1965 French champion, partnering Fraser for the first two, then Laver, then Manolo Santana, then Ken Fletcher, and then with Stolle for the final one • 1962, 1966 and 1969 Australian (Open) champion, partnering Fraser, Stolle, and Laver respectively
Thomas Enqvist1974Sweden Sweden1999 Australian Open finalist, 1996 quarterfinalist • 2001 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1999
Jonathan Erlich1977Israel IsraelWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2008 Australian Open champion, partnering Andy Ram
Nicolas Escudé1976France France1998 Australian Open semifinalist • 1999 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2001 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 17 in 2000
Lestocq Robert Erskine18571916United Kingdom Great Britain1878 Wimbledon All Comers finalist
Kelly Evernden1961New Zealand New Zealand1987 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Brian Fairlie1948New Zealand New ZealandRanked world no. 24 in 1973
Robert Falkenburg1926United States United States1974Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1948 Wimbledon champion, 1947 and 1949 quarterfinalist • 1946 United States semifinalist, 1944, 1945, 1947 and 1948 quarterfinalist — winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1944 United States doubles champion, partnering Don McNeill • 1947 Wimbledon doubles champion, partnering Jack Kramer
Roger Federer1981Switzerland SwitzerlandWinner of 20 Grand Slam singles titles and a career Grand Slam completed in 2009 ◌ Singles: 2003/2004/2005/2006/2007/2009/2012/2017 Wimbledon champion (8), 2008/2014/2015 finalist, 2016 semifinalist, 2001/2010/2011 quarterfinalist • 2004/2006/2007/2010/2017/2018 Australian Open champion (6), 2009 finalist, 2005/2008/2011/2012/2013/2014/2016 semifinalist • 2004/2005/2006/2007/2008 U.S. Open champion (5), 2009/2015 finalist, 2010/2011/2014 semifinalist, 2012 quarterfinalist • 2009 French Open champion, 2006/2007/2008/2011 finalist, 2005/2012 semifinalist, 2001/2010/2013/2015 quarterfinalist • 2003/2004/2006/2007/2010/2011 Tour Finals champion (6), 2005/2012/2014/2015 finalist, 2002/2009/2013 semifinalist • 2012 Olympics silver medalist ◌ Doubles: 2008 Olympics gold medalist [partnering Stanislas Wawrinka] ◌ Ranking: world no. 1 for a record 303 weeks (2004-2018) of which 237 consecutive (also a record) (2004-2008)
Peter Feigl1951Austria Austria1978 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Wayne Ferreira1971South Africa/South Africa South Africa1992 and 2003 Australian Open semifinalist • 1992 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 1994 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1992 Olympic silver medalists • ranked world no. 6 in 1995
David Ferrer1982Spain Spain2011/2013 Australian Open semifinalist, 2008/2012/2014/2016 quarterfinalist • 2013 French Open finalist, 2012 semifinalist, 2005/2008/2014/2015 quarterfinalsit • 2012/2013 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2007/2012 U.S. Open semifinalist, 2013 quarterfinalist • 2007 Tour Finals finalist, 2011 semifinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 2013
Juan Carlos Ferrero1980Spain SpainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2003 French Open champion, 2002 finalist, 2000/2001 semifinalist • 2003 US Open finalist •2004 Australian Open semifinalist, 2003 quarterfinalist • 2007/2009 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2002 Tour Finals finalist, 2001 semifinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 8 weeks, in 2003
Wojtek Fibak1952Poland Poland1977 and 1980 French Open quarterfinalist • 1980 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1980 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Marcelo Filippini1967Uruguay Uruguay1999 French Open quarterfinalist
Jaime Fillol1946Chile Chile1975 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 14 in 1974
Mardy Fish1981United States United States2007 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2008 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2011 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2004 Olympic single silver medalist • ranked world no. 7 in 2011
John Fitzgerald1960Australia AustraliaRanked world no. 25 in 1988 — winner of 7 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1982 Australian Open champion, partnering John Alexander • 1984 and 1991 U.S. Open champion, partnering Tomáš Šmíd and Anders Järryd respectively • 1986 and 1991 French Open champion, partnering Šmíd and Järryd respectively • 1989 and 1991 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Järryd • ranked doubles world no. 1 for 40 weeks → 27 weeks in 1991 and 13 in 1992
Ken Flach1963United States United StatesWinner of 4 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1985 and 1993 U.S. Open champion • 1987 and 1988 Wimbledon champion • ranked world no. 1 for 5 weeks → 2 weeks in 1985 and 3 in 1986
Herbie Flam19281980United States United States1950 United States finalist • 1951 and 1952 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1957 French finalist • rated world no. 5 in 1957
Peter Fleming1955United States United States1980 Wimbledon quarterfinalist — winner of 7 Grand Slam doubles titles, all partnering John McEnroe → 1979, 1981, 1983 and 1984 Wimbledon champion, • 1979, 1981 and 1983 U.S. Open champion • ranked world no. 1 for 17 weeks → 3 weeks in 1982 and 14 in 1984
Fabio Fognini1987Italy ItalyWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2015 Australian Open champion, partnering Simone Bolelli • 2011 French Open singles quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 13 in 2014
Gordon Forbes1934South Africa South Africa1962 United States quarterfinalist
Guy Forget1965France France1991 and 1993 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1991, 1992 and 1994 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Željko Franulović1947Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia1970 French Open finalist, 1971 semifinalist
Neale Fraser1933Australia Australia1984Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1959 and 1960 United States champion, 1956 and 1958 semifinalist • 1960 Wimbledon champion, 1958 finalist, 1957 and 1962 semifinalist, 1959 quarterfinalist • 1957, 1959 and 1960 Australian Championships finalist, 1956, 1958 and 1962 semifinalist • 1959 and 1962 French semifinalist, 1957, 1958 and 1960 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 1 amateur for two years, 1959 and 1960 - winner of 11 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1957, 1958 and 1962 Australian champion, partnering Lew Hoad, Ashley Cooper and Roy Emerson respectively • 1957, 1959 and 1960 United States champion, partnering Cooper and then Emerson twice • 1958, 1960 and 1962 French champion, partnering Cooper and then Emerson twice • 1959 and 1961 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Emerson - winner of 5 mixed doubles Grand Slam titles → 1956 Australian champion, partnering Beryl Penrose Collier • 1958, 1959 and 1960 United States champion, all partnering Margaret Osborne duPont • 1962 Wimbledon champion, partnering Osborne duPont
Rod Frawley1952Australia Australia1979 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Frank Froehling1942United States United States1971 French Open semifinalist • 1971 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Otto Froitzheim18841962Germany Germany1914 Wimbledon finalist • 1908 Olympic silver medalist
Richard Fromberg1970Australia AustraliaRanked world no. 24 in 1990
Renzo Furlan1970Italy Italy1995 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 19 in 1996
Patrick Galbraith1967United States United States1995 ATP Tour World champion, partnering Grant Connell• ranked doubles world no. 1 for 4 weeks → 3 weeks in 1993 and 1 in 1994 - winner of 2 grand slam mixed doubles titles → 1994 and 1996 U.S. Open champion, partnering Elna Reinach and Lisa Raymond respectively
Jan-Michael Gambill1977United States United States2004 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 14 in 2001
Guillermo García-López1983Spain SpainRanked world no. 23 in 2011
Chuck Garland18981971United States United States1919, 1920 Wimbledon singles semifinalist • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1920 Wimbledon champion, partnering Richard Norris Williams
Richard Gasquet1986France France2007 and 2015 Wimbledon semifinalist • 2013 US Open semifinalist •2016 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 2007 — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 2004 French Open champion, partnering Tatiana Golovin
Andrea Gaudenzi1973Italy ItalyRanked world no. 18 in 1995
Gastón Gaudio1978Argentina ArgentinaWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2004 French Open champion • 2005 Tour Finals semifinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 2005
Vitas Gerulaitis19541994United States United StatesWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1977(December) Australian Open champion • 1979 U.S. Open finalist, 1978 and 1981 semifinalist • 1980 French Open finalist, 1979 semifinalist, 1982 quarterfinalist • 1977 and 1978 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1976 and 1982 quarterfinalist • 1979 and 1981 Masters Grand Prix finalist • ranked world no. 3 in 1978 - winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1975 Wimbledon champion, partnering Gene Mayer
Sam Giammalva1934United States United StatesSingles: 1955 U.S. Championships quarterfinalist
Sammy Giammalva, Jr.1963United States United StatesSingles: 1982 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Bob Giltinan1949Australia AustraliaRanked world no. 16 in 1974 ◌ Singles: 1977(December) Australian Open semifinalist
Robby Ginepri1982United States United StatesRanked world no. 15 in 2005 ◌ 2005 U.S. Open semifinalist
Andrés Gimeno1938Spain Spain2009Winner of one Grand Slam singles titles → 1972 French champion • ranked world no. 10 amateur in 1969
Juan Gisbert, Sr.1942Spain/Spain Spain1968 Australian Championships finalist - 1975 Masters Grand Prix champion, partnering Manuel Orantes
Drew Gitlin1958United States United States1982 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Brad Gilbert1961United States United StatesRanked world no. 4 in 1990 ◌ Singles: 1987 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 1990 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1988 Olympics bronze medalist
Hans Gildemeister1956Chile ChileRanked world no. 12 in 1980 ◌ Singles: 1978/1979/1980 French Open quarterfinalist
Shlomo Glickstein1958Israel IsraelRanked world no. 22 in 1982 ◌ Singles: 1981 Australian Open quarterfinalist
William Glyn18601939United States United States1881 U.S. Championships singles finalist
André Gobert18901951France France1912 Wimbledon singles finalist • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1911 Wimbledon doubles champion • 1912 Olympic gold medalist singles, doubles
David Goffin1990Belgium BelgiumSingles: 2016 French Open quarterfinalist • 2017 Australian Open quarterfinalist • Tour Finals finalist • ranked world no. 7 in 2017
Dan Goldie1963United States United States1989 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Jérôme Golmard1973France FranceRanked world no. 22 in 1999
Andrés Gómez1960Ecuador EcuadorWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1990 French Open champion, 1984, 1986 and 1987 quarterfinalist • 1984 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1984 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1990
Pancho Gonzales19281995United States United States1968Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1948 and 1949 United States champion • 1968 French Open semifinalist • 1968 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • rated world no. 1 for 8 years, 1952, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959 and (as co-no.1) 1960
Fernando González1980Chile Chile2007 Australian Open finalist • 2009 French Open semifinalist, 2003 and 2008 quarterfinalist • 2002 and 2009 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2005 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2008 Olympic silver medalist, 2004 bronze medalist • ranked world no. 5 in 2007 — winner of 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 2004 gold medalist, partnering Nicolás Massú
Vere St. Leger Goold18531909Ireland Ireland1879 Wimbledon finalist
Arthur Gore18681928United Kingdom Great Britain2006Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1900, 1901 and 1909 Wimbledon champion • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1909 • 1908 Olympic singles gold medallist • 1908 Olympic doubles gold medallist
Spencer Gore18501906United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1877 Wimbledon champion, 1878 finalist
Tom Gorman1946United States United States1971 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1972 U.S. Open semifinalist • 1973 French Open semifinalist • rated world no. 8 in 193
Brian Gottfried1952United States United States1977 French Open finalist • 1980 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1978 quarterfinalist • 1977 and 1978 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 1977 - winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1975 and 1977 French Open champion, both partnering Raúl Ramírez • 1976 Wimbledon champion, partnering Ramírez
Georges Goven1948France France1970 French Open semifinalist
Jim Grabb1964United States United StatesRanked world no. 25 in 1985 – ranked doubles world no. 1 for 13 weeks → 1 week in 1989 and 6 in 1992, and 6 in 1993
Clark Graebner1943United States United States1967 United States finalist, 1966 quarterfinalist; 1968 U.S. Open semifinalist, 1971 quarterfinalist • 1966 Australian quarterfinalist • 1968 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1969 and 1970 quarterfinalist • rated world no. 7 for 1968 - winner of 1 doubles Grand Slam title → 1966 French champion, partnering Dennis Ralston
Bryan Grant19101986United States United States19721935 U.S. Open semifinalist • 1936, 1937 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 6 in 1937
Colin Gregory19031959United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1929 Wimbledon champion • 1929 Australian Championships doubles finalist, 1929 Wimbledon doubles finalist, both partnering Ian Collins
Seymour Greenberg19202006United States United States1942, 1943, 1944, and 1945 U.S. National Championships quarterfinalist
Charles Walder Grinstead18601930United Kingdom Great BritainFinalist in 1884 Wimbledon Championships – Gentlemen's Singles
Sébastien Grosjean1978France France2001 Australian Open semifinalist, 2003, 2004 and 2006 quarterfinalist • 2001 French Open semifinalist, 2002 quarterfinalist • 2003 and 2004 Wimbledon semifinalist, 2005 quarterfinalist • 2001 Tennis Masters Cup finalist • winner of 1 ATP Masters Series event • ranked world no. 4 in 2002
Ernests Gulbis1988Latvia Latvia2014 French Open semifinalist• ranked world no. 10 in 2014
Tim Gullikson19511996United States United States1979 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 15 in 1979
Tom Gullikson1951United States United States1982 U.S. Open quarterfinalist - winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1984 U.S. Open champion, partnering Manuela Maleeva
István Gulyás19312000Hungary Hungary1966 French finalist, 1971 quarterfinalist
Jan Gunnarsson1962Sweden Sweden1989 Australian Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 25 in 1985
Heinz Günthardt1959Switzerland Switzerland1985 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1985 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 22 in 1986
Magnus Gustafsson1967Sweden Sweden1994 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 10 in 1991
Paul Haarhuis1966Netherlands Netherlands1991 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 18 in 1995 — winner of 6 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1994 Australian Open champion, partnering Jacco Eltingh • 1994 U.S. Open champion, partnering Eltingh • 1995, 1998 and 2002 French Open champion, partnering Eltingh twice and then Yevgeny Kafelnikov • 1998 Wimbledon champion, partnering Eltingh • 1993 and 1998 ATP Tour World Championships titlist, both partnering Eltingh • ranked doubles world no. 1 for 70 weeks → 27 weeks in 1994, 27 weeks in 1995 and 16 weeks in 1999
Tommy Haas1978Germany Germany2000 Olympic silver medalist • 1999/2002/2007 Australian Open semifinalist • 2009 Wimbledon semifinalist • 2004/2006/2007 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2013 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 2 in 2002
Harold Hackett18781937United States United States19611906 United States quarterfinalist - winner of 4 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1907, 1908, 1909 and 1910 United States champion, partnering Fred Alexander
Frank Hadow18551946United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1878 Wimbledon champion, 1879 runner-up • rated world no. 1 for 1 year, 1878
Edward L. Hall18721932United States United States1892 U.S. Championships singles semifinalist • 1892 U.S. Championships doubles finalist, partnering Valentine Hall
Valentine Hall18671934United States United States1891 U.S. Championships singles semifinalist • winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1888, 1890 U.S. champion, partnering Oliver Campbell and Clarence Hobart
Willoughby Hamilton18641943Ireland IrelandWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1890 Wimbledon champion, 1889 semifinalist • rated co-world no. 1 for 2 years, 1889 and 1890
Victor Hănescu1981Romania Romania2005 French Open quarterfinalist
Charles Hare19151996United Kingdom Great Britain1937 French Championships singles quarterfinalist, 1937 U.S. Championships singles quarterfinalist
Rodney Harmon1961United States United States1982 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
John Hartley18491935United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 2 Grand Slam singles title → 1879 and 1880 Wimbledon champion, 1881 runner-up • rated world no. 1 for 2 years, 1879 and 1880
John Hawkes18991990Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1926 Australasian champion • 1928 French Championships singles semifinalist • winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1922, 1926, 1927 Australasian champion, partnering Gerald Patterson • winner of 5 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1922, 1926, 1927 Australasian champion, partnering Esna Boyd, 1923, 1928 U.S. champion, partnering Helen Wills
Charles Heathcote18411915United Kingdom Great Britain1877 Wimbledon All-Comers semifinalist
Henner Henkel19151943Germany/Germany GermanyWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1937 French champion • 1938, 1939 Wimbledon singles semifinalist • Winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1937 French champions, 1937 U.S. champion, partnering Gottfried von Cramm
Tim Henman1974United Kingdom Great Britain1998, 1999, 2001 and 2002 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1996, 1997, 2003 and 2004 quarterfinalist • 2004 French Open semifinalist • 2004 U.S. Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 2002
John Hennessey19001981United States United StatesRated world no. 8 in 1927 and 1928 – winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1928 U.S. champion, partnering George Lott
Pierre-Hugues Herbert1991France FranceWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2015 US Open doubles champion, partnering Nicolas Mahut
Bob Hewitt1940Australia Australia/South Africa South Africa1960, 1962 and 1963 Australian semifinalist • 1962, 1964 and 1966 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1967 United States quarterfinalist - winner of 9 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1962, 1964, 1967, 1972 and 1978 Wimbledon champion, partnering for the first two Fred Stolle and for the final three Frew McMillan • 1963 and 1964 Australian champion, partnering Stolle • 1972 French Open champion, partnering McMillan • 1977 U.S. Open champion, partnering McMillan • 1977 Masters Grand Prix champion, partnering McMillan • ranked doubles world no. 1 for 6 weeks, in 1976 - winner of 6 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1961 Australian champion, partnering Jan Lehane • 1970 and 1979 French Open champion, partnering Billie Jean King and Wendy Turnbull respectively • 1977 and 1979 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Greer Stevens • 1979 U.S. Open champion, partnering Stevens
Lleyton Hewitt1981Australia AustraliaWinner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 2001 U.S. Open champion, 2004 finalist, 2000/2002/2005 semifinalist, 2003/2006 quarterfinalist • 2002 Wimbledon champion, 2005 semifinalist, 2004/2006/2009 quarterfinalist • 2005 Australian Open finalist • 2001/2004 French Open quarterfinalist • 2001/2002 Tour Finals champion, 2004 finalist • ranked world no. 1 for 80 weeks • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2000 U.S. Open champion, partnering Max Mirnyi
José Higueras1953Spain Spain1982 and 1983 French Open semifinalist, 1977 and 1979 quarterfinalist - ranked world no. 6 in 1983
Jakob Hlasek1964Switzerland Switzerland1991 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 22 in 1985 — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1992 French Open champion, partnering Marc Rosset
Lew Hoad19341994Australia Australia1980Winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles → 1956 and 1957 Wimbledon champion, 1953, 1954 and 1955 quarterfinalist • 1956 French champion, 1953 quarterfinalist • 1956 Australian champion, 1955 finalist, 1957 semifinalist • 1956 United States finalist, 1953 and 1955 semifinalist, 1951 and 1954 quarterfinalist • rated world no. 1 amateur for 1 year, 1956 - winner of 8 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1953, 1956 and 1957 Wimbledon champion, partnering Ken Rosewall, Rex Hartwig, and Rosewall respectively • 1953 and 1956 Australian champion, partnering Rosewell for the first two and then Neale Fraser • 1953 French champion, partnering Rosewell • 1956 United States champion, partnering Rosewell - winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1954 French champion, partnering Maureen Connolly
Clarence Hobart18701930United States United States1891, 1905 U.S. Championships singles finalist • 1898 Wimbledon singles semifinalist • winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1890, 1893, 1894 U.S. champion, partnering Valentine Hall and Fred Hovey • winner of 3 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1892, 1893, 1905 U.S. champion
Henrik Holm1968Sweden SwedenRanked world no. 17 in 1993
Ronald Holmberg1938United States United States1959 U.S. Championships singles semifinalist • 1961 French Championships singles quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1960
Greg Holmes1963United States United StatesRanked world no. 22 in 1985
Chip Hooper1958United States United StatesRanked world no. 17 in 1982
Harry Hopman19061985Australia Australia19781930, 1931 and 1932 Australian Championships finalist • 1930 French Championships quarterfinalist • 1938, 1939 U.S. Championships quarterfinalist • winner of 2 Grand slam doubles titles → 1929, 1930 Australian champion, partnering Jack Crawford - winner of 5 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1930, 1936, 1937 and 1938 Australian champion, partnering Nell Hall Hopman - United States champion, partnering Alice Marble.
Luis Horna1980Peru Peruwinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2008 French Open champion, partnering Pablo Cuevas
Fred Hovey18681945United States United States19741895 United States champion, 1896 finalist (results likely incomplete as drawsheets for other years unavailable)
G. Turner Howard III1947-United States United StatesAppeared in the first rounds of the 1966, 1970 and 1971 US Open
Dominik Hrbatý1978Slovakia Slovakia1999 French Open semifinalist • 2001 and 2005 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2004 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 12 in 2004
Jiří Hřebec1950Czechoslovakia CzechoslovakiaRanked world no. 25 in 1974
Pat Hughes19021997United Kingdom Great Britain1931 French Championships semifinalist – winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1933 French champion and 1934 Australian champion, partnering Fred Perry and 1936 Wimbledon champion, partnering Raymond Tuckey.
Joe Hunt19191945United States United States1966Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1943 U.S. champion
Frank Hunter18941981United States United States19611923 Wimbledon finalist • 1928 and 1929 United States finalist
Stephen Huss1975Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2005 Wimbledon champion, partnering Wesley Moodie
John Isner1985United States United States2018 Wimbledon semifinalist • 2011 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 8 in 2018
Goran Ivanišević1971Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia / Croatia CroatiaWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2001 Wimbledon champion, 1992, 1994 and 1998 finalist • 1989, 1994 and 1997 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1990, 1992 and 1994 French Open quarterfinalist • 1996 U.S. Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 2 in 1994
Sydney Jacob18791977India India1925 French Championships singles semifinalist, 1925 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist
Martín Jaite1964Argentina Argentina1985 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 10 in 1990
François Jauffret1942France France1974 French Open semifinalist, 1970 quarterfinalist; 1966 French Championships semifinalist • ranked world no. 20 in 1974
Anders Järryd1961Sweden Sweden1987 and 1988 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1985 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1985 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 1985 - winner of 8 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1983, 1987 and 1991 French Open champion, partnering Hans Simonsson, Robert Seguso and John Fitzgerald respectively • 1987 and 1991 U.S. Open champion, partnering Stefan Edberg and Fitzgerald respectively • 1989 and 1991 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Fitzgerald • 1987 Australian Open champion, partnering Edberg • 1985 and 1986 Masters Grand Prix champion, both partnering Edberg; 1991 ATP Tour World Championships titlist, partnering Fitzgerald • ranked doubles world no. 1 for 107 weeks → 6 weeks in 1985, 5 in 1986, 45 in 1988, 31 in 1989, 4 in 1990 and 16 in 1992
Joachim Johansson1982Sweden Sweden2004 U.S. Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 9 in 2005
Thomas Johansson1975Sweden SwedenWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2002 Australian Open champion • 2005 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1998/2000 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 2002
Donald Johnson1968United States United StatesWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2001 Wimbledon champion, partnering Jared Palmer
Bill Johnston18941946United States United States1958Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1915 and 1919 United States champion1923 Wimbledon champion (results incomplete as tournament drawsheets unavailable) • co-rated world no. 1 for 1919 - winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1915, 1916 and 1920 United States champion, partnering Clarence Griffin - winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1921 United States champion, partnering Mary Browne
Kelly Jones1964United States United StatesRanked doubles world no. 1 for 1 week, in 1992
Boro Jovanović1939Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia1968 French Open quarterfinalist
Yevgeny Kafelnikov1974Russia RussiaWinner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles and 1 Olympic gold medal → 1996 French Open champion, 1995 semifinalist, 1997, 2000 and 2001 quarterfinalist • 1999 Australian Open champion, 2000 finalist, 1995, 1996 and 2001 quarterfinalist • 1999 and 2001 U.S. Open semifinalist • 1995 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2000 Olympic gold medalistranked world no. 1 for 6 weeks, in 1999 — winner of 4 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1996, 1997 and 2002 French Open champion, partnering Daniel Vacek for the first two and Paul Haarhuis for the third • 1997 U.S. Open champion, partnering Vacek
Bernd Karbacher1968Germany GermanyRanked world no. 22 in 1995
Ivo Karlović1979Croatia Croatia2009 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 14 in 2008
Béla von Kehrling18911937Hungary Hungary1926, 1929 French Championships quarterfinalist • 1929 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Karen Khachanov1996Russia Russia• ranked world no. 24 in 2018
Nicolas Kiefer1977Germany Germany2006 Australian Open semifinalist, 1998/2000 quarterfinalist • 1997 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2000 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2004 Olympic doubles silver medalist partnering Rainer Schüttler • 1999 Tour Finals semifinalist • ranked world No 4 in 2000
Howard Kinsey18991966United States United States1926 Wimbledon singles finalist • winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1924 French champion, 1926 US champion • 1926 Wimbledon mixed doubles finalist
Algernon Kingscote18881964United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1919 Australian champion • 1919 Wimbledon singles finalist • 1920 Wimbledon doubles finalist
Vernon Kirby1911South Africa South Africa1934 U.S. Championships singles semifinalist • 1934 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist • 1931, 1937 French Championships doubles finalist • 1935 Australian Championships mixed doubles finalist
Martin Kližan1989Slovakia SlovakiaRanked world no. 24 in 2015
Percy Knapp18631917United States United States1885, 1890 U.S. Championships singles finalist
Billy Knight1935United Kingdom Great Britain1959 French quarterfinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1959 French champion, partnering Yola Ramírez
Julian Knowle1974Austria AustriaWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2007 U.S. Open champion, partnering Simon Aspelin
Mark Knowles1971The Bahamas BahamasWinner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 2002 Australian Open champion, partnering Daniel Nestor • 2004 U.S. Open champion, partnering Nestor • 2007 French Open champion, partnering Nestor • 2007 Tennis Masters Cup champion, partnering Nestor • ranked doubles world no. 1 for 65 weeks → 16 weeks in 2002, 23 in 2003, 13 in 2004 and 13 in 2005 — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 2009 Wimbledon champion, partnering Anna-Lena Grönefeld
Thomaz Koch1945Brazil Brazil1969 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 24 in 1974 — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1975 French Open champion, partnering Fiorella Bonicelli
Jan Kodeš1946Czech Republic Czechoslovakia1990Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1970 and 1971 French Open champion, 1972 and 1973 quarterfinalist • 1973 Wimbledon champion, 1972 semifinalist, 1974 quarterfinalist • 1971 and 1973 U.S. Open finalist, 1976 quarterfinalist
Philipp Kohlschreiber1983Germany Germany2012 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 16 in 2012
Petr Korda1968Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia / Czech Republic Czech RepublicWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1998 Australian Open champion, 1993 quarterfinalist • 1992 French Open finalist • 1998 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1995 and 1997 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 2 in 1998
Stefan Koubek1977Austria Austria2002 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 20 in 2000
Jan Koželuh19041979Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia1926 and 1927 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Karel Koželuh18951950Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia2006Rated professionial world no. 1 for four years, 1926, 1927, 1928 and 1929
Richard Krajicek1971Netherlands NetherlandsWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1996 Wimbledon champion, 1998 semifinalist • 1992 Australian Open semifinalist • 1993 French Open semifinalist, 1996 quarterfinalist • 1997, 1999 and 2000 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1999
Jack Kramer19212009United States United States1968Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1946 and 1947 United States champion, 1943 finalist, 1941 quarterfinalist • 1947 Wimbledon championrated world no. 1 for 5 years → 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950 and 1951 — winner of 6 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1940, 1941, 1943, 1947 United States champion, all partnering Ted Schroeder • 1946 and 1947 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Schroeder — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1941 United States champion, partnering Sarah Palfrey Cooke
Oscar Kreuzer18871968Germany Germany1913 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1912 Olympic singles bronze medalist
Aaron Krickstein1967United States United States1989 U.S. Open semifinalist, 1988 and 1990 quarterfinalist • 1995 Australian Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 6 in 1990
Johan Kriek1958South Africa South Africa/United States USAWinner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1981 and 1982 Australian Open champion, 1984 semifinalist, 1983 and 1985 quarterfinalist • 1986 French Open semifinalist • 1981 and 1982 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1980 U.S. Open semifinalist, 1978 and 1979 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1984
Ramanathan Krishnan1937India India1960 and 1961 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1962 French quarterfinalist
Ramesh Krishnan1961India India1981 and 1987 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 1986 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 23 in 1985
Paul Kronk1954Australia Australia1978 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Łukasz Kubot1982Poland PolandWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2014 Australian Open doubles champion, partnering Robert Lindstedt • 2013 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist
Gustavo Kuerten1976Brazil Brazil2012Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1997/2000/2001 French Open champion, 1999/2004 quarterfinalist • 1999 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1999/2001 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2000 Tennis Masters Cup champion • ranked world no. 1 for 43 weeksin 2000-2001
Karol Kučera1974Slovakia Slovakia1998 Australian Open semifinalist, 1999 quarterfinalist • 1998 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 6 in 1998
Nicklas Kulti1971Sweden Sweden1992 French Open quarterfinalist
Ichiya Kumagae18901968Japan Japan1918 U.S. Championships singles semifinalist • 1920 Olympics singles and doubles silver medalist
Nick Kyrgios1995Australia Australia2015 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2014 Wimbledon quarterfinalist •Ranked world no. 13 in 2016
René Lacoste19041996France France1976Winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1925, 1927 and 1929 French champion, 1926 and 1928 finalist • 1925 and 1928 Wimbledon champion, 1924 finalist, 1927 semifinalist • 1926 and 1927 United States championrated world no. 1 for 2 years — winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1925 and 1929 French champion, both partnering Jean Borotra • 1925 Wimbledon champion, partnering Borotra
Nicolás Lapentti1976Ecuador Ecuador1999 Australian Open semifinalist • 2002 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 6 in 1999
Sébastien Lareau1973Canada CanadaWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title and 1 Olympic doubles gold medal → 1999 U.S. Open doubles champion, partnering Alex O’Brien • 2000 Olympic doubles gold medalist, partnering Daniel Nestor • 1999 Tennis Masters Cup champion, partnering O’Brien
William Larned18721926United States United States1956Winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1901, 1902, 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910 and 1911 United States champion, 1900 and 1903 finalist • rated world no. 1 for 5 years → 1901 and 1902 (co-rated), 1908, 1909 and 1910
Art Larsen19252012United States United States1969Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1950 United States champion, 1954 finalist
Magnus Larsson1970Sweden Sweden1994 French Open semifinalist • 1993, 1997 and 1998 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 10 in 1995
Rod Laver1938Australia Australia1981Winner of 11 Grand Slam titles → 1960 and 1962 Australian champion, 1961 finalist; 1969 Australian Open champion1962 French champion, 1961 semifinalist; 1969 French Open champion, 1968 finalist • 1961, 1962, 1968 and 1969 Wimbledon champion, 1959 and 1960 finalist, 1971 quarterfinalist • 1962 United States champion, 1960 and 1961 finalist, 1959 quarterfinalist; 1969 U.S. Open champion • 1970 Masters Grand Prix finalist • rated world no. 1 for 7 years → 1964 (co-rated), 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969 and 1970 (co-rated) - winner of 6 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1959, 1960 and 1961 Australian champion, partnering Bob Mark; 1969 Australian Open champion, partnering Roy Emerson • 1961 French champion, partnering Emerson • 1971 Wimbledon champion, partnering Emerson - winner of 3 mixed doubles Grand Slam titles → 1959 and 1960 Wimbledon champion, partnering Darlene Hard • 1961 French champion, partnering Hard
Herbert Lawford18511925United Kingdom Great Britain2006Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1887 Wimbledon champion, 1880, 1884, 1885, 1886 and 1888 finalist, 1878, 1881 and 1882 and All-Comers semifinalist
Rick Leach1964United States United StatesWinner of 5 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1988, 1989 and 2000 Australian Open champion, partnering Jim Pugh for the first two and Ellis Ferreira for the last one • 1990 Wimbledon champion, partnering Pugh • 1993 U.S. Open champion, partnering Ken Flach • 1988 Masters Grand Prix champion, partnering Pugh; 1997 ATP Tour World Championships titlist, partnering Jonathan Stark; 2001 ATP World Doubles Challenge Cup champion, partnering Ferreira • ranked doubles world no. 1 for 9 weeks, in 1990 - winner of 4 mixed doubles titles → 1995 and 1997 Australian Open champion, Natasha Zvereva and Manon Bollegraf respectively • 1990 Wimbledon champion, partnering Zina Garrison • 1997 U.S. Open champion, partnering Bollegraf
Henri Leconte1963France France1988 French Open finalist, 1986 semifinalist, 1985 and 1990 quarterfinalist • 1986 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1985 and 1987 quarterfinalist • 1986 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 1986 - winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1984 French Open champion, partnering Yannick Noah
Harry Lee19071998United Kingdom Great Britain1933 French Championships singles semifinalist, 1934 Australian Championships singles quarterfinalist
Ivan Lendl1960Czech Republic Czechoslovakia/United States United States2001winner of 8 Grand Slam singles titles → 1984, 1986 and 1987 French Open champion, 1981 and 1985 finalist, 1983 and 1988 quarterfinalist • 1985, 1986 and 1987 U.S. Open champion, 1982, 1983 and 1984 finalist, 1991 semifinalist, 1980, 1990 and 1992 quarterfinalist • 1989 and 1990 Australian Open champion, 1983 and 1991 finalist, 1985, 1987 and 1988 semifinalist, 1992 quarterfinalist • 1986 and 1987 Wimbledon finalist, 1983, 1984, 1988, 1989 and 1990 semifinalist • 1981, 1982, 1985, 1986 and 1987 Masters Grand Prix champion • ranked world no. 1 for 270 weeks → 17 weeks in 1983, 15 in 1984, 17 in 1985, 52 in 1986, 52 in 1987, 37 in 1988, 48 in 1989 and 32 in 1990
Ernest Lewis18671930United Kingdom Great Britain1886, 1888, 1892, 1894 Wimbledon finalist
Chris Lewis1957New Zealand New Zealand1983 Wimbledon finalist • ranked world no. 19 in 1979
Robert Lindstedt1977Sweden SwedenWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2014 Australian Open doubles champion, partnering Łukasz Kubot
Ivan Ljubičić1979Croatia Croatia2006 French Open semifinalist • 2006 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 2006 - 2004 Olympic Games doubles bronze medalist
Michaël Llodra1980France FranceWinner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 2003 and 2004 Australian Open champion, both partnering Fabrice Santoro • 2007 Wimbledon champion, partnering Arnaud Clément • 2012 Olympic silver medalist in doubles partnering [Jo-Wilfried Tsonga] • ranked No. 21 in 2011
John Lloyd1954United Kingdom Great Britain1977 (December) Australian Open finalist, 1985 quarterfinalist • 1984 U.S. Open quarterfinalist - winner of 3 mixed doubles Grand Slam titles → 1983 and 1984 Wimbledon champion, partnering Wendy Turnbull • 1982 French Open champion, partnering Turnbull
Feliciano López1981Spain Spain2005/2008/2011 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2015 US Open quarterfinalist • 2016 French open doubles champion partnering Marc Lopez • ranked world no. 12 in 2015
George Lott19061991United States United States19641931 United States finalist (likely incomplete as drawsheets prior to 1933 are unavailable) - winner of 8 doubles Grand Slam titles → 1928, 1929, 1930, 1933 and 1934 United States champion, partnering John Hennessey, John Doeg, Doeg again, Lester Stoefen and Stoefen again, respectively • 1931 and 1934 Wimbledon champion, partnering John Van Ryn and Stoefen respectively • 1931 French champion, partnering Van Ryn - winner of 4 mixed doubles Grand Slam titles → 1929, 1931 and 1934 United States champion, partnering Betty Nuthall, Nuthall again, and Helen Jacobs, respectively • 1931 Wimbledon champion, partnering Anna McCune Harper
Gordon Lowe18841972United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1915 Australian champion • 1911, 1923 Wimbledon semifinalist
Yen-hsun Lu1983Taiwan Chinese Taipei2010 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Peter Lundgren1965Sweden SwedenRanked world no. 25 in 1987
Jan-Erik Lundqvist1937Sweden Sweden1961, 1964 French Championships singles semifinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 1964
Bob Lutz1949United States United States1970 Australian Open semifinalist • 1969 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1980 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • rated world no. 7 in 1972 - winner of 5 doubles Grand Slam titles → 1968, 1974, 1978 and 1980 U.S. Open champion, all partnering Stan Smith • 1970 Australian Open champion, partnering Smith
Randolph Lycett18861935United Kingdom Great Britain1922 Wimbledon singles finalist, 1905 Australian singles semifinalist • Winner of 5 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1905, 1911 Australian champion, 1921, 1922, 1923 Wimbledon champion • Winner of 3 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1919, 1921, 1923 Wimbledon champion
George Lyttleton-Rogers19061963United Kingdom Great Britain1930, 1932 French Championships quarterfinalist
Barry MacKay19352012United States United States1959 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1958 and 1960 quarterfinalist • 1959 Australian semifinalist • 1959 United States quarterfinalist
Harold Mahoney18671905United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1896 Wimbledon champion • 1900 Olympics singles and doubles silver medalist
Nicolas Mahut1982France FranceWinner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 2015 US Open doubles champion, and 2016 Wimbledon doubles champion, partnering Pierre-Hugues Herbert in both.
Gene Mako19162013United States United States19731938 United States finalist • 1938 Australian quarterfinalist • rated world no. 9 in 1938 – winner of 4 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1936 and 1938 United States champion, both partnering Don Budge • 1937 and 1938 Wimbledon champion, partnering Budge – winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1936 U.S. mixed doubles champion, partnering Alice Marble
Xavier Malisse1980Belgium BelgiumWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title ◌ Singles: 2002 Wimbledon semifinalist • ranked world no. 19 in 2002 ◌ Doubles: 2004 French Open champion [partnering Olivier Rochus] • ranked world no. 25 in 2011
Boris Maneff19161960Switzerland Switzerland1936 French Championships quarterfinalist
Amos Mansdorf1965Israel Israel1992 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 18 in 1987
Alberto Mancini1969Argentina Argentina1989 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 8 in 1989
Gregory Mangin19071978United States United States1928, 1930, 1933, 1935, 1926 U.S. Championships singles quarterfinalist • 1930 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist • 1933 French Championships singles quarterfinalist • 1931 U.S. Championships doubles finalist
Bruce Manson1956United States United States1981 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Félix Mantilla1974Spain SpainSingles: 1997 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1998 French Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 10 in 1998
John Marks1952Australia AustraliaSingles: 1978 Australian Open finalist
William Marshall18491921United Kingdom Great BritainSingles: 1877 Wimbledon runner-up
Billy Martin1956United States United StatesWinner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title ◌ Singles: 1977 Wimbledon quarterfinalist ◌ Mixed doubles: 1980 U.S. Open champion, partnering Anne Smith
Todd Martin1970United States United States1994 Australian Open finalist, 1999 and 2001 quarterfinalist • 1999 U.S. Open finalist, 1994 and 2000 semifinalist • 1994 and 1996 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1993 and 1999 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1999
Nicolás Massú1979Chile ChileWinner of 2 Olympic gold medals ◌ Singles: 2004 Olympic gold medalist • ranked world no. 9 in 2004 ◌ Doubles: 2004 gold medalist, partnering Fernando González
Geoff Masters1950Australia AustraliaWinner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles and 1 mixed doubles title ◌ Singles: 1974 Australian Open quarterfinalist ◌ Doubles: 1974 Australian Open champion • 1977 U.S. Open champion ◌ Mixed doubles: 1974 U.S. Open champion
Wally Masur1963Australia AustraliaSingles: 1987 Australian Open semifinalist, 1983 quarterfinalist • 1993 U.S. Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 15 in 1993
Paul-Henri Mathieu1982France FranceRanked world no. 12 in 2008
Shuzo Matsuoka1967Japan JapanSingles: 1995 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Andreas Maurer1958West Germany West GermanyRanked world no. 24 in 1986
Theodore Mavrogordato18831941United Kingdom Great BritainSingles: 1909/1914/1920 Wimbledon semifinalist ◌ Doubles: 1914 Wimbledon finalist
Florian Mayer1983Germany GermanySingles: 2004/2012 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 18 in 2011
Gene Mayer1956United States United States1980 and 1982 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1982 and 1984 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1980 — winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1978 and 1979 French Open champion, partnering Hank Pfister and Sandy Mayer respectively
Leonardo Mayer1987Argentina ArgentinaRanked world no. 21 in 2015
Sandy Mayer1952United States United States1973 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1978 and 1983 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1982 — winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1975 Wimbledon champion, partnering Vitas Gerulaitis • 1979 French Open champion, partnering Gene Mayer
Tim Mayotte1960United States United States1983 Australian Open semifinalist, 1981 quarterfinalist • 1982 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1981, 1983, 1986, 1988 and 1989 quarterfinalist • 1989 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1988
John McEnroe1959United States United States1999Winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1979, 1980, 1981 and 1984 U.S. Open champion, 1985 finalist, 1978, 1982 and 1990 semifinalist, 1987 quarterfinalist • 1981, 1983 and 1984 Wimbledon champion, 1980 and 1982 finalist, 1977, 1989 and 1992 semifinalist, 1985 quarterfinalist • 1984 French Open finalist, 1985 semifinalist, 1981 and 1983 quarterfinalist • 1983 Australian Open semifinalist, 1985, 1989 and 1992 quarterfinalist • 1978, 1983 and 1984 Masters Grand Prix champion, 1982 finalist • ranked world no. 1 for 170 weeks → 4 weeks in 1980, 23 in 1981, 45 in 1982, 26 in 1983, 37 in 1984, 35 in 1985 — winner of 9 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1979, 1981, 1983, 1984 and 1992 Wimbledon champion, the first four partnering Peter Fleming and the fifth partnering Michael Stich • 1979, 1981, 1983 and 1989 U.S. Open champion, the first three partnering Fleming and the fourth partnering Mark Woodforde • 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983 and 1984 Masters Grand Prix doubles champion, all partnering Fleming • ranked world no. 1 for 267 weeks → 37 weeks in 1979, 52 in 1980, 41 in 1981, 48 in 1982, 52 in 1983, 37 in 1984 - winner of 1 mixed Grand Slam doubles title → 1977 French Open champion, partnering Mary Carillo
Patrick McEnroe1966United States USA1991 Australian Open semifinalist • 1995 U.S. Open quarterfinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1989 French Open champion, partnering Jim Grabb
Vivian McGrath19161978Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam title → 1927 Australian champion • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1935 Australian champion, partnering John Bromwich • 1933, 1934, 1935 French Championship doubles finalist
Ken McGregor19292007Australia Australia1999Winner of 1 Grand Slam title → 1952 Australian champion, 1950 and 1951 finalist • 1951 Wimbledon finalist, 1952 quarterfinalist - winner of 7 Grand Slam doubles titles, all partnering Frank Sedgman → 1951 and 1952 French champion • 1951 and 1952 Wimbledon champion • 1951 and 1952 Australian champion • 1951 United States champion - winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles champion → 1950 United States champion, partnering Margaret Osborne duPont
Chuck McKinley19411986United States United States1986Winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1963 Wimbledon champion, 1961 finalist, 1964 semifinalist • 1962, 1963 and 1964 United States semifinalist, 1960 quarterfinalist - winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1961, 1963 and 1964 United States champion, all partnering Dennis Ralston
Maurice McLoughlin18901957United States United States1957Winner of 2 Grand Slam titles → 1912 and 1913 United States champion, 1911, 1914 and 1915 finalist • 1913 Wimbledon finalist (results likely incomplete as most drawsheets are unavailable) • rated world no. 1 for 1 year, 1914 - winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1912, 1913 and 1914 United States champion, all partnering Tom Bundy
Peter McNamara1955Australia Australia• 1980 Australian Open semifinalist, 1981 quarterfinalist • 1981 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1982 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1983 (may be higher as rankings before 1983 are incomplete) - winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1980 and 1982 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Paul McNamee • 1979 Australian Open champion, partnering McNamee
Paul McNamee1954Australia AustraliaRanked world no. 24 in 1986
Don McNeill19181996United States United States1965Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1939 French champion, 1940 United States champion • Winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1939 French champion, 1944 United States champion
Frew McMillan1942South Africa South Africa1992
Miloslav Mečíř1964Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia1988 Olympic gold medalist • 1986 US Open finalist, 1987 quarterfinalist • 1989 Australian Open finalist, 1987 quarterfinalist • 1987 French Open semifinalist • 1988 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1986 quarterfinalist
Andrei Medvedev1974Soviet Union Soviet Union / Ukraine Ukraine1999 French Open finalist, 1993 semifinalist, 1994 quarterfinalist • 1993 US Open quarterfinalist • 1995 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1994
Ernest George Meers18481928United Kingdom Great Britain1889 U.S. Championships singles semifinalist • 1895 Wimbledon singles semifinalist • 1888 Wimbledon doubles all-comers finalist, partnering A.G. Ziffo
Karl Meiler1949West Germany West GermanyRanked world no. 20 in 1973
Fernando Meligeni1971Brazil Brazil1999 French Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 25 in 1999
Jürgen Melzer1981Austria Austria2010 French Open semifinalist • winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles title → 2010 Wimbledon and 2011 US Open champion (both with Philipp Petzschner), winner of 1 Grand Slam Mixed double title → 2011 Wimbledon champion with Iveta Benešová • ranked world no. 8 in 2011
Roderich Menzel19071987Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia1938 French Championships singles finalist • 1935 U.S. Championships mixed doubles finalist, partnering Kay Stammers
Giuseppe Merlo1926Italy Italy1955, 1956 French Championships singles semifinalist
Alex Metreveli1944Soviet Union Soviet Union1973 Wimbledon finalist, 1972/1974 quarterfinalist • 1972 French Open semifinalist • 1972 Australian Open semifinalist, 1973/1975 quarterfinalist • 1974 US Open quarterfinalist
Max Mirnyi1977Belarus Belarus2002 US Open quarterfinalist • world no. 18 in 2003 — winner of 6 Grand Slam doubles titles → 2000/2002 US Open champion (respectively with L. Hewitt, and Bhupathi) • 2005/2006/2011/2012 French Open champion (2005/06 with Björkman, 11/12 with Nestor) — winner of 4 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1998 Wimbledon champion (with Serena Williams) • 1998/2007/2013 US Open champion (respectively with Serena Williams, Azarenka, and Hlaváčková) - 2012 Olympic mixed doubles gold medalist with Victoria Azarenka
Dragutin Mitić19171986Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia1938, 1946, 1949 French Championships singles quarterfinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1938 French champion
Juan Mónaco1984Argentina ArgentinaRanked world no. 10 in 2012
Gaël Monfils1986France France2008 French Open semifinalist •2016 US Open semifinalist •2016 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 6 in 2016
Albert Montañés1980Spain SpainRanked world no. 22 in 2010
Wesley Moodie1979South Africa South AfricaWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2005 Wimbledon champion (with Huss) • 2009 French Open doubles finalist (with Dick Norman)
Edgar Moon19041976Australia Australia1930 Australian champion • 1930 French Championships singles quarterfinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1932 Australian champion — winner of 2 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1929, 1934 Australian champion
Raymond Moore1946South Africa South Africa1977 US Open quarterfinalist
Enrique Morea19202006Argentina Argentina1953, 1954 French Championships singles semifinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1950 French champion
Umberto De Morpurgo18961961Italy Italy1930 French Championships singles semifinalist, 1928 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist
Buster Mottram1955United Kingdom Great BritainRanked world no. 15 in 1983
Carlos Moyá1976Spain SpainWinner of 1 Grand Slam title → 1998 French Open champion, 2003/2004/2007 quarterfinalist • 1997 Australian Open finalist, 2001 quarterfinalist • 1998 US Open semifinalist, 2007 quarterfinalist • 1998 Tour Finals finalist, 1997/2002 semifinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 2 weeks in 1999
Marty Mulligan1940Australia Australia1962 Wimbledon finalist; 1959, 1962 and 1970 French Open quarterfinalist
Gardnar Mulloy19132016United States United States19721952 U.S. finalist, 1942/1946/1950 semifinalist, 1947/1949/1951/1953 quarterfinalist • 1947 Australian semifinalist • 1948 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1950 quarterfinalist • 1952/1953/1954 French quarterfinalist — winner of 4 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1942/1945/1946/1948 U.S. champion, partnering Bill Talbert
Gilles Müller1983Luxembourg Luxembourg2008 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Andy Murray1987United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 2012 US Open champion, 2008 finalist, 2011 semifinalist, 2013/2014/2016 quarterfinalist •2013 and 2016 Wimbledon Champion, 2012 finalist, 2009/2010/2011/2015 semifinalist, 2008/2014 quarterfinalist •2010/2011/2013/2015/2016 Australian Open finalist, 2012 semifinalist, 2014 quarterfinalist •2016 French Open finalist, 2011/2014/2015 semifinalist 2009/2012 quarterfinalist • 2016 Tour Finals champion, 2008/2010/2012 semifinalist •winner of 2 Olympic singles gold medals → 2012 and 2016 Olympic gold medalist, 2012 Olympic mixed doubles silver medalist •ranked world no. 1 for 41 weeks (2016–17)
Jamie Murray1983United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 2007 Wimbledon champion, partnering Jelena Jankovic and 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 2016 Australian and US doubles Opens partnering Bruno Soares.
Robert Murray18921970United States United States19581917/1918 U.S. champion
Thomas Muster1967Austria AustriaWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1995 French Open champion, 1990 semifinalist • 1989/1997 Australian Open semifinalist, 1994 quarterfinalist • 1993/1994/1996 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 6 weeks
Rafael Nadal1986Spain SpainWinner of 17 Grand Slam singles titles including a career Grand Slam achieved in 2010 and 2 Olympic gold medals → 2005/2006/2007/2008/2010/2011/2012/2013/2014/2017/2018 French Open champion (11), 2015 quarterfinalist • 2008/2010 Wimbledon champion (2), 2006/2007/2011 finalist • 2010/2013/2017 US Open champion (3), 2011 finalist, 2008/2009 semifinalist, 2006 quarterfinalist • 2009 Australian Open champion, 2012/2014/2017 finalist, 2008 semifinalist, 2007/2010/2011/2015 quarterfinalist • 2010/2013 Tour Finals finalist, 2006/2007/2015 semifinalist • 2008 Olympic single gold medalist, 2016 Olympic double gold medalist (w/Marc Lopez) •reigning world no. 1 since August 2017
David Nalbandian1982Argentina Argentina2006 Australian Open semifinalist, 2003/2004/2005 quarterfinalist • 2004/2006 French Open semifinalist • 2002 Wimbledon finalist, 2005 quarterfinalist • 2003 US Open semifinalist, 2005 quarterfinalist• 2005 Tour Finals champion, 2006 semifinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 2006
Ilie Năstase1946Romania Romania1991Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1972 US Open champion, 1976 semifinalist, 1975 quarterfinalist • 1973 French Open champion, 1971 finalist, 1970/1974/1977 quarterfinalist • 1972/1976 Wimbledon finalist, 1977/1978 quarterfinalist • 1971/1972/1973/1975 Masters champion, 1974 finalist • ranked world no. 1 for 40 weeks and for 1973
Carr Neel18731949United States United States1895, 1896 U.S. Championships singles semifinalist • Winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1896 U.S. champion, partnering Sam Neel
Daniel Nestor1972Canada CanadaWinner of 5 Grand Slam doubles titles → 2002 Australian Open champion, partnering Mark Knowles • 2004 US Open champion, partnering Knowles • 2007 French Open champion, partnering Knowles • 2008/2009 Wimbledon champion, both partnering Nenad Zimonjić • 2000 Olympic gold medal, partnering Sébastien Lareau • 2007/2008 Masters champion, the first partnering Knowles, the second with Zimonjić • ranked world no. 1 in 2002/2009
John Newcombe1944Australia Australia1986Winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1967/1970/1971 Wimbledon champion, 1969 finalist, 1974 quarterfinalist • 1967/1973 US Open champion, 1969/1970/1974 semifinalist, 1968 quarterfinalist • 1973/1975 Australian Open champion, 1976 finalist, 1969/1970/1972/1974/1977[Dec] quarterfinalist • 1969 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 1
Kurt Nielsen19302011Denmark Denmark1953/1955 Wimbledon finalist • French quarterfinalist (twice) • U.S. quarterfinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1957 U.S. mixed doubles champion, partnering Althea Gibson
Jarkko Nieminen1981Finland Finland2005 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • 2006 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2008 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 13 in 2006
Nathaniel Niles18861932United States United States1917 U.S. Championships singles finalist • 1908 U.S. champion mixed doubles, partnering Edith Rotch
Harold Nisbet18731937United Kingdom Great Britain1897 U.S. Championships singles finalist • 1896, 1900 Wimbledon singles semifinalist • 1896, 1898, 1899, 1900 Wimbledon doubles finalist • 1897 U.S. Championships doubles finalist
Kei Nishikori1989Japan Japan2012,2015,2016 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2014 US Open finalist • 2015 French Open quarterfinalist • 2014,2016 Tour finals semifinalist • 2016 Olympic bronze medalist • ranked world no.4 in 2015
Yannick Noah1960France France2005Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1983 French Open champion, 1981/1982/1984/1987 quarterfinalist • 1990 Australian Open semifinalist, 1987 quarterfinalist • 1983/1985/1989 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 1986
Magnus Norman1976Sweden Sweden2000 French Open finalist, 1997 quarterfinalist • 2000 Australian Open semifinalist • Ranked world no.2 in 2000
Brian Norton18991956South Africa South Africa1921 Wimbledon finalist • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1923 U.S. champion
Karel Nováček1965Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia / Czech Republic Czech Republic1994 US Open semifinalist • 1987/1993 French Open quarterfinalist
Jiří Novák1975Czech Republic Czech Republic2002 Australian Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 2002
Hans Nüsslein19101991Germany / Germany Germany2006
Joakim Nyström1963Sweden SwedenRanked world no. 7 in 1986
Alex O'Brien1970United States United States
Tom Okker1944Netherlands Netherlands1968 US Open finalist, 1971 semifinalist • 1969 French Open semifinalist, 1973 quarterfinalist • 1971 Australian Open semifinalist, 1970 quarterfinalist • 1978 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1968/1969/1975/1979 quarterfinalist ◌ Doubles:
Alex Olmedo1936Peru Peru / United States United States1987Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1959 Australian champion • 1959 Wimbledon champion • 1959 U.S. finalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1958 U.S. champion, partnering Ham Richardson
Manuel Orantes1949Spain/Spain Spain2012Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1975 US Open champion, 1976/1977 quarterfinalist • 1974 French Open finalist, 1972 semifinalist, 1976/1978 quarterfinalist • 1972 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1968 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1976 Masters champion
Jim Osborne1945United States United States1971 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Rafael Osuna19381969Mexico Mexico1979Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1963 U.S. Open champion, winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1960/1963 Wimbledon champion • 1962 US Open champion, ranked world no. 1 in 1963
Leander Paes1973India India1996 Olympic bronze medalist — winner of 8 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1999/2001/2009 French Open champion, partnering Mahesh Bhupathi in the first two, and Lukáš Dlouhý in the last • 1999 Wimbledon champion, partnering Bhupathi • 2006/2009/2013 US Open champion, partnering Martin Damm Dlouhý and Radek Štepánek respectively • 2012 Australian Open champion partnering Štepánek — winner of 10 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1999/2003/2010/2015 Wimbledon champion, partnering Lisa Raymond,Martina Navratilova,Cara Black, and Martina Hingis respectively • 2003/2010/2015 Australian Open champion, partnering Navratilova, Black, and Hingis • 2008/2015 US Open champion partnering Black and Hingis • 2016 French Open Champion partnering Hingis
Dinny Pails19211986Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam title → 1946 Australian champion, 1947 finalist • 1947 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1946 quarterfinalist
Benoit Paire1989France FranceRanked world no. 18 in 2016
Josip Palada19121994Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia1938 French Championships singles semifinalist
Antonio Palafox1936Mexico MexicoWinner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1962 U.S. National champion • 1963 Wimbledon champion
Jared Palmer1971United States United StatesWinner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1995 Australian Open champion, partnering Richey Reneberg • 2001 Wimbledon champion, partnering Donald Johnson • ranked world no. 1 in doubles for 16 weeks
Adriano Panatta1950Italy ItalyWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1976 French Open champion, 1973/1975 semifinalist, 1972/1977 quarterfinalist • 1979 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1976 Davis Cup champion • ranked world no. 4 in 1976
Jahial Parmly Paret18701952United States United States1899 U.S. Championships singles finalist
James Cecil Parke18811946United Kingdom Great BritainWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1912 Australian champion • Winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1912 Australian champion
Frank Parker19161997United States United States1966Winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles → 1944, 1945 U.S. champion, 1948, 1949 French champion • 1937 Wimbledon singles semifinalist • winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1943 U.S. champion, 1949 French champion, 1949 Wimbledon champion
C. F. Parr???1879 Wimbledon All-Comers semifinalist
Onny Parun1947New Zealand New Zealand1973 Australian Open finalist • 1975 French Open quarterfinalist • 1971/1972 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1973 US Open quarterfinalist
Charlie Pasarell1944United States United States2013[lower-alpha 1]1965 U.S. quarterfinalist • 1976 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
David Pate1962United States United StatesRanked world no. 18 in 1987
Gerald Patterson18951967Australia Australia1989Rated co-world no. 1 in 1919 with "Little Bill" Johnston
Andrew Pattison1949Rhodesia RhodesiaRanked world no. 24 in 1974
Budge Patty1924United States United States1977Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1950 French champion • 1950 Wimbledon champion, 1949 finalist, 1947 semifinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1957 Wimbledon champion — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 1946 French champion
Andrei Pavel1974Romania Romania2002 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 13 in 2004
Victor Pecci1955Paraguay ParaguayRanked world no. 9 in 1980
Theodore Pell18791967United States United States19661915 United States semifinalist
Pierre Pellizza1917France France1946 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Guillermo Pérez Roldán1969Argentina ArgentinaRanked world no. 13 in 1988
Mikael Pernfors1963Sweden Sweden1986 French Open finalist • 1990 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 10 in 1986
Fred Perry19091995United Kingdom Great Britain1975Winner of 8 Grand Slam singles titles, including a Career Slam → 1933/1934/1936 U.S. champion • 1934/1935/1936 Wimbledon champion • 1934 Australian champion, 1935 finalist • 1935 French champion, 1936 finalist • rated world no. 1 for 5 years
Yvon Petra19161984France France2016Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1946 Wimbledon champion, 1947 quarterfinalist
Hank Pfister1953United States United States1978/1981/1982 Australian Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 19 in 1983
Mark Philippoussis1976Australia Australia1998 US Open finalist • 2003 Wimbledon finalist, 1998/1999/2000 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 8 in 1999
Barry Phillips-Moore1937Australia Australia1968 Australian Championships semifinalist • 1971 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Nicola Pietrangeli1933Italy Italy1986Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1959 and 1960 French Open champion, 1961 and 1964 finalist, 1960 Wimbledon semifinalist • ranked world no. 3 in 1959
Nikola Pilić1939Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia1973 French Open singles finalist • 1970 US Open doubles champion
Joshua Pim18691942Republic of Ireland IrelandWinner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1893, 1894 Wimbledon champion
Libor Pimek1963Czechoslovakia CzechoslovakiaRanked world no. 21 in 1985
Ulrich Pinner1954West Germany West GermanyRanked world no. 23 in 1979
Cédric Pioline1969France France1993 US Open finalist • 1997 Wimbledon finalist • 1998 French Open semifinalist
Hans-Jürgen Pohmann1947West Germany West Germany1974 French Open quarterfinalist
Alexander Popp1976Germany Germany2000/2003 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Vasek Pospisil1990-Canada CanadaWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2014 Wimbledon doubles champion, partnering Jack Sock • 2015 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 25 in 2014
Lucas Pouille1994-France France2016 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2016 US Open quarterfinalist •ranked world no. 10 in 2018
Goran Prpić1964Croatia Croatia1991 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1993 French Open quarterfinalist • 1992 Olympic doubles bronze medalist • ranked world no. 16 in 1991
Patrick Proisy1949France FranceRanked world no. 23 in 1973 • 1973 French Open finalist
Mariano Puerta1978Argentina Argentina2005 French Open finalist • ranked world no. 9 in 2005
Jim Pugh1964United States United States
Franjo Punčec19131985Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia1938 French Championships singles semifinalist • 1938, 1939 Wimbledon singles semifinalist
Mel Purcell1959United States United StatesRanked world no. 21 in 1980
Sam Querrey1987United States United States2016 Wimbledon Open quarterfinalist • Ranked world no. 17 in 2011
Adrian Quist19131991Australia Australia1984Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1936/1940/1948 Australian champion — winner of 10 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1936/1937/1938/1939/1940/1946/1947/1948/1949/1950 Australian champion, the first two partnering Don Turnbull, the last eight with John Bromwich
Patrick Rafter1972Australia Australia2006Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1997/1998 U.S. Open champion • 2000/2001 Wimbledon finalist, 1999 semifinalist • 1997 French Open semifinalist • 2001 Australian Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 1 week
Dennis Ralston1942United States United States19871966 Wimbledon finalist
Andy Ram1980Israel IsraelWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2008 Australian Open champion, partnering Jonathan Erlich — winner of 2 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 2006 Wimbledon champion, partnering Vera Zvonareva, 2007 French Open champion, partnering Nathalie Dechy
Raúl Ramírez1953Mexico MexicoRanked world no. 4 in 1976 – winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1975/1977 French Open champion • 1976 Wimbledon champion • 1980 Masters champion
Milos Raonic1990Canada CanadaRanked world no. 3 in 2016 - 2016 Wimbledon finalist • 2016 Australian open semifinalist • 2014 French Open quarterfinalist • 2016 Tour Finals semifinalist
Louis Raymond18951962South Africa South Africa1924 Wimbledon singles semifinalist • 1927 French Championships quarterfinalist • 1920 Olympic singles gold medalist
Richey Reneberg1965United States United StatesRanked world no. 20 in 1991 – winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1992 US Open champion • 1995 Australian Open champion • ranked world no. 1 in doubles
Peter Rennert1958United States United States1980 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Ernest Renshaw18611899United Kingdom Great Britain1983Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1888 Wimbledon champion • ranked world no. 1 in 1887/1888 — winner of 7 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1980/1881/1884/1885/1886/1888/1889 Wimbledon champion, all partnering twin brother William Renshaw
William Renshaw18611904United Kingdom Great Britain1983Winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1881/1882/1883/1884/1885/1886/1889 Wimbledon champion, 1890 finalist • ranked world no. 1 for 7 years (including 6 consecutive) — winner of 7 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1980/1881/1884/1885/1886/1888/1889 Wimbledon champion, partnering twin brother /Ernest Renshaw
George E. Richardsc.1921United States United States1942 U.S. National Championships quarterfinalist
Vinnie Richards19031959United States United States19611924 Olympic gold medalist
Cliff Richey1946United States United States1970 French Open semifinalist • 1970/1972 US Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 16 in 1973
Bobby Riggs19181995United States United States1967Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1939 Wimbledon champion, 1939, 1941 U.S. champion • ranked world no. 1 for 3 years
Marty Riessen1941United States United States1971 Australian Open quarterfinalist; 1971 doubles finalist • 1971 US Open quarterfinalist; 1976 doubles champion, 1975/1978 finalist • 1971 French Open doubles champion (w/Ashe) • 1969 Wimbledon doubles finalist • ranked world no. 11 in 1974
Marcelo Ríos1975Chile Chile1998 Australian Open finalist, 1997/2002 quarterfinalist; 1998/1999 French Open quarterfinalist • 1997 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 6 weeks in 1998
Frank Riseley18771959United Kingdom Great Britain1903(Ch), 1904(Ch), and 1906(Ch) Wimbledon finalist
Major Ritchie18701955United Kingdom Great Britain1902, 1903, 1904, and 1909(Ch) Wimbledon finalist
Tommy Robredo1982Spain Spain2007 Australian Open quarterfinalist •2003/2005/2007/2009/2013 French Open quarterfinalist • 2013 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 2006
Tony Roche1945Australia Australia19861966 French champion, 1965/1967 finalist • 1968 Wimbledon finalist • 1969/1970 U.S. Open finalist • 1964 Australian Championships quarterfinalist
Olivier Rochus1981Belgium BelgiumWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title ◌ Singles: ranked world no. 24 in 2005 ◌ Doubles: 2004 French Open champion [partnering Xavier Malisse] • ranked world no. 29 in 2004
Andy Roddick1982United States United States2017Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 2003 US Open champion, 2006 finalist, 2001/2002/2004/2007/2008/2011 quarterfinalist • 2004/2005/2009 Wimbledon finalist, 2003 semifinalist, 2007 quarterfinalist • 2003/2005/2007/2009 Australian Open semifinalist, 2004/2010 quarterfinalist • 2003/2004/2007 Masters semifinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 13 weeks in 2003-2004
Christophe Roger-Vasselin1957France France1983 French Open semifinalist
Édouard Roger-Vasselin1983France FranceWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 2014 French Open champion, partnering Julien Benneteau
Mervyn Rose19302017Australia Australia2001Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1954 Australian champion • 1958 French champion – winner of 4 Grand Slam doubles title → 1952 and 1953 United States champion, partnering Vic Seixas and Rex Hartwig respectively • 1954 Australian Champion, partnering Hartwig • 1954 Wimbledon champion, partnering Hartwig – ranked world no.3 in 1958
Ken Rosewall1934Australia Australia1980Winner of 8 Grand Slam singles titles → 1953/1955/1971(O)/1972(O) Australian (Open) champion; 1953/1956/1972(O) doubles champion • 1953/1968(O) French (Open) champion • 1956/1970(O) US (Open) champion; 1956/1969(O) doubles champion • 1954/1956/1970(Open)/1974(O) Wimbledon finalist; 1953/1956 doubles champion • ranked world no.1 in 1961, 1962 and 1963
Marc Rosset1970Switzerland Switzerland1992 Olympic gold medalist • 1996 French Open semifinalist • 1999 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 9 in 1995
Derrick Rostagno1965United States United States1988 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 13 in 1991
Ray Ruffels1946Australia Australia1969/1975 Australian Open semifinalist, 1970/1977(December) quarterfinalist • 1968 Australian Championships quarterfinalist
Greg Rusedski1973United Kingdom Great Britain1997 US Open finalist • 1997 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1997
Alejo Russell19161977Argentina Argentina1942 and 1945 U.S. National Championships quarterfinalist
John Van Ryn19051999United States United States1963Winner of 6 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1929, 1930, 1931 Wimbledon champion • 1931, 1935 U.S. champion • 1931 French champion
André Sá1978Brazil Brazil2002 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
John Sadri1956United States United StatesRanked world no. 14 in 1980
Marat Safin1980Russia Russia2016Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 2000 US Open champion, 2001 semifinalist • 2005 Australian Open champion, 2002/2004 finalist • 2002 French Open semifinalist, 2000 quarterfinalist • 2008 Wimbledon semifinalist, 2001 quarterfinalist • 2000/2004 Masters semifinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 9 weeks
Pete Sampras1971United States United States2007Winner of 14 Grand Slam singles titles → 1990/1993/1995/1996/2002 US Open champion, 1992/2000/2001 finalist, 1998 semifinalist, 1991 quarterfinalist • 1993/1994/1995/1997/1998/1999/2000 Wimbledon champion (record), 1992 semifinalist, 1996 quarterfinalist • 1994/1997 Australian Open champion, 1995 finalist, 1993/2000 semifinalist, 1998 quarterfinalist • 1996 French Open semifinalist, 1992/1993/1994 quarterfinalist • 1991/1994/1996/1997/1999 Masters champion (record; shared with Ivan Lendl), 1993 finalist, 1992/1995/1998/2000 semifinalist • ranked world no. 1 for 286 weeks
Emilio Sánchez1965Spain Spain1988 French Open quarterfinalist • 1988 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Javier Sánchez1968Spain Spain1991/1996 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Manuel Santana1938Spain Spain1984Winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles → 1961/1964 French champion • 1965 U.S. champion • 1966 Wimbledon champion • ranked world no. 1 amateur in 1966 • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1963 French champion
Fabrice Santoro1972France France2006 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 17 in 2001 — winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 2003/2004 Australian Open champion, both partnering Michaël Llodra — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 2005 French Open champion, partnering Daniela Hantuchová
Jiro Sato19081934Japan Japan1931/1933 French championship semifinalist • 1932 Australian championship semifinalist • 1932/1933 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1931 quarterfinalist
Dick Savitt1927United States United States1976Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1951 Wimbledon champion • 1951 Australian champion • 1950/1951 U.S. semifinalist, 1956 quarterfinalist – ranked world no. 2
Bill Scanlon1956United States United StatesRanked world no. 9 in 1984
Sjeng Schalken1976Netherlands Netherlands2002 US Open semifinalist • 2002/2003/2004 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 11 in 2003
Michiel Schapers1959Netherlands Netherlands1985/1988 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 25 in 1988
Richard Schlesinger19001968Australia Australia1924, 1929 Australian Championships singles finalist • 1925 Australasian Championships mixed doubles finalist
Ted Schroeder19212006United States United States1966Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1942 U.S. champion, 1949 finalist • 1949 Wimbledon champion — winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1940/1941/1947 U.S. champion, all partnering Jack Kramer
Rainer Schüttler1976Germany Germany2003 Australian Open finalist • 2008 Wimbledon semifinalist • 2003 Masters semifinalist • ranked world no. 5 in 2003
Diego Schwartzman1992Argentina Argentina2017 US Open quarterfinalist • 2018 French Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 11 in 2018
Richard Sears18611943United States United States1955Winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1881–1887 U.S. champion — winner of 6 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1882–1887 U.S. champion
Frank Sedgman1927Australia Australia1979Winner of 5 Grand Slam singles titles → 1949/1950 Australian champion, 1952 finalist • 1951/1952 U.S. champion • 1952 Wimbledon champion • 1952 French championships finalist — winner of 9 Grand Slam doubles titles and a calendar year Grand Slam (1951) → 1948/1951/1952 Wimbledon champion • 1950/1951 U.S. champion • 1951/1952 Australian champion • 1951/1952 French champion — winner of 8 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1949/1950 Australian champion • 1951/1952 French champion • 1951/1952 Wimbledon champion • 1951/1952 U.S. champion • considered world no. 1 amateur for 1952
Abe Segal19302016South Africa South Africa1964 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Pancho Segura1921United States USA19841942/1943/1944/1945/1946/1947 U.S. semifinalist • considered world no. 1 professional for 1950 and 1952
Robert Seguso1963United States United StatesWinner of 4 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1985 US Open champion • 1987/1988 Wimbledon champion • 1987 French Open champion
Vic Seixas1923United States United States1971Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1953 Wimbledon champion • 1954 U.S. champion — winner of 5 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1955 Australian champion, partnering Tony Trabert • 1954, 1955 French champion with Tony Trabert • 1952, 1954 U.S. champion, partnering Mervyn Rose and Trabert respectively.
Andreas Seppi1984Italy ItalyRanked world no. 18 in 2013
Quincy Shaw18691960United States United States1889 U.S Championships singles finalist
Frank Shields19091975United States USA19641930 U.S. Championships singles finalist • 1931 Wimbledon singles finalist
Zenzo Shimizu18911977Japan Japan1920 Wimbledon (challenge round) finalist
Bill Sidwell1920Australia Australia1948–1950 Australian Championships singles semifinalist – winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1949 U.S. champion, partnering John Bromwich – ranked world no. 10 in 1949
Jan Siemerink1970Netherlands Netherlands1998 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 14 in 1998
Gilles Simon1984France France2009 Australian Open quarterfinalist •2015 Wimbledon quarterfinalist •2008 Masters semifinalist •ranked world no. 6 in 2009
Orlando Sirola19281995Italy Italy1960 French Championships singles semifinalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1959 French champion, partnering Nicola Pietrangeli
Dick Skeen19061994United States United StatesRanked no. 2 in professional tennis in 1941
Horst Skoff19682008Austria AustriaRanked world no. 18 in 1990
Henry Slocum18621949United States United States1955Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1888/1889 U.S. champion, 1887/1890 finalist — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1889 U.S. champion
Pavel Složil1955Czechoslovakia CzechoslovakiaRanked world no. 12 in 1984
Tomáš Šmíd1956Czechoslovakia CzechoslovakiaRanked world no. 11 in 1984
Stan Smith1946United States United States1987Winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles → 1971 US Open champion • 1972 Wimbledon champion • 1971/1972 French Open quarterfinalist • 1970 Masters champion • ranked world no. 1 for 1972 (year-end)
Sydney Howard Smith18721947United Kingdom Great Britain1899, 1900(Ch), 1905 Wimbledon finalist • winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1902, 1906 Wimbledon champion
Jack Sock1992-United States United StatesWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title and 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 2014 Wimbledon doubles champion, partnering Vasek Pospisil • 2011 US Open mixed doubles champion, partnering Melanie Oudin
Robin Söderling1984Sweden Sweden2009/2010 French Open finalist, 2011 quarterfinalist •2010 Wimbledon quarterfinalist •2009/2010 US Open quarterfinalist • 2009 Masters semifinalist •ranked world no. 4 in 2010
Harold Solomon1952United States United StatesRanked world no. 5 in 1980
Vince Spadea1974United States United States1999 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 18 in 2005
Pat Spence18721947South Africa South Africa1927 French Championships singles semifinalist, 1926 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist • winner of 2 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1928 Wimbledon champion, partnering Elizabeth Ryan, 1931 French champion, partnering Betty Nuthall
Franco Squillari1975Argentina Argentina2000 French Open semifinalist • ranked world no. 11 in 2000
Milan Šrejber1963Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia1986 U.S. Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 23 in 1986
Paradorn Srichaphan1979Thailand ThailandRanked world no. 9 in 2003
Jonathan Stark1971United States United States
Carl-Uwe Steeb1967West Germany West Germany/Germany GermanyRanked world no. 14 in 1990
Giorgio de Stefani19041992Italy Italy1932 French Championships singles finalist, 1935 Australian Championships singles quarterfinalist
Ulf Stenlund1967Sweden SwedenRanked world no. 23 in 1987
Radek Štěpánek1978Czech Republic Czech Republic2006 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • Winner of 2 Grand Slams doubles titles → 2012 Australian Open and 2013 US Open doubles champion both with Leander Paes • 2016 mixed doubles Olympic bronze medalist with Lucie Hradecká • ranked world no. 8 in 2006
Brett Steven1969New Zealand New Zealand1993 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Sherwood Stewart1946United States United StatesWinner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1976/1982 French Open champion • 1984 Australian Open champion
Michael Stich1968Germany Germany2018Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1991 Wimbledon champion, 1997 semifinalist, 1992/1993 quarterfinalist • 1994 U.S. Open finalist, 1991 quarterfinalist • 1996 French Open finalist, 1991 semifinalist • 1993 Australian Open semifinalist, 1992 quarterfinalist • 1993 Masters champion • winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1992 Wimbledon champion, partnering John McEnroe
Dick Stockton1951United States United States1974 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1976/1977 US Open quarterfinalist
Les Stoefen19111970United States United States1934 U.S. Championships semifinalist, 1934 and 1935 doubles winner
Fred Stolle1938Australia Australia19851969 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1969 French Open quarterfinalist • 1969/1972 US Open quarterfinalist
Sandon Stolle1970Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1998 U.S. Open champion, partnering Cyril Suk.
Jason Stoltenberg1970Australia Australia1996 Wimbledon semifinalist • ranked world no. 19 in 1994
Allan Stone1945Australia Australia1971 Australian Open semifinalist — winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1968/1977[Dec] Australian Open champion
Eric Sturgess19202004South Africa South Africa
Cyril Suk1967Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia / Czech Republic Czech RepublicWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1998 U.S. Open champion, partnering Sandon Stolle — winner of 4 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1991 French Open champion, partnering sister Helena Suková • 1992/1996/1997 Wimbledon champion, the first partnering Larisa Neiland, the other two with Suková
Henrik Sundström1964Sweden Sweden1984 French Open quarterfinalist
Jonas Svensson1966Sweden Sweden1988 French Open semifinalist • 1989 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Ottó Szigeti19111976Hungary Hungary1939 French Championships semifinalist
Bill Talbert19181999United States United States19671944, 1945 U.S. Championships singles finalist • 1950 French Championships singles semifinalist • 1950 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist – winner of 5 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1942, 1945, 1946, 1948 U.S. champion, partnering Gardnar Mulloy • 1950 French champion, partnering Tony Trabert.
Roscoe Tanner1951United States United StatesWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1977[Jan] Australian Open champion, 1979 Wimbledon finalist, 1975/1976 semifinalist, 1980/1983 quarterfinalist • 1974/1979 US Open semifinalist, 1972/1980/1981 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 4 in 1979
Balázs Taróczy1954Hungary Hungary1976/1981 French Open quarterfinalist; ranked world no. 13 in 1982
Howard Taylor1865?United States United States1884(Ch), 1886, 1887, 1888 U.S. Championships singles finalist • Winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1889 U.S. champion, partnering Henry Slocum
Roger Taylor1941United Kingdom United KingdomRanked world no. 11 in 1973
Brian Teacher1954United States United StatesWinner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1980 Australian Open champion, 1982 quarterfinalist • 1982 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 1981
Horia Tecău1985Romania RomaniaWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title and 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 2015 Wimbledon doubles champion, partnering Jean-Julien Rojer • 2012 Australian Open mixed doubles champion, partnering Bethanie Mattek-Sands
Eliot Teltscher1959United States United StatesRanked world no. 6 in 1982
Ben Testerman1962United States United StatesRanked world no. 22 in 1984
Dominic Thiem1993Austria Austria2015 French Open semifinalist • Ranked world no.7 in 2016
Bill Tilden18931953United States United States1959Winner of 10 Grand Slam singles titles → 1920/1921/1922/1923/1924/1925/1929 U.S. champion • 1920/1921/1930 Wimbledon champion • 7 times world no. 1
Mikael Tillström1972Sweden Sweden1996 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Henk Timmer19041998Netherlands Netherlands1927, 1929 Wimbledon singles quarterfinalist • 1924 Olympic mixed doubles bronze medalist
Janko Tipsarević1984Serbia Serbia2011/2012 US Open quarterfinalist •ranked world no. 8 in 2012
Ion Ţiriac1939Romania Romania2013[lower-alpha 1]Winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1970 French Open champion, partnering Ilie Năstase
Ignacy Tłoczyński19112000Poland Poland1939 French Championships singles quarterfinalist
Bernard Tomic1992Australia Australia2011 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • Ranked world no. 17 in 2016
Tony Trabert1930United States United States1970Winner of 5 Grand Slam singles titles → 1953/1955 U.S. champion • 1954/1955 French champion • 1955 Wimbledon champion — winner of 5 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1950/1954/1955 French champion, the first partnering Bill Talbert, the other two with Vic Seixas • 1954 U.S. champion, partnering Seixas • 1955 Australian champion, partnering Seixas
Viktor Troicki1986Serbia SerbiaRanked world no. 12 in 2011
Stefanos Tsitsipas1998Greece GreeceRanked world no. 15 in 2018
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga1985France France2008 Australian Open finalist, 2010 semifinalist, 2009/2013/2017 quarterfinalist •2013/2015 French Open semifinalist, 2012 quarterfinalist •2011/2012 Wimbledon semifinalist, 2010/2016 quarterfinalist •2011/2015/2016 US Open quarterfinalist •2011 Tour Finals finalist •2012 Olympic silver medalist in doubles partnering Michaël Llodra •ranked world no. 5 in 2012
Thierry Tulasne1963France FranceRanked world no. 10 in 1986
Dmitry Tursunov1982Russia RussiaRanked world no. 20 in 2006
Kevin Ullyett1972Zimbabwe ZimbabweWinner of 2 Grand Slam doubles titles → 2001 US Open champion with Wayne Black • 2005 Australian Open champion with Black • 2008 Wimbledon finalist with Jonas Björkman — winner of 1 Grand Slam mixed doubles title → 2002 Australian Open champion (with Daniela Hantuchová)
Christo van Rensburg1962South Africa South AfricaRanked world no. 19 in 1988 — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1985 Australian Open champion, partnering Paul Annacone
Robert Van't Hof1959United States United StatesRanked world no. 25 in 1983
Fernando Verdasco1983Spain Spain2009 Australian Open semifinalist • 2013 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 2009/2010 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 7 in 2009
Martin Verkerk1978Netherlands Netherlands2003 French Open finalist • ranked world no. 14 in 2003
Ian Vermaak1933South Africa South Africa1959 French Championships singles finalist • ranked world no. 10 in 1959
Armando Vieira1925Brazil Brazil1951 Wimbledon quarterfinalist
Guillermo Vilas1952Argentina Argentina1991Winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles → 1977 French Open champion, 1975/1978/1982 finalist, 1976/1979/1980/1983/1986 quarterfinalist • 1977 US Open champion, 1975/1976/1982 semifinalist • 1978/1979 Australian Open champion, 1977[Jan] finalist, 1980 semifinalist • 1975/1976 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1974 Masters champion, 1975/1976/1977/1982 semifinalist
Ellsworth Vines19111994United States United States1962Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1931/1932 U.S. Champion • 1932 Wimbledon Champion, 1933 finalist • rated world no 1 for 4 years (1932/1935/1936/1937)
Danie Visser1961South Africa South AfricaWinner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1990/1993 Australian Open champion, the first partnering Pieter Aldrich, the second with Laurie Warder • 1990 US Open champion, partnering Aldrich
Adrian Voinea1974Romania Romania1995 French Open quarterfinalist
Filippo Volandri1981Italy ItalyRanked world no. 25 in 2007
Alexander Volkov1967Russia Russia1993 US Open semifinalist, 1992 quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 14 in 1994
Butch Walts1955United States United States1978 U.S. Open quarterfinalist
Holcombe Ward18781961United States United States1956Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1904 U.S. champion • Winner of 6 Grand Slam doubles title → 1899–1901, 1904–1906 US champion
Laurie Warder1962Australia AustraliaWinner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1993 Australian Open champion with Danie Visser, 1987 finalist with Peter Doohan
Leo Ware18761914United States United States1897, 1898, 1899, 1901 US semifinalist • Winner of 2 Grand Slam doubles title → 1897, 1898 US Champion
Kim Warwick1952Australia Australia1980 Australian Open finalist • ranked world no. 15 in 1981
Philippe Washer19242015Belgium Belgium1957 French Championships singles quarterfinalist
MaliVai Washington1969United States United States1996 Wimbledon finalist • 1994 Australian Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 11 in 1992
Stan Wawrinka1985Switzerland SwitzerlandWinner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 2014 Australian Open champion, 2015/2017 semifinalist, 2011 quarterfinalist •2015 French Open champion, 2016 semifinalist, 2013 quarterfinalist •2016 US Open champion, 2013/2015 semifinalist, 2010/2014 quarterfinalist •2014/2015 Wimbledon quarterfinalist •2008 Olympic gold medalist in doubles with Roger Federer •2013/2014/2015 Tour Finals semifinalist •ranked world no. 3 in 2014
David Wheaton1969United States United States1991 Wimbledon semifinalist • 1990 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 1990 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 12 in 1992
Malcolm Whitman18771932United States United States1955Winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles → 1898, 1899, 1900 US champion
Mats Wilander1964Sweden Sweden2002Winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles → 1982 (first appearance) /1985/1988 French Open champion, 1983/1987 finalist, 1984 semifinalist, 1989 quarterfinalist • 1983/1984/1988 Australian Open champion, 1985 finalist, 1990 semifinalist • 1988 US Open champion, 1987 finalist, 1985 semifinalist, 1983/1984 quarterfinalist • 1987/1988/1989 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • 1987 Masters finalist • ranked world no. 1 for 20 weeks — winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1986 Wimbledon champion with Joakim Nyström • 1984 Australian Open finalist with Nyström • 1986 US Open finalist with Nyström
Tony Wilding18831915New Zealand New Zealand1978Winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles → 1906/1909 Australian champion, 1910/1911/1912/1913 Wimbledon champion• ranked world no. 1 in 1913
R. Norris Williams18911968United States United States1914, 1916 US champion • ranked world no. 5 in 1913, 1914
Tim Wilkison1959United States United States1986 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 23 in 1986
Bobby Wilson1935United Kingdom Great Britain1958, 1959, 1961 and 1963 Wimbledon quarterfinalist, 1960 and 1963 U.S. National quarterfinalist, and 1963 French Championships quarterfinalist
Todd Witsken19631998United States United States1988 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Sidney Wood19112009United States United States1964Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1931 Wimbledon champion • 1935 U.S. Championships singles finalist • 1932 French Championships mixed doubles finalist
Todd Woodbridge1971Australia Australia2010Ranked world no. 19 in 1997 — winner of 16 Grand Slam doubles titles (record) → 1995/1996/2003 US Open champion the first two with Mark Woodforde, the third with Jonas Björkman • 1992/1997/2001 Australian Open champion the first two with Woodforde, the third with Björkman • 1993/1994/1995/1996/1997/2000/2002/2003/2004 Wimbledon champion the first six with Woodforde, the last three with Björkman • 2000 French Open champion with Woodforde • 1996 Olympic gold medal with Woodforde • 1992/1996 Masters champion with Woodforde — winner of 6 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1990/1993/2001 US Open champion the first with Elizabeth Smylie, the second with Helena Suková, and the third with Rennae Stubbs • 1993 Australian Open champion with Arantxa Sánchez Vicario • 1994 Wimbledon champion with Suková • 1995 French Open champion with Larisa Savchenko
See also: The Woodies
Mark Woodforde1965Australia Australia2010Ranked world no. 19 in 1996 — winner of 12 Grand Slam doubles titles → 1989/1995/1996 US Open champion, the first partnering John McEnroe, the second and third with Todd Woodbridge • 1992/1997 Australian Open champion, both partnering Woodbridge • 1993/1994/1995/1996/1997/2000 Wimbledon champion, all partnering Woodbridge • 2000 French Open champion, partnering Woodbridge • 1996 Olympic gold medal, partnering Woodbridge • 1992/1996 Masters champion, partnering Woodbridge — winner of 5 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 1992/1996 Australian Open champion, both partnering Nicole Provis • 1992 French Open champion, partnering Arantxa Sánchez Vicario • 1992 US Open champion, partnering Provis • 1993 Wimbledon champion, partnering Martina Navratilova
See also: The Woodies
Chris Woodruff1973United States United States2000 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Robert Wrenn18731925United States United States1955Winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles → 1893, 1894, 1896 and 1897 US champion • Winner of 1 Grand Slam doubles title → 1895
George Wrenn18651948United States United States1900 U.S. Championships singles finalist
Beals Wright18791925United States United States1956Winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title → 1905 US champion • Winner of 3 Grand Slam doubles title → 1904, 1905 and 1906 • Winner of 1 Olympic Gold singles medal → 1904 • Winner of 1 Olympic Gold doubles medal → 1904
Mikhail Youzhny1982Russia Russia2006/2010 US Open semifinalist, 2013 quarterfinalist • 2008 Australian Open quarterfinalist • 2010 French Open quarterfinalist • 2012 Wimbledon quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 8 in 2008
Jaime Yzaga1967Peru Peru1991 Australian Open quarterfinalist (first appearance) • 1994 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 18 in 1989
Mariano Zabaleta1978Argentina Argentina2001 US Open quarterfinalist • ranked world no. 20 in 2000
Vladimír Zedník1947Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia1973 Australian Open quarterfinalist
Nenad Zimonjić1976Serbia SerbiaWinner of 3 Grand Slam doubles titles (partnering Daniel Nestor)→ 2008/2009 Wimbledon champion ; 2010 French Open champion • winner of 5 Grand Slam mixed doubles titles → 2004/2008 Australian Open champion respectively with Elena Bovina and Sun Tiantian • 2006/2010 French Open champion (both with Katarina Srebotnik), 2014 Wimbledon champion with Samantha Stosur
Slobodan Živojinović1963Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia1985 Australian Open semifinalist (first appearance) • 1986 Wimbledon semifinalist, 1987 quarterfinalist
Alexander Zverev1997Germany GermanyRanked world no. 3 in 2017 • 2018 French Open quarterfinalist

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Inducted into the 'contributor' category.

See also: Tyler "Bone" Jackson

References

    See also

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.