List of career achievements by Roger Federer

Roger Federer has won an all-time record 20 Grand Slam singles titles and has reached a record 31 Grand Slam finals (10 consecutive, and another 8 consecutive – the two longest streaks in history), 46 semi-final appearances, and 57 quarter-final appearances. He is one of eight men to have won a career Grand Slam (winning all four Grand Slams at least once) and one of four players to have won a career Grand Slam on three different surfaces, hard, grass and clay courts. Federer has won 8 Wimbledon titles, an all-time record. From 2005-2010 Federer reached the finals in 18 out of 19 grand slams, winning 12 titles and 6 runner up trophies. He is the only male player to win 2 different Grand Slam tournaments at least 6 times (Australian Open, Wimbledon) and the only player to win 3 different tournaments at least 5 times (Wimbledon, Australian Open, US Open). He is the only player to win two Grand Slams five consecutive times at Wimbledon from 2003–07 and the US Open from 2004–08. Federer has spent 310 weeks as the No. 1 ranked player in the world (ranked No. 1 for 237 consecutive weeks), the most of any men's tennis player since the inception of these rankings in 1973.

Roger Federer has won an all-time record 20 Grand Slam Titles from 2003–18 including an all-time record of 8 Wimbledon Titles.

Federer has won an all-time record 11 hard court Grand Slam titles (tied with Novak Djokovic). He is the only player to win 5 consecutive titles at the US Open (2004–08).[1] Federer has won an all-time record of 71 hard court titles. Federer has won an all-time record 7 Cincinnati Masters 1000 titles. He has also won an all-time record 10 Swiss Indoors titles and has reached the final at the Swiss Indoors for a total of 15 years (2000–01, 2006–15, 2017–19) and 10 consecutive years (2006–15) and is the only player to ever achieve both feats in the Open Era in any tournament. Federer has also registered a 56-match win streak on hard courts which is the all-time record.

Federer's success does not hold strictly to hard courts, his most successful surface is grass where he has won an Open Era record 19 grass court titles including an all-time record 10 Halle Open titles and an all-time record of 8 Wimbledon titles. He reached an all-time record 7 consecutive Wimbledon finals from 2003–09 and is the only player to achieve this feat in the Open Era. Federer has the longest grass court winning streak in the Open Era as he won 65 consecutive matches on grass from 2003 to 2008 where he was beaten by Rafael Nadal in the 2008 Wimbledon final. Due to his success on grass courts, Federer is considered by many as the greatest grass court player of all time having surpassed the likes of Pete Sampras (winner of 7 Wimbledon trophies and undefeated in finals), Björn Borg (won 5 consecutive Wimbledon finals), Boris Becker, John McEnroe, Novak Djokovic due to his consistent record on grass and the number of titles/finals he has accrued.

Alongside his record on grass, Federer has been successful on clay courts. He has reached 5 French Open finals (being beaten in 4 finals by Nadal, who is classed by many as the greatest clay court player ever), and has won 6 Masters 1000 titles on clay from 16 finals. Federer won his first and only French Open title in 2009 when he also won Wimbledon thus achieving the "Channel Slam" alongside Rod Laver, Borg and Nadal. Federer has won 11 clay court titles from 26 finals (11 of his clay court finals losses have been to Nadal, against 2 wins). His consistency in his prime years on clay was surpassed only by Rafael Nadal, and Federer was widely viewed as the second greatest clay court player during Nadal's era in the French Open from 2005–11 when he achieved 1 quarterfinal, 1 semifinal, 4 runners-up, and 1 title (he succumbed only to Nadal in the semifinal and finals he lost).

Federer is the only player to register at least ten titles on clay, grass and hard courts, he has 71 hard court titles, 19 grass court titles, and 11 clay court titles. In his prime years, he won an unparalleled 11 Grand Slam tournaments (3 Australian Open titles, 4 Wimbledon titles and 4 US Open titles) of a possible 16 events from 2004 to 2007. He reached the finals of all four Grand Slam tournaments in the same calendar year in 2006, 2007, and 2009, joining Rod Laver (1969) and later joined by Novak Djokovic (2015). In the World Tour Finals, Federer has won 6 titles from 10 finals, both Open Era records, at the prestigious year-end tournament featuring the top-8 players in the year-end rankings. He has qualified for the tournament a record 14 consecutive years from 2002 through 2015. Following an injury enforced absence for 6 months in 2016, in which Federer did not play on the tour after his defeat in the semifinal of Wimbledon, he qualified second to Rafael Nadal for the ATP Finals for a record 15th time in 2017. That year was the first time Federer won multiple Grand Slam titles since 2009.

Federer was selected by fellow players as winner of the Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award 13 times (2004–2009, 2011–2017). Fans voted for him in 2018 to receive the ATPWorldTour.com Fans' Favourite Award for a 16th straight year (since 2003). Since his Grand Slam winning debut in 2003, Federer has won a record total of 37 ATP World Tour Awards.

All-time records

  • These records were attained since the amateur era and the Open Era of tennis, beginning since 1877.
  • Records in italics are currently active streaks.
Tournament Since Record accomplished Player tied Ref(s)
Grand Slams 1877 20 men's Grand Slam singles titles Stands alone [2][3]
31 men's Grand Slam finals [4]
All 4 Grand Slam finals in 1 season reached three times (2006–2007, 2009)
2+ men's Grand Slam titles per-year 6 times (2004–2007, 2009, 2017)
3 men's Grand Slam titles per-year 3 times (2004, 2006–2007)
2 consecutive years winning 3 titles (2006–2007)
4 consecutive years winning 2+ titles (2004–2007)
46 men's Grand Slam semifinals
57 men's Grand Slam quarter-finals
10 consecutive men's Grand Slam finals (2005–2007)
23 consecutive men's Grand Slam semifinals
36 consecutive men's Grand Slam quarter-finals
25 consecutive victories in quarter-finals
79 men's Grand Slam tournament appearances [5]
7+ finals at three tournaments
4+ consecutive finals at three tournaments
6+ consecutive finals at two tournaments
5 consecutive titles at two tournaments
5+ titles at three tournaments
6+ titles at two tournaments
10 titles defended overall
70+ match wins at all four tournaments
85+ match wins at three tournaments
100+ match wins at two tournaments
40 consecutive match wins at two tournaments
191 hard court match wins
8+ titles on two different surfaces (hard & grass)
12+ finals on two different surfaces (hard & grass)
362 match wins [6][7]
421 matches played
ATP World Tour 1970 24 consecutive tournament finals won
24 consecutive match wins against top ten opponents
71 hard court titles
56 consecutive hard court match victories
24 ATP 500 series titles
6+ titles at seven different tournaments
ATP Rankings 1973 310 weeks as world No. 1
237 consecutive weeks as world No. 1
3 consecutive calendar years as wire-to-wire No. 1 (2005–2007)
Oldest No. 1 in ATP history (36 years, 320 days) [8]
15 years ended inside the top 3 (2003–2012, 2014–2015, 2017–2019)
Wimbledon 1877 8 men's singles titles
World Tour Finals 1970 6 men's singles titles
Cincinnati Masters 1899 7 men's singles titles
Swiss Indoors 1970 10 men's singles titles
Halle Open 1993 10 men's singles titles [9]
Dubai Tennis
Championships
8 men's singles titles [10]
Qatar Open 3 men's singles titles [11]
Thailand Open 2003–13 2 men's singles titles
  • Federer has won more Grand Slam singles titles than any other male player. Federer broke the previous all-time record held by Pete Sampras (14) in 2009 and is the first, and one of only three male players (other being Nadal and Djokovic) to win 15+ Grand Slam singles titles in tennis history.
  • Federer has been ranked world No. 1 for longer than any other player in the Open Era. Federer broke the previous all-time record of 286 weeks as No. 1, which Pete Sampras held until 2012. Federer has held the No. 1 ranking for 310 total weeks and is the only male player in the Open Era to register 300 or more weeks as world No. 1. Additionally, from 2004 through 2008, Federer held the top singles ranking for 237 consecutive weeks, breaking Jimmy Connors' 31-year-old record of 160 consecutive weeks.
  • Federer is the only player in tennis history who has won 6+ titles in 7 different tournaments. Federer has won 10 titles at the Halle Open (ATP 500), 10 titles at the Swiss Indoors (ATP 500), 8 titles at Wimbledon (Grand Slam), 8 titles at the Dubai Tennis Championships (ATP 500), 7 titles at the Cincinnati Masters (Masters 1000), 6 titles at the Australian Open (Grand Slam), and 6 titles at the World Tour Finals.

Open Era records - Grand Slams

  • These records were attained in the Open Era of tennis.
  • Records in italics are currently active streaks.
Time Span Grand Slam Tournament Records Players Matched Ref(s)
2003 Wimbledon — 2018 Australian Open 20 Grand Slam men's singles titles Stands alone [2][3]
2009 French Open Career Grand Slam Rod Laver
Andre Agassi
Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic
[12][13][14]
2003 Wimbledon — 2019 Wimbledon 31 finals overall Stands alone [2]
2005 Wimbledon — 2007 US Open 10 consecutive finals [15]
2004, 2006–2009 Reached 3+ finals per year on 5 occasions Novak Djokovic
2003–2009 4+ consecutive finals on Grass, Clay, and Hard courts Stands alone
2003–2012, 2014–2015, 2017–2019 15 years reaching 1+ final
2006–2007 2 consecutive years winning 3 titles
2007 Defended 3 Grand Slam titles in a season
2004, 2006–2007 3 men's singles titles per-year 3 times
2004–2007, 2009, 2017 2+ men's singles titles per-year 6 times
2003 Wimbledon — 2020 Australian Open 46 semifinals overall
18 consecutive years reaching 1+ semifinal
2004 Wimbledon — 2010 Australian Open 23 consecutive semifinals
2001 French Open — 2020 Australian Open 57 quarterfinals overall
2004 Wimbledon — 2013 French Open 36 consecutive quarterfinals
2003 Wimbledon — 2010 Australian Open 25 consecutive victories in quarterfinals
2000 Australian Open — 2020 Australian Open 79 appearances overall
2004–2007 4 consecutive years winning 2+ titles
2004–2011 8 consecutive years winning 20+ matches
2003 Wimbledon — 2018 Australian Open 5+ titles at 3 different Grand Slams
6+ titles at 2 different Grand Slams
14+ year span of Grand Slam titles Rafael Nadal
8+ titles on two different surfaces (hard & grass) Stands alone
2003 Wimbledon — 2019 Wimbledon 7+ finals at 3 different Grand Slams
5+ finals at all 4 Grand Slams Rafael Nadal
12+ finals on two different surfaces (hard & grass) Stands alone
12 finals at a single tournament Rafael Nadal
2003 Wimbledon — 2008 US Open 5 consecutive titles at two Grand Slams Stands alone
2003 Wimbledon — 2009 US Open 2+ consecutive titles at 3 Grand Slams Ivan Lendl
6+ consecutive finals at 2 Grand Slams Stands alone
40 consecutive match wins at 2 Grand Slams
15 Grand Slams won in 1 decade (2000–2009) Novak Djokovic
2003 Wimbledon — 2017 Wimbledon 8 grass court titles Stands alone
10 finals won in straight sets
2004 Australian Open — 2020 Australian Open 15 semifinals at a single Grand Slam
2003 Wimbledon — 2020 Australian Open 13+ semifinals at 2 Grand Slams
10+ semifinals at 3 Grand Slams
8+ semifinals at all 4 Grand Slams Novak Djokovic
2001 Wimbledon — 2020 Australian Open 15+ quarterfinals at 2 Grand Slams Stands alone
13+ quarterfinals at 3 Grand Slams
2001 French Open — 2020 Australian Open 12+ quarterfinals at all 4 Grand Slams
2003 Wimbledon — 2009 French Open 5+ consecutive semifinals at all 4 Grand Slams
2003 Wimbledon — 2013 French Open 9+ consecutive quarterfinals at all 4 Grand Slams
2003 Wimbledon — 2006 Australian Open First 7 finals won
2003 Wimbledon — 2007 Australian Open 10 out of 11 first finals won (90% Win Rate)
2005 US Open — 2007 US Open 5 consecutive hard court major titles won
2004 Australian Open — 2018 Australian Open 11 hard court titles Novak Djokovic
2008 US Open — 2009 Wimbledon Simultaneous holder of Grand Slams on clay, grass and hard court Rafael Nadal
Novak Djokovic
2009 French Open — 2009 Wimbledon Accomplished "Channel Slam". Won both tournaments in the same year Rod Laver
Björn Borg
Rafael Nadal
[16]
2004 Wimbledon — 2018 Australian Open 10 titles defended overall Stands alone
2007 Wimbledon — 2019 Wimbledon 9 finals played over five sets
2004 Australian Open — 2018 Australian Open 6 existing Major champions defeated in finals Björn Borg
2006–2007,
2009–2009
All 4 Grand Slam finals in 3 separate seasons Stands alone
All 4 Grand Slam finals in 1 season Rod Laver
Novak Djokovic
2005–2009 5 consecutive years reaching all 4 Grand Slam semifinals Stands alone
2005–2012 8 consecutive years reaching all 4 Grand Slam quarterfinals
2006 French Open — 2009 US Open Runner-up finishes at all four Grand Slams Ivan Lendl
Andy Murray
2000 Australian Open —
2020 Australian Open
362 match wins Stands alone [6][7]
70+ match wins at all four Grand Slams
85+ match wins at three Grand Slams
100+ match wins at two Grand Slams
191 hard court match wins
1999 French Open — 2020 Australian Open 421 matches played
2004–2007 Wimbledon & US Open title double won for four consecutive years
2004, 2006–2007, 2017 Australian Open & Wimbledon title double in four non consecutive years
2004, 2006–2007 Australian Open, Wimbledon & US Open title triple in three non consecutive years
Australian Open & US Open title double in three non consecutive years
2006 Australian Open — 2006 US Open 27 match wins in 1 season Novak Djokovic
2004–2007, 2009, 2017 6 years with match winning percentage of 90% + Stands alone
2003–2012, 2014–2019 16 years with match winning percentage of 80% +
2004 French Open — 2018 Wimbledon Seeded first 24 times
2004 French Open — 2008 Wimbledon Seeded first in 18 consecutive grand slams
2003 US Open — 2010 US Open Seeded first or second in 30 consecutive grand slams
2004 Wimbledon — 2010 Australian Open Won 11 grand slams as first seed Novak Djokovic
2007 Australian Open — 2007 French Open 11 consecutive match victories without losing a set John McEnroe
2006 US Open — 2007 French Open 36 consecutive sets won Stands alone
2009 Wimbledon 50 aces in a final
2005 Wimbledon — 2007 French Open 2 winning streaks of 27+ matches Novak Djokovic
2005 Wimbledon — 2009 US Open 3 winning streaks of 20+ matches
2004 Wimbledon — 2017 US Open 6 winning streaks of 15+ matches Stands alone
2017 Australian Open 4 match victories vs. top 10 opponents in one tournament Guillermo Vilas
Björn Borg
Mats Wilander

Open Era records at each Grand Slam tournament

  • Records in italics are currently active streaks.
Grand Slam Tournaments Time Span Record Accomplished Players Matched Ref(s)
Australian Open 2004–2014, 2016–2018, 2020 15 semifinals Stands alone
15 quarterfinals
2004–2014 11 consecutive semifinals
2007 Won title without losing a set Ken Rosewall
2000–2020 102 match wins Stands alone
117 matches played
21 tournaments played
2006–2008 30 consecutive sets won
2004, 2006–2007, 2010, 2017–2018 Title won thrice on both Rebound Ace and Plexicushion Prestige
14 year gap between first and last singles title
Wimbledon 2003–2007, 2009, 2012, 2017 8 titles
2003–2007 5 consecutive titles Björn Borg
2017 Won title without losing a set
Oldest champion (35 years, 11 months) Stands alone
2003–2007, 2009, 2012, 2017 14 year gap between first and last singles title
2003–2009, 2012, 2014–2015, 2017, 2019 12 finals
2003–2009 7 consecutive finals
7 consecutive semifinals
2001–2019 101 match wins
1999–2019 114 matches played
21 tournaments played
2001, 2003–2012, 2014–2019 17 quarterfinals
2003–2009, 2012, 2014–2017, 2019 13 semifinals
2005–2006, 2017–2018 34 consecutive sets won (twice)
2018 35 consecutive service points won
2019 Longest rally won in a Wimbledon final (35 shots)
2019 Longest final (by duration) vs. Novak Djokovic[lower-alpha 1] Novak Djokovic
US Open 2004–2008 5 titles Jimmy Connors
Pete Sampras
5 consecutive titles Stands alone
2004–2009 40 consecutive match wins
2007 35 consecutive service points won
Won as US Open Series champion Rafael Nadal
  • Federer is the first and only player to win both Wimbledon and the US Open for four consecutive years, a feat he achieved from 2004 until 2007.

ATP Finals records and ATP Masters 1000 Series records

  • 1970, 1971 - Round robin with no semifinals or finals, winner decided on best performed player
  • 1982, 1983, 1984 - 12 player knock-out tournament with no round robin. The top four seeds in the event received a bye in the first round.
  • 1985 - 16 player knock-out tournament with no round robin
  • In the current tournament, winners are awarded up to 1500 rankings points; with each round-robin loss, 200 points are deducted from that amount.
  • Grand Prix Championship Series began in 1970.
  • ATP Masters Series was introduced in 1990.
  • Renamed ATP Masters 1000 in 2009.
Tournament Time Span Records Accomplished Players Matched Ref(s)
ATP Finals 2003–2004, 2006–2007, 2010–2011 6 titles Stands alone
2003–2007, 2010–2012, 2014–2015 10 finals
2002–2007, 2009–2015, 2017–2019 16 semifinals overall
2002–2015, 2017–2019 59 match wins
2002–2015, 2017–2019 17 appearances overall
2002–2015 14 consecutive appearances
2003–2004, 2006, 2010–2011 Won tournament undefeated five times Ivan Lendl
2011 Oldest champion (30 years, 3 months) Stands alone
ATP Masters 1000 2002–2011 Appearances in finals of all 9 Masters 1000 tournaments Novak Djokovic
Rafael Nadal
2019 Oldest ATP 1000 champion (37 years, 7 months) Stands alone
Oldest ATP 1000 finalist (37 years, 7 months)
2004–2017 2+ titles at all four North American tournaments
2005–2006 Winner of three North American tournaments in a single season Novak Djokovic
Rafael Nadal
Indian Wells 2004–2006, 2012, 2017 5 titles Novak Djokovic
2004–2006, 2012, 2014–2015, 2017–2019 9 finals Stands alone
2004–2006 3 consecutive titles Novak Djokovic
2004–2006, 2017–2019 3 consecutive finals
2004–2019 66 match wins Stands alone
2017 Oldest champion (35 years, 7 months)
Miami Open 2019 Oldest champion (37 years, 7 months)
Shanghai Masters 2017 Oldest champion (36 years, 2 months)
Hamburg Masters 2002, 2004–2005, 2007 4 titles
2004–2005 2 consecutive titles Eddie Dibbs
Andrei Medvedev
2002, 2004–2005, 2007–2008 5 finals Stands alone
2004–2008 21 consecutive match wins
Cincinnati Masters 2005, 2007, 2009–2010, 2012, 2014–2015 7 titles
2005, 2007, 2009–2010, 2012, 2014–2015, 2018 8 finals
2009–2010, 2014–2015 2 consecutive titles Andre Agassi
Michael Chang
Mats Wilander
2003–2019 47 match wins Stands alone
2012, 2015 Won title twice without having serve broken or losing a set
  • Roger Federer is the first player to win more than 5 titles at the World Tour Finals. Federer is the first and only player to reach 10 finals overall and 16 semifinals. He has appeared in the 8-man year-end tournament 14 consecutive times and total 17 times, and is the only player to achieve both these feats in the open era.
  • Federer has won 28 Masters 1000 titles, he is third in the open era masters list behind Rafael Nadal (35 titles) and Novak Djokovic (34 titles).

Records at each ATP 500 Series tournament

Tournaments Years Record Accomplished Players Matched Ref(s)
Dubai Tennis Championships 2003–05, 2007, 2012, 2014–15, 2019 8 titles Stands alone
2003–07, 2011–12, 2014–15, 2019 10 finals
2003–2005 3 consecutive titles Novak Djokovic
2003–2007 5 consecutive finals Stands alone
2003–2006 19 consecutive match wins
Swiss Indoors 2006–08, 2010–11, 2014–15, 2017–19 10 titles[*]
2006–2008, 2017–2019 3 consecutive titles
2000–01, 2006–15, 2017–19 15 finals
2006–2015 10 consecutive finals
2014–2019 24 consecutive match wins
Rotterdam Open 2005, 2012, 2018 3 titles Arthur Ashe
2001, 2005, 2012, 2018 4 finals Jimmy Connors

* 3 out of the 10 Swiss Indoors titles were won when the tournament was an ATP 250 series event before 2009.

  • Halle Open used to be an ATP 250 series tournament before 2015 when Federer won the majority (7) of his titles there.

Other significant records (ATP Rankings achievements, ATP 500 & 250 Series & win streaks)

Time span Record accomplished Players matched Ref(s)
2 February 2004 – 24 June 2018 310 total weeks at No. 1 Stands alone
2 February 2004 – 17 August 2008 237 consecutive weeks at No. 1
2005–2007 3 calendar years as wire-to-wire No. 1 Jimmy Connors
3 consecutive calendar years as wire-to-wire No. 1 Stands alone
24 June 2018 Oldest player ranked No. 1 (36 years, 320 days)
2 February 2004 – 18 June 2018 14 years, 136 days between first and last stints at No. 1
4 November 2012 – 19 February 2018 5 years, 106 days between stints at No. 1
17 November 2003 – 4 July 2010 346 consecutive weeks in top 2
2003–2010, 2012, 2014, 2017 Ended 11 years ranked inside the top two Rafael Nadal
2003–2010 Ended 8 consecutive years ranked inside the top two Stands alone
7 July 2003 – 24 February 2020 750 weeks ranked in top 3
2003–2012, 2014–2015, 2017–2019 Ended 15 years ranked inside the top three
3 March 2003 – 6 July 2020 793 weeks ranked in top 4
2003–2012, 2014–2015, 2017–2019 Ended 15 years ranked inside the top four
27 January 2003 – 6 July 2020 831 weeks ranked in top 5
2003–2012, 2014–2015, 2017–2019 Ended 15 years ranked inside the top five
20 May 2002 – 6 July 2020 908 weeks ranked in top 10
2002–2015, 2017–2019 Ended 17 years ranked inside the top ten
6 March 2000 – 6 July 2020 1038 weeks ranked in top 50
12 June 2000 – 6 July 2020 1032 consecutive weeks in top 50 [18]
20 September 1999 – 6 July 2020 1069 weeks ranked in Top 100
11 October 1999 – 6 July 2020 1067 consecutive weeks in top 100
1999–2019 224 match wins vs top 10 players
2003–2005 24 consecutive match victories vs. top 10 opponents
2003–2006 Won Halle Open and Wimbledon for four consecutive years
2003–2008 Reached Halle Open and Wimbledon final for six consecutive years
1999–2020 782 hard court match victories
944 outdoor court match victories
2000–2019 187 grass court match victories
2005–2006 9 consecutive hard court titles
56 consecutive hard court match victories
2006 59 hard court match wins in a season Novak Djokovic
2000–2019 87.38% (187–27) grass court match winning percentage Stands alone
2003–2008 10 consecutive grass court titles
65 consecutive grass court match victories
2003–2010 13 consecutive grass court finals reached
2003–2004 36 consecutive sets on grass court won
2003–2005 24 consecutive tournament finals won
2002–2012 1+ big title for 11 consecutive years (Grand Slams, WTF or Masters 1000) Pete Sampras
2001–2019 10+ titles on grass, clay and hard courts Stands alone
2003–2019 19 grass court titles
2002–2019 71 hard court titles
2002–2019 24 ATP 500 Series titles
2014–2015 5 consecutive ATP 500 series titles Rafael Nadal
2001–2019 31 ATP 500 Series finals Stands alone
2014–2016 28 consecutive ATP 500 Series match wins
2000, 2004, 2008, 2012 13 Olympic match wins
2004–2008 13 consecutive ATP 250 Series titles
2000–2018 34 ATP 250 Series finals
2004–2009 68 consecutive ATP 250 Series match wins
2000, 2001, 2006–2015, 2017–2019 15 finals at a single tournament (Swiss Indoors)
2006–2015 10 consecutive finals at a single tournament (Swiss Indoors)
2003–06, 2008, 2013–15, 2017, 2019 10 Halle Open titles
2003–2006 4 consecutive Halle Open titles
2003–2019 13 Halle Open finals
2004, 2008, 2017 3 Halle Open titles without losing a set
2005, 2006, 2011 3 Qatar Open titles
2005–2006 2 consecutive Qatar Open titles Novak Djokovic
Stefan Edberg
Andy Murray
2004–2005 2 Thailand Open titles Stands alone
2006 9 hard court titles in 1 season Jimmy Connors
2005 7 titles defended in a season Novak Djokovic
2001–2015, 2017–2019 18 years winning 1+ title Stands alone
2002–2012, 2014–2015, 2017–2019 16 years winning 3+ titles
2003–2012, 2014–2015, 2017–2019 15 years winning 4+ titles
2004–2006 3 consecutive years winning 10+ titles Rod Laver
2000–2019 20 consecutive years reaching 1+ final Stands alone
2003–2019 7+ titles at five different tournaments
6+ titles at seven different tournaments
2000–2019 10+ finals at five different tournaments
2001–2018 20+ wins over four different opponents (Djokovic, Roddick, Wawrinka, Berdych) Novak Djokovic
Rafael Nadal
1998–2020 460 tie breaks won Stands alone
2006 94.12% of tournament finals reached in 1 season
2005–2007 2 winning streaks of 35+ matches Björn Borg
Jimmy Connors
2000–2016 10 match wins after trailing 0–2 in sets Aaron Krickstein
Boris Becker
2001–2015 ATP titles won in 19 different countries Stands alone

    Guinness World Records

    Roger Federer had held the world's second highest number of Guinness World records within one discipline - 24 performance based records. Higher number (33) is held by Fiann Paul. As of 2019 Federer holds the world's 3rd highest number of performance based Guinness World Records within one discipline (30/18),[19]

    performance based records:

    1. Most consecutive Men’s Grand Slam semi-finals
    2. First male player to win 100 singles matches at a Grand Slam tennis tournament
    3. Longest time consecutively ranked tennis world number one (male)
    4. Most Wimbledon Men's singles tennis titles
    5. Most French Open Tennis Men's Singles Final defeats
    6. Most tennis Grand Slam singles matches won (male)
    7. Most weeks ranked number one in singles tennis (male)
    8. Most tennis singles matches on grass won consecutively (male)
    9. Most tennis Grand Slam singles matches won
    10. Most wins of the singles ATP World Tour Finals
    11. Most Grand Slam singles tennis titles won (male)
    12. Most consecutive tennis final victories
    13. Most consecutive tennis Grand Slam quarter-finals
    14. Most Grand Slam singles tournaments played (male)
    15. Most matches played on the ATP World Tour without retiring
    16. Most singles appearances at the ATP Finals
    17. Most consecutive seasons at the ATP World Tour Finals
    18. Most games in a tennis Wimbledon singles final (male)

    other records:

    1. Highest annual earnings for a tennis player (male, current year)
    2. Oldest person ranked world tennis number one (male)
    3. Highest annual earnings for a tennis player ever (male)
    4. Highest annual earnings for a tennis player ever
    5. Most powerful sports star
    6. Most Laureus World Sports Awards won
    7. Longest span of Grand Slam singles titles by a tennis player (male, open era)
    8. Most Laureus World Sportsman of the Year awards won
    9. Longest Wimbledon singles final
    10. Most tennis Grand Slam meetings (singles)
    11. Longest Olympic tennis match (duration)
    12. Most playable real-life characters in a tennis videogame

    Awards

    This is a list of awards Swiss tennis player Roger Federer has won in his career.

    1998

    1. ITF World Junior Champion

    2003

    1. ATP European Player of the Year
    2. Swiss Sportsman of the Year
    3. Swiss of the Year
    4. Michael-Westphal Award

    2004

    1. ATP European Player of the Year
    2. ATPTennis.com Fans' Favourite award (For the year 2003)
    3. ITF World Champion
    4. Sports Illustrated Tennis Player of the Year
    5. Swiss Sportsman of the Year
    6. Reuters International Sportsman of the Year
    7. BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year
    8. International Tennis Writers Association (ITWA) Player of the Year
    9. International Tennis Writers Ambassador(ITWA) for Tennis
    10. Golden Bagel Award
    11. European Sportsman of the Year (aka UEPS [Federation of European sports journalists] Sportsman of the Year)[20]

    2005

    1. Ambassador of United Nations' Year of Sport and Physical Education
    2. Goldene Kamera Award
    3. ATP Player of the Year (for the year 2004)
    4. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award (for the year 2004)
    5. ATPTennis.com Fans' Favourite (for the year 2004)
    6. Laureus World Sportsman of the Year (for the year 2004)
    7. Michael-Westphal Award
    8. International Tennis Writers Association (ITWA) Player of the Year
    9. International Tennis Writers Ambassador for Tennis
    10. Most Outstanding Athlete by the United States Sports Academy
    11. Freedom Air People's Choice Sports Awards International Sportsperson of the Year
    12. ITF World Champion
    13. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    14. La Gazzetta dello Sport named him World Sportsman of the Year
    15. European Sportsman of the Year (aka UEPS [Federation of European sports journalists] Sportsman of the Year)[20]
    16. The 'Prix Orange' Award

    2006

    1. L'Equipe Magazine's Champion of Champions (for the year 2005)
    2. ATP Player of the Year (for the year 2005)
    3. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award (for the year 2005)
    4. ATPTennis.com Fans' Favourite (for the year 2005)
    5. Laureus World Sportsman of the Year (for the year 2005)
    6. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    7. International Tennis Writers Association (ITWA) Player of the Year
    8. International Tennis Writers Ambassador for Tennis
    9. ITF World Champion
    10. BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year
    11. Swiss Sportsman of the Year
    12. EFE's Sportsman of the Year
    13. Golden Bagel Award
    14. Most Outstanding Athlete of the Year by The United States Sports Academy
    15. European Sportsman of the Year (aka UEPS [Federation of European sports journalists] Sportsman of the Year)[20]
    16. La Gazzetta dello Sport named him World Sportsman of the Year
    17. The 'Prix Orange' Award
    18. Baccarat Athlete of the Year 2006[21]

    2007

    1. Time magazine named him as one of the 100 most important people in the world.[22]
    2. L'Equipe Magazine's Champion of Champions (for the year 2006)
    3. ATP Player of the Year (for the year 2006)
    4. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award (for the year 2006)
    5. ATPTennis.com Fans' Favourite (for the year 2006)
    6. Arthur Ashe Humanitarian of the Year (for the year 2006)
    7. Laureus World Sportsman of the Year (for the year 2006)
    8. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    9. ESPY Best Male International Athlete
    10. ITF World Champion
    11. BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year
    12. Tennis magazine's 2007 player of the year
    13. La Gazzetta dello Sport named him World Sportsman of the Year
    14. Swiss Sportsman of the Year
    15. The 'Prix Orange' Award
    16. Marca Leyenda

    2008

    1. L'Equipe Magazine's Champion of Champions (for the year 2007)
    2. European Sportsman of the Year (for the year 2007) (aka UEPS [Federation of European sports journalists] Sportsman of the Year)[20]
    3. Laureus World Sportsman of the Year (for the year 2007) – First ever winner of four Laureus World Sports Awards[23]
    4. Men's Doubles gold medalist partnering Stanislas Wawrinka at the 2008 Olympic Games held in Beijing, China
    5. ATP Player of the Year (for the year 2007)
    6. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award (for the year 2007)
    7. ATPTennis.com Fans' Favourite (for the year 2007)
    8. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    9. Swiss Team of the Year (with Stanislas Wawrinka)
    10. The 'Prix Orange' Award

    2009

    1. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award (for the year 2008)
    2. ATPWorldtour.com (formerly ATPTennis.com) Fans' Favourite (for the year 2008)
    3. Talksport Hall of Fame
    4. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    5. Ehrespalebaerglemer award. An award given to outstanding citizens of the city of Basel.[24]
    6. ATPWorldtour.com Player of the Decade[25]
    7. ITF World Champion
    8. European Sportsman of the Year (aka UEPS [Federation of European sports journalists] Sportsman of the Year)[20]
    9. One of Sports Illustrated's Athletes of the Decade[26]
    10. Listed at #27 on the Forbes Celebrity 100
    11. European Sportsman of the Year[27]
    12. The 'Prix Orange' Award
    13. Best Match of the Year[lower-alpha 2]

    2010

    1. International Tennis Writers' Association's Ambassador of the Year[28]
    2. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    3. ATP Player of the Year (for the year 2009)
    4. ATPWorldTour.com Fans' Favourite (for the year 2009)[29]
    5. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award (for the year 2009)
    6. ATPWorldTour.com Fans' Favourite (for the year 2010)
    7. MARCA magazine's Sportsman of the Decade[30]
    8. Listed at #29 on the Forbes Celebrity 100
    9. Compeed Elegance Award[31]

    2011

    1. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award
    2. ATPWorldtour.com Fans' Favourite
    3. Listed at #25 on the Forbes Celebrity 100
    4. Best Grand Slam/Davis Cup Match of the Year[lower-alpha 3]
    5. Only player to "bagel" (6-0 set) Nadal on three different surfaces. (2006 Wimbledon (Grass), 2007 Hamburg (Clay) 2011 World Tour Finals (indoor hard)

    2012

    1. Listed at #1 in 100 Greatest of All Time by Tennis Channel
    2. Listed at #5 in Forbes list of 100 richest athletes of the world
    3. Singles silver medalist at 2012 Olympic Games held in London, England
    4. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award
    5. ATPWorldtour.com Fans' Favourite
    6. Swiss Sportsman of the Year
    7. Hello Magazine's Most Attractive Man of 2012
    8. Davis Cup Commitment Award

    2013

    1. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award
    2. ATPWorldtour.com Fans' Favourite
    3. Arthur Ashe Humanitarian of the Year

    2014

    1. US Open Sportsmanship Award
    2. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award
    3. ATPWorldtour.com Fans' Favourite
    4. Swiss Sportsman of the Year
    5. Swiss Team of the Year (with Stanislas Wawrinka, Marco Chiudinelli, Michael Lammer, Severin Lüthi )
    6. Best Grand Slam Match of the Year[lower-alpha 4]
    7. Davis Cup Most Valuable Player (shared with Stan Wawrinka)

    2015

    1. International Tennis Writers' Association's Ambassador of the Year (for the year 2014)
    2. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award
    3. ATPWorldtour.com Fans' Favourite
    4. International Tennis Writers' Association's Ambassador of the Year

    2016

    1. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award
    2. ATPWorldtour.com Fans' Favourite
    3. Most Stylish Man of the Year by GQ

    2017

    1. Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award
    2. ATPWorldtour.com Fans' Favourite
    3. Comeback Player of the year
    4. Best ATP World Tour match of the year
    5. Best Grand Slam match of the year
    6. Swiss Sportsman of the Year
    7. BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year
    8. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    9. AIPS Athletes of the Year
    10. L'Equipe Magazine's Champion of Champions
    11. La Gazzetta dello Sport named him World Sportsman of the Year
    12. Eurosport International Athlete of the Year

    2018

    1. International Tennis Writers' Association's Ambassador of the Year (for the year 2017)
    2. European Sportsman of the Year (for the year 2017) (aka UEPS [Federation of European sports journalists] Sportsman of the Year)
    3. Laureus World Sportsman of the Year (for the year 2017)
    4. Laureus World Comeback of the Year (for the year 2017)
    5. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    6. ATPWorldtour.com Fans' Favourite
    7. Best Record-Breaking Performance ESPY Award
    8. Best ATP World Tour match of the year

    2019

    1. ESPY Best Male Tennis Player
    2. Best Grand slam match of the year
    3. ATPTour.com Fans' Favourite Award
    4. Most Stylish Man of the Decade by GQ

    See also

    Notes

    1. The final took 4 hours, 57 minutes to complete.[17]
    2. Wimbledon final def. Andy Roddick 5–7, 7–6(8–6), 7–6(7–5), 3–6, 16–14
    3. US Open semifinal lost to Novak Djokovic 7–6(9–7), 6–4, 3–6, 2–6, 5–7
    4. Wimbledon final lost to Novak Djokovic 6–7(7–9), 6–4, 7–6(7–4), 5–7, 6–4

    Footnotes

    1. Hazarika, Bhargav. "US Open: Reliving Roger Federer's 5 consecutive titles at Flushing Meadows". sportskeeda.com. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
    2. "Roger Federer's Grand Slam Titles, Finals, Records". Tennis-X.com. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
    3. Berkok, John (3 February 2018). "Roger Federer: 20 Stats For His 20TH Grand Slam Title". tennis.com. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
    4. Sandra, Harwitt (26 January 2018). "Roger Federer reaches Australian Open final, his 30th Grand Slam singles finals appearance". USA TODAY. Retrieved 27 June 2019.
    5. Wimbledon 2017: Federer equaling Santoro’s record, Serena missing out on equaling another Graf’s record and more interesting stats, 30 June 2017
    6. "Nadal, Federer add to Wimbledon lore with wins". ESPN. 7 July 2019. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
    7. Alix Ramsay (6 July 2019). "Federer cruises to 350th victory". wimbledon.com. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
    8. https://www.forbes.com/sites/daniellerossingh/2018/02/07/roger-federer-to-play-rotterdam-in-bid-to-become-oldest-no-1-in-atp-history/#10dffb37663a
    9. "Federer Win 10th Halle Title, Sends Wimbledon Warning". ATP TOUR. 23 June 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
    10. "Federer Beats Tsitsipas To Win 100th Title And Eighth Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships Crown". Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships. 2 March 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
    11. "Federer Wins in Qatar Without Losing a Set". The New York Times. 8 January 2011. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
    12. "Federer Clinches Roland Garros Title To Seal Career Slam". ATP TOUR. 7 June 2009. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
    13. "Federer never doubted Paris win". BBC Sport. 7 June 2009. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
    14. Clarey, Christopher (7 June 2009). "The Greatest? Federer's Victory Fills Last Hole on His Résumé". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
    15. Tandon, Kamakshi (9 June 2009). "Federer's numbers speak volumes". ESPN. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
    16. Sharp, Alex (29 June 2018). "CHANNEL SLAM FOR RAFA AND SIMONA". Roland Garros. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
    17. "Novak Djokovic beats Roger Federer in longest Wimbledon final to claim fifth title". The Telegraph. 15 July 2019.
    18. http://www.livetennis.it/post/265458/roger-federer-da-17-anni-in-top-50-superato-il-record-di-jimmy-connors/
    19. "Guinness Records online registry, requires signing in, lists higher number of records due to Federer being mentioned in the description of many records that don't belong to him". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 2018-05-21.
    20. "European Sports Journalists honor Henin and Federer", De Standaard, January 8, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-01-08.
    21. "Tennis – ATP World Tour – Roger Federer Blogs From Tokyo". ATP World Tour. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
    22. "The Time 100". Time. May 3, 2007. Retrieved May 3, 2007.
    23. "Press Releases". Laureus. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
    24. "Tennis – ATP World Tour – Federer Honoured In Home Town". ATP World Tour. July 17, 2009. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
    25. "Tennis – ATP World Tour – The Players Of The Decade". ATP World Tour. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
    26. "Video". CNN. December 28, 2009. Retrieved May 8, 2010.
    27. "Button second in 2009 European sportsman poll". Worldcarfans.com. December 29, 2009. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
    28. "Roger Federer wins another award". YouTube. January 28, 2010. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
    29. Archived February 4, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
    30. "Niet compatibele browser". Facebook. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
    31. "Federer Receives Compeed Elegance Award". Tennis Connected. April 30, 2010. Archived from the original on August 15, 2014. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
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