2020 ATP Tour
The 2020 ATP Tour is the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals for the 2020 tennis season. The 2020 ATP Tour calendar is composed of the Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP Finals, the ATP Tour Masters 1000, the ATP Cup, the ATP Tour 500 series, the ATP Tour 250 series, and the Davis Cup. Also included in the 2020 calendar are the tennis events at the Next Generation ATP Finals, and the Laver Cup, neither of which distribute ranking points.
Several tournaments were suspended or postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, including the Tokyo Summer Olympics. On 17 June 2020, ATP issued revised calendar for Tour resumption.
Schedule
This is the complete schedule of events on the 2020 calendar.;Key
Grand Slam |
ATP Finals |
ATP Tour Masters 1000 |
ATP Tour 500 |
ATP Tour 250 |
Team Events |
January
February
March
April–July
No tournaments have been played due to the COVID-19 pandemic.August
September
October
November
Affected tournaments
The COVID-19 pandemic affected many tournaments on both the ATP and WTA tours. As of now, tournaments from 9 March to 21 August have either been cancelled or postponed. The 2020 Summer Olympics have been postponed to 2021 and the ATP Rankings are also frozen over this period, with the last official rankings being released on March 16. The following tournaments were suspended or postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.Week of | Tournament | Status |
9 March 16 March | Indian Wells Masters Indian Wells, United States ATP Tour Masters 1000 Hard | Cancelled |
23 March 30 March | Miami Open Miami, United States ATP Tour Masters 1000 Hard | Cancelled |
6 April | U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships Houston, United States ATP Tour 250 Clay | Cancelled |
6 April | Grand Prix Hassan II Marrakesh, Morocco ATP Tour 250 Clay | Cancelled |
13 April | Monte-Carlo Masters Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France ATP Tour Masters 1000 Clay | Cancelled |
20 April | Barcelona Open Barcelona, Spain ATP Tour 500 Clay | Cancelled |
20 April | Hungarian Open Budapest, Hungary ATP Tour 250 Clay | Cancelled |
27 April | Estoril Open Estoril, Portugal ATP Tour 250 Clay | Cancelled |
27 April | Bavarian International Championships Munich, Germany ATP Tour 250 Clay | Cancelled |
4 May | Madrid Open Madrid, Spain ATP Tour Masters 1000 Clay | Rescheduled to September |
11 May | Italian Open Rome, Italy ATP Tour Masters 1000 Clay | Rescheduled to September |
18 May | Geneva Open Geneva, Switzerland ATP Tour 250 Clay | Suspended |
18 May | Lyon Open Lyon, France ATP Tour 250 Clay | Suspended |
25 May 1 June | French Open Paris, France Grand Slam Clay | Rescheduled to September |
8 June | Stuttgart Open Stuttgart, Germany ATP Tour 250 Grass | Cancelled |
8 June | Rosmalen Grass Court Championships 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands ATP Tour 250 Grass | Cancelled |
15 June | Halle Open Halle, Germany ATP Tour 500 Grass | Cancelled |
15 June | Queen's Club Championships London, Great Britain ATP Tour 500 Grass | Cancelled |
22 June | Eastbourne International Eastbourne, Great Britain ATP Tour 250 Grass | Cancelled |
22 June | Mallorca Championships Santa Ponsa, Spain ATP Tour 250 Grass | Cancelled |
29 June 6 July | Wimbledon London, Great Britain Grand Slam Grass | Cancelled |
13 July | Hamburg European Open Hamburg, Germany ATP Tour 500 Clay | Cancelled |
13 July | Hall of Fame Open Newport, United States ATP Tour 250 Grass | Cancelled |
13 July | Swedish Open Båstad, Sweden ATP Tour 250 Clay | Cancelled |
20 July | Los Cabos Open Cabo San Lucas, Mexico ATP Tour 250 Hard | Cancelled |
20 July | Swiss Open Gstaad, Switzerland ATP Tour 250 Clay | Cancelled |
20 July | Croatia Open Umag, Croatia ATP Tour 250 Clay | Cancelled |
27 July | Summer Olympic Games Tokyo, Japan Olympic Games Hard | Rescheduled to July 2021 |
27 July | Atlanta Open Atlanta, United States ATP Tour 250 Hard | Cancelled |
27 July | Austrian Open Kitzbühel Kitzbühel, Austria ATP Tour 250 Clay | Rescheduled to September |
3 August | Washington Open Washington, United States ATP Tour 500 Hard | Cancelled |
10 August | Canadian Open Toronto, Canada ATP Tour Masters 1000 Hard | Suspended |
17 August | Cincinnati Masters Cincinnati, United States ATP Tour Masters 1000 Hard | Rescheduled to 22 August and moved from Cincinnati to New York City |
24 August | Winston-Salem Open Winston-Salem, United States ATP Tour 250 Hard | Suspended |
21 September | Laver Cup Boston, United States Hard | Postponed to September 2021 |
21 September | St. Petersburg Open St. Petersburg, Russia ATP Tour 250 Hard | Suspended |
21 September | Moselle Open Metz, France ATP Tour 250 Hard | Suspended |
28 September | Chengdu Open Chengdu, China ATP Tour 250 Hard | Suspended |
28 September | Zhuhai Championships Zhuhai, China ATP Tour 250 Hard | Suspended |
28 September | Sofia Open Sofia, Bulgaria ATP Tour 250 Hard | Suspended |
5 October | Japan Open Tokyo, Japan ATP Tour 500 Hard | Cancelled |
5 October | China Open Beijing, China ATP Tour 500 Hard | Cancelled |
12 October | Shanghai Masters Shanghai, China ATP Tour Masters 1000 Hard | Cancelled |
26 October | Swiss Indoors Basel, Switzerland ATP Tour 500 Hard | Cancelled |
23 November | Davis Cup Finals Madrid, Spain Hard | Postponed to November 2021'' |
Statistical information
These tables present the number of singles, doubles, and mixed doubles titles won by each player and each nation during the season, within all the tournament categories of the 2019 ATP Tour: the Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP Finals, the ATP Tour Masters 1000, the ATP Tour 500 series, and the ATP Tour 250 series. The players/nations are sorted by:- Total number of titles ;
- Cumulated importance of those titles ;
- A singles > doubles > mixed doubles hierarchy;
- Alphabetical order.
Key
Titles won by player
Titles won by nation
Titles information
The following players won their first main circuit title in singles, doubles or mixed doubles:;Singles
;Doubles
- André Göransson – Pune '
- Christopher Rungkat – Pune '
- Roberto Carballés Baena – Santiago '
- Alejandro Davidovich Fokina – Santiago '
The following players defended a main circuit title in singles, doubles, or mixed doubles:
;Singles
- Novak Djokovic – Australian Open
- Gaël Monfils – Rotterdam Open '
- Stefanos Tsitsipas – Marseille '
- Ben McLachlan – Auckland '
- Horacio Zeballos – Buenos Aires '
- Bob Bryan – Delray Beach '
- Mike Bryan – Delray Beach
Best ranking
;Singles
;Doubles
ATP ranking
These are the ATP Rankings and yearly ATP Race Rankings of the top 20 singles players, doubles players and doubles teams at the current date of the 2020 season. Rankings are frozen up until the resumption of the 2020 season on 3 August 2020.Singles
‡Change since previous week's rankingsNumber 1 ranking
Doubles
Number 1 ranking
Point distribution
Prize money leaders
Retirements and comebacks
The following is a list of notable players who returned from retirement, announced their retirement from professional tennis, became inactive, or were permanently banned from playing, during the 2020 season:- Bob and Mike Bryan ' joined the professional tour in 1998 and reached a career-high ranking of No. 1 in doubles in September 2003. During the 2000s and the 2010s, the Bryan brothers, generally playing together, became the most successful doubles team in tennis history. Between 2003 and 2019, they spent a total of 438 weeks together at the No. 1 spot, with Bob spending an additional week alone at the top for a personal total of 439 weeks and Mike 68 more weeks alone for a record total of 506 weeks. The Bryans also hold the record for most seasons ended together at No. 1, with 10 top finishes between 2003 and 2014. They hold the record for most doubles Grand Slam titles as a team, with 16 titles out of 30 finals: 6 Australian Opens, 2 French Opens 3 Wimbledons and 5 US Opens. After Bob was injured in 2018, Mike won 2 more Grand Slam titles with Jack Sock to hold alone the record for most doubles major titles with 18. The Bryans also won 4 year-end championships together, with Mike winning one more alongside Sock. They picked up 2 medals for the United States at the Summer Olympic Games, the bronze in Beijing and the gold in London. With different partners, they won a total of 11 major mixed doubles titles. On the ATP Tour, the Bryans collected a record of 118 titles together between 1999 and 2019, including 39 ATP Tour Masters 1000 titles. They were part of the United States Davis Cup team from 2003 to 2018, winning the tournament once. In November 2019, both of them announced their plans to retire after the 2020 US Open.
- Steve Darcis ' joined the professional tour in 2003 and reached a career-high ranking of No. 38 in singles in 2017. He won 2 singles titles on the ATP Tour and recorded his best results playing for the Belgium Davis Cup team, helping it reach both the 2015 and 2017 final in the competition. Darcis announced in October 2019 that the 2020 Australian Open would be his last professional tournament.
- Leander Paes ' joined the professional tour in 1991 and reached a career-high ranking of No. 1 in doubles in June 1999 and No. 73 in singles in August 1998. Paes had one singles title on the ATP: The 1998 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships. He has won 8 doubles and 10 mixed doubles Grand Slam titles. Paes achieved the rare men's doubles/mixed doubles titles feat at the 1999 Wimbledon Championships and his mixed doubles Wimbledon title in 2010 made him the second man to win Wimbledon titles in three separate decades. He won a bronze medal for India in singles at the 1996 Olympic Games and competed at consecutive Olympics from 1992 to 2016, making him the first Indian and only tennis player to compete at 7 Olympic Games. He is formerly an India Davis Cup team captain and holds the record for the most Davis Cup doubles wins, with 44 victories between 1990 and 2019. Paes announced on 25 December 2019 that he will bring the curtains down on his illustrious career in 2020, which will be his farewell season on the professional tour.
- Pere Riba'''