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ATP Masters 1000 tournaments
Tennis tournaments
Tennis tournaments
The ATP Masters 1000 tournaments, also known as Masters 1000 or ATP 1000 events, are an annual series of nine tennis tournaments featuring the top-ranked players on the ATP Tour since its inception in 1990. The ATP 1000 tournaments, sitting below the Grand Slam tournaments and the year-end championships, make up the most coveted trophies on the annual ATP Tour calendar. In addition to the quadrennial Summer Olympics, they are collectively known as the 'Big Titles'. Novak Djokovic holds the record for the most ATP 1000 singles titles with 40. By completing the career set of all nine current ATP 1000 series singles titles in 2018, Djokovic became the first and only player to achieve the career Golden Masters. In 2020, Djokovic completed a second career Golden Masters. In doubles, the Bryan brothers (Bob and Mike) won a record 39 doubles titles as a team. Daniel Nestor and the Bryan brothers are the only doubles players to achieve the career Golden Masters.
History
The ATP Championship Series (Single Week) was introduced in 1990 with the inception of the ATP Tour by bringing together the nine most prestigious tournaments of the Grand Prix Super Series of the preceding ITF Grand Prix Circuit. Results in ATP 1000 events earn players more ranking points than regular tournaments but less than Grand Slam events or the year-end ATP Finals. Up until 2007, most ATP Masters 1000 finals were contested as best-of-five-set matches, but from 2008 all events were decided in best-of-three-set matches. As part of a shake-up of the tennis circuit in 2009, the Masters Series became the ATP Masters 1000, with the addition of the number 1000 referring to the number of ranking points earned by the winner of each tournament. Contrary to earlier plans, the number of tournaments was not reduced from nine to eight and the Monte-Carlo Masters remained part of the series although, unlike the other events, it does not have a mandatory player commitment. The Hamburg Masters event was downgraded to an ATP Tour 500 event. The Madrid Open moved to May and onto clay courts. A new tournament in Shanghai replaced the Hamburg Masters and took over Madrid's former October indoor slot. In 2011, six of the nine 1000 level tournaments were combined ATP and WTA events.
Series name
- 1990–1995: ATP Championship Series, Single Week
- 1996–1999: ATP Super 9
- 2000–2003: Tennis Masters Series
- 2004–2008: ATP Masters Series
- 2009–2018: ATP World Tour Masters 1000
- 2019–present: ATP Masters 1000
Points distribution
The following ranking points are as of 2025.
| Event | Singles (96 draws) | Singles (56 draws) | Doubles |
|---|---|---|---|
| W | F | SF | QF |
| 1000 | 650 | 400 | 200 |
| 10 | 30 | 16 | |
| 1000 | 600 | 360 | 180 |
Tournaments
Currently, the following nine tournaments are part of the ATP Masters 1000: Canadian Open (alternating yearly between Montreal and Toronto), Italian Open (held in Rome), Indian Wells Open, Miami Open, Monte-Carlo Masters, Madrid Open, Cincinnati Open, Shanghai Masters and Paris Masters. Since 2009, five of the tournaments have been held on outdoor hard courts, three on clay and one on indoor hard court, whereas from 1990 until 2008 there were two indoor tournaments at the top-9 level. In 2009, the Shanghai Masters replaced the Madrid Open, which was until then held as an indoor event, in the eighth slot of the year with the Madrid Open switched to clay courts, replacing the Hamburg Open in the spring clay court season. The Shanghai Masters was designated as an outdoor event despite the facility having a retractable roof and having been used as the indoor venue for the ATP Finals from 2005 until 2008. Other than Hamburg, the tournaments defunct between 1990 and 2009 were Stockholm (1990–1994) and Stuttgart (1995–2001), which were held as indoor events in the eighth slot.
On October 23, 2025, the ATP announced that a new Masters 1000 tournament (the tenth on the calendar) will be held in Saudi Arabia, likely beginning in 2028, although the specific date remains to be determined. The placement of the event on the ATP calendar has also not been announced. The field will be 56 players and the event will be non-mandatory. This will be the first time the ATP Masters 1000 events number ten in one calendar year.{{Cite news|first=Howard|last=Fendrich|date=October 23, 2025|title=Saudi Arabia and the ATP are putting a new Masters tennis tournament on a crowded calendar
Current
| Tournament | Location | Venue | Surface | Draw | Date | Indian Wells Open | Miami Open | Monte-Carlo Masters | Madrid Open | Italian Open | Canadian Open | Cincinnati Open | Shanghai Masters | Paris Masters |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indian Wells, United States | Indian Wells Tennis Garden | Hard | 96 | March 5–16 | ||||||||||
| Miami, United States | Hard Rock Stadium | March 19–30 | ||||||||||||
| Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France | Monte Carlo Country Club | Clay | 56 | April 6–13 | ||||||||||
| Madrid, Spain | La Caja Mágica | 96 | April 22–May 4 | |||||||||||
| Rome, Italy | Foro Italico | May 7–18 | ||||||||||||
| Montreal / Toronto, Canada | IGA Stadium / Sobeys Stadium | Hard | July 27–August 7 | |||||||||||
| Mason, United States | Lindner Family Tennis Center | August 7–18 | ||||||||||||
| Shanghai, China | Qizhong Forest Sports City Arena | October 1–12 | ||||||||||||
| Nanterre, France | Paris La Défense Arena | Hard (i) | 56 | October 27–November 2 |
Past
| Tournament | Location | Venue | Surface | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hamburg Open (1990–2008) | Hamburg, Germany | Am Rothenbaum | Clay | |
| Eurocard Open (1995–2001) | Stuttgart, Germany | Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle | Carpet/Hard (i) | |
| Stockholm Open (1990–1994) | Stockholm, Sweden | Stockholm Globe Arena | Hard/Carpet (i) |
Future
| Tournament | Location | Venue | Surface | Draw | Date | Saudi Arabia Open |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saudi Arabia | TBD | Hard | 56 | TBD |
{{CURRENTYEAR}} finals
Main article: {{CURRENTYEAR}} ATP Tour Masters 1000#Results
Past finals
past finals
1990
Main article: 1990 ATP Championship Series, Single Week
1991
Main article: 1991 ATP Championship Series, Single Week
1992
Main article: 1992 ATP Championship Series, Single Week
1993
Main article: 1993 ATP Championship Series, Single Week
1994
Main article: 1994 ATP Championship Series, Single Week
1995
Main article: 1995 ATP Championship Series, Single Week
1996
Main article: 1996 ATP Super 9
1997
Main article: 1997 ATP Super 9
1998
Main article: 1998 ATP Super 9
1999
Main article: 1999 ATP Super 9
2000
Main article: 2000 Tennis Masters Series
2001
Main article: 2001 Tennis Masters Series
2002
Main article: 2002 Tennis Masters Series
2003
Main article: 2003 Tennis Masters Series
2004
Main article: 2004 ATP Masters Series
2005
Main article: 2005 ATP Masters Series
2006
Main article: 2006 ATP Masters Series
2007
Main article: 2007 ATP Masters Series
2008
Main article: 2008 ATP Masters Series
2009
Main article: 2009 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2010
Main article: 2010 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2011
Main article: 2011 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2012
Main article: 2012 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2013
Main article: 2013 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2014
Main article: 2014 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2015
Main article: 2015 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2016
Main article: 2016 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2017
Main article: 2017 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2018
Main article: 2018 ATP World Tour Masters 1000
2019
Main article: 2019 ATP Tour Masters 1000
2020
Main article: 2020 ATP Tour Masters 1000
2021
Main article: 2021 ATP Tour Masters 1000
2022
Main article: 2022 ATP Tour Masters 1000
2023
Main article: 2023 ATP Tour Masters 1000
2024
Main article: 2024 ATP Masters 1000 tournaments
Records
- Active players in bold.
Title leaders
Career Golden Masters
The achievement of winning all of the active nine ATP Masters tournaments over the course of a player's career.
- The event at which the Career Golden Masters was accomplished indicated in bold.
;Singles
;Doubles
Double crown
- Winning the same Masters tournament in both singles and doubles in the same year.
| Player | Tournament |
|---|---|
| Jim Courier | 1991 Indian Wells |
| Rafael Nadal | 2008 Monte Carlo |
Broadcasting rights
Reference:
References
References
- (Jun 27, 2018). "It's time for a grass-court Masters tournament". Tennis.com.
- (10 May 2016). "Big Titles: Federer Leads But Novak's Strike Rate Dazzles". [[Association of Tennis Professionals.
- "ATP Masters 1000: Tournaments, Records, Stats".
- (19 August 2018). "Nine To Shine: Djokovic Claims Historic Cincy Crown".
- (29 August 2020). "Novak Djokovic's Golden Rule: A Grandmaster Twice Over! {{!}} ATP Tour {{!}} Tennis".
- Patrick Johnston. (2014-10-12). "Bryans achieve another record with Masters slam". Reuters.
- "FAQ about PIF ATP Rankings".
- (Dec 26, 2023). "ATP Releases Pepperstone ATP Rankings Breakdown Updates {{!}} ATP Tour {{!}} Tennis".
- "Rankings FAQ". ATPTour.com.
- "ATP Tour calendar".
- (2008-04-27). "Nadal wins fourth Monte Carlo title in a row". Reuters.
- [https://www.atptour.com/en/tournaments/tv-schedule TV Schedule] {{Webarchive. link. (November 7, 2021 atptour.com)
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