2025 Tennis Season Statistics – Tennis Now

The 2025 season is a dazzling one filled with breakthroughs, wins and jaw-dropping statistical achievements. What else did you expect? We took the time to summarize the season digitally, below.
Most singles titles:
ATP 8Carlos Alcaraz
Women’s Professional Tennis Association 4Alina Sabalenka
Most wins:
ATP 71 – Carlos Alcaraz (71-9)
WTA 63 – Aryna Sabalenka (63-12)

Clay King:
Carlos Alcaraz won his second consecutive French Open title with a 22-1 record.
Interior Master:
Jannik Sinner won all 15 indoor matches he entered in 2025, extending his active indoor hard court winning streak to 31 matches. Sinner’s streak is currently the fifth-longest in Open history.
Most Grand Slam wins:
- ATP – Jannik Sinner, 26 wins, 2 losses, 2 championships
- Women’s Tennis Association – Alina Sabalenka, 23-3, 1 time champion
Beat the No. 1 and No. 2 players in the world in the same match in 2025 (4).
Madison Keys at Australian Open (beat Swiatek then Sabalenka)
Mira Andreeva in Indian Wells (beat Swiatek, then Sabalenka)
Jelena Ostapenko of Stuttgart (beat Swiatek then Sabalenka)
Elena Rybakina at the WTA Finals in Riyadh (defeated Swiatek and Sabalenka)
Youngest Champion:
- ATP: Joao Fonseca (18), Buenos Aires
- WTA: Iva Jovic (17), Guadalajara
Oldest Champion:
- Novak Djokovic (38), Athens
- Tatiana Maria (37) Queen’s University
Best results in ATP qualifiers
- ATP – Champion – Jenson Brooksby (Houston), Alejandro Tabilo (Chengdu), Valentin Vacherot (Shanghai)
- Women’s Tennis Association – Winner – Tatjana Maria, Queens, Sorana Cirstea, Cleveland
King Ace
Taylor Fritz, 867
queen ace
Elena Rybakina, 516
Successfully defended the title
Adenosine triphosphate(6)
- Jannik Sinner Australian Open
- Ugo Humbert Marseille
- Sebastian Baez Rio de Janeiro
- Carlos Alcaraz Roland Garros
- Taylor Fritz Eastbourne
- Jannik Sinner Nitto ATP Finals
Women’s Tennis Association(2)
- Camila Osorio (Bogota)
- Aryna Sabalenka (U.S. Open)
young guns
At this year’s US Open, Carlos Alcaraz became the second youngest man in the history of the Open Era to win 6 Grand Slam titles. He also became the fourth man in history to win multiple Grand Slam titles on clay (2), grass (2) and hard courts (2022 US Open).
Longest best-of-three games:
- ATP – 3:48 (Mutai Kazo 67 63 76, Hangzhou 2R)
- WTA – 3:33 (Bencic d. Starodubtseva 5-7, 6-4, 7-5, Ningbo 2R)
Longest Grand Slam final:
Alcaraz defeated Sinner in the French Open final in 5 hours and 29 minutes, the longest final in French Open history.
By winning this epic rivalry, Alcaraz became the ninth player in the Open era to rally from two sets down to win a Grand Slam final. The classic in Paris ended up being the second-longest final in Grand Slam history, behind only the 2012 Australian Open final between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal, which lasted 5 hours and 53 minutes.
Top 10 most wins:
- ATP Jannik Sinner (19-4) (Alcaraz is 17-4).
- WTA Alina Sabalenka (15)
Longest winning streak:
26. Jannik Sinner (2024 Shanghai 2R-2025 Rome Final)
Top ten breakthroughs for the first time:
ATP 4. Tommy Paul (January 27), Jack Draper (March 17), Lorenzo Musetti (May 5), Ben Shelton (June 16)
Women’s Tennis Association 3 Mirra Andreeva (February 24) Amanda Anisimova (July 14) Ekaterina Alexandrova (October 13).

First ATP title (9):
There are eight first-time champions this season.
- Alexander Muller 27 Hong Kong
- Jason Brooksby 24 Houston
- Joao Fonseca 18 Buenos Aires
- Gabriel Diallo 23’s-Hertogenbosch
- Tomas Machak 24 Acapulco
- Valentin Vachero 26 Shanghai
- Jakub Mencic 19 Miami
- Learner Tien 19 Metz
- Flavio Coboli 22 Bucharest
First time WTA title (6):
- Maya Commonwealth, Rabat
- Louis Boisson, Hamburg
- Victoria Mboko, Montreal
- Eva Jovic, Guadalajara
- Sao PauloTiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah
- Janice Tjen, Chennai
clutch queen
Elise Mertens saved 11 match points in her win over Ekaterina Alexandrova to reach the final of the Liberma Open.
Three players – Madison Keys, Barbora Krejcikova and Moyuka Uchijima – saved match points four times to win.
Number of different teenagers who have won WTA titles
- Eva Jovic, Guadalajara (17)
- Mirra Andreeva, Dubai and Indian Wells (twice won at the age of 17)
- Maya Joint, Rabat and Eastbourne (twice won at the age of 19)
- Victoria Mboko, Montreal (then 18) and Hong Kong (then 19)
- Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah, St. Paul (then 19 years old)
**17-year-old Lilli Tagger became the first player born in 2008 to enter the finals of the Jiujiang Tour**
Match point saves championship
Adenosine triphosphate: (9)
- Alexandre Muller Hong Kong – d. Miomir Kecmanovic 2R 2 MP saved
- Joao Fonseca Buenos Aires – d. Mariano Navone QF Save 2 MP
- Miomir Kecmanovic Delray Beach – d. Alejandro Davidovich Fokina Final Save 2 MP
- Andrey Rublev Doha – d. Alex de Minaur QF Save 1 MP
- jenson brooksby houston – d. Alejandro Tabilo 2R 3 MP saved
- jenson brooksby houston – d. Tommy PaulSF Save 1 MP
- Carlos Alcaraz Roland Garros – D. Jannik Sinner finally saves 3 MP
- Gabriel Diallo ‘s-Hertogenbosch – d. Jordan Thompson 2R Save 2 MP
- Alex de Minaur Washington – D. Alejandro Davidovich Fokina Final Save 3 MP
- Alejandro Tabilo Chengdu – d. Lorenzo Musetti Final Save 2 MP
tie-break queen
Aryna Sabalenka won 19 tiebreaks in the 2025 season (the longest among women’s players in the Open era) and ended the season with a 22-3 record in tiebreaks.
On the men’s side, no one has won more tiebreaks than Felix Auger-Aliassime (32-14).
Match point saves championshipWomen’s Tennis Association
- Clara Towson (Oakland, saved a match point against Sofia Kenin in the second round)
- Madison Keys (Australian Open SF, saved one goal vs. Iga Swiatek)
- Camila Osorio (Bogota, one goal saved vs. Emina Bektas)
- Elise Mertens (‘s-Hertogenbosch, saved 11 points against Ekaterina Alexandrova)
- Maya United (Eastbourne, saved four times in final against Alexandra Ella)
- Victoria Mboko (Montreal, saved one goal vs. Elena Rybakina)
- Diana Schneider (Monterey, five saves vs. Elise Mertens)
- Eva Jovic (Guadalajara, vs. Victoria Jimenez Kasintseva) saves one goal
- Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah (São Paulo, three saves vs. Ana Sofia Sánchez)
- Belinda Bencic (Tokyo, saved one goal vs. Karolina Muchova)
The biggest increase in ranking from the end of 2024 to the end of 2025:
+902, Belinda Bencic (913th to 11th).
Players who win the 2025 title without losing a set:
Women’s Tennis Association(8)
- Emma Navarro (Merida)
- Aryna Sabalenka (Miami)
- Elena Svitolina (Rouen)
- Mayan joint (Rabat)
- Iga Swiatek (Cincinnati)
- Sorana Cirstea (Cleveland, including qualifying)
- Coco Gauff (Wuhan)
- Li An (Guangzhou)
- Anna Blinkova (Jiujiang)
Adenosine triphosphate(7)
- Ugo Humbert (Marseille)
- Taylor Fritz (Stuttgart)
- Taron Grikspur (Mallorca)
- Denis Shapovalov (Los Cabos)
- Alexander Bublik (Kitzbühel)
- Yannick Sinner (Paris)
- Jannik Sinner (Nitto ATP Finals)
38. New greatness?
Novak Djokovic, 38, became the oldest player to reach all four Grand Slams in a single season this year. When he won the Geneva title in May, he also became the third player in ATP history to win 100 career titles. By winning this title, Djokovic became the first ATP player to win the title for 20 consecutive seasons (2006-2025).
Consistently Amazing Award: Jannik Sinner
At the age of 24, the Italian became the youngest player in history to reach all four Grand Slam finals and the ATP Finals in the same season. Sinner is the third player to achieve the feat after Roger Federer in 2006 and 2007 (aged 25 and 26) and Novak Djokovic in 2015 and 2023 (aged 28 and 36).



