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ATP Masters 1000 doubles records and statistics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ATP Masters 1000 doubles records and statistics
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In tennis, the ATP Masters is an annual series of nine top-level tennis tournaments featuring the elite men's tennis players on the ATP Tour. The tournaments are important for the top players on the professional circuit as the series constituted the most prestigious tournaments in men's tennis after the four Grand Slam events. The Masters series along with the Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP Finals championship and the Olympic Games are considered the top-tier events of men's tennis, referred to by the ATP as the "Big Titles".[1]

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The Bryan brothers have won a record 39 ATP Masters titles.
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Daniel Nestor is the first player to complete the Golden Masters.

Twelve tournaments have been held as Masters events so far, nine each year. They have been played on three different surfaces: hard outdoors: Indian Wells, Miami, Canada, Cincinnati and Shanghai; hard indoors: Stockholm (1991–94), Stuttgart (1998–2001), Madrid (2002–08) and Paris; clay: Hamburg (1990–2008), Monte Carlo, Madrid and Rome; carpet indoors: Stockholm (1990), Stuttgart (1995–97) and Paris (1990–2006).

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Champions by year

  Active tournaments
  Defunct tournaments
More information Year, Indian Wells ...

^ Seasons' tournaments are listed in chronological order with a few exceptions:
a) Cincinnati and Canada were switched in 1996.
b) Rome was held before Madrid/Hamburg from 2000 to 2010 and after Cincinnati in 2020.
c) Indian Wells was held after Cincinnati in 2021.

  1. Competed under no nationality due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
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Title leaders

  Active tournaments
  Defunct tournaments
More information Titles, Player ...
  • Players with 6+ titles. Active players and tournament records indicated in bold.
  • 175 champions in 313 events as of 2025 Canada.
  • Player's best career strike rate of winning the Masters series events in nine slots.
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Career Golden Masters

The achievement of winning all of the nine active ATP Masters tournaments over the course of a player's career.

  • The event at which the Career Golden Masters was accomplished indicated in bold.

^ Player won all current nine Masters series events and ATP's now defunct Hamburg (clay) and Madrid (hard indoor) Masters events played in his career.

Career totals

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  • Active players denoted in bold.

More information No., Finals ...
More information No., Semifinals ...
More information No., Quarterfinals ...
More information No., Match wins ...
More information %, W–L ...

Statistics correct as of 2025 Rome. To avoid double counting, they should be updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

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Season records

More information No., Titles in a season ...
More information No., Finals ...
More information No., Match wins ...
More information %, W–L ...
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Consecutive records

More information No., Consecutive titles ...
More information No., Consecutive finals ...
More information No., Match win streak ...
  1. Streak includes a walkover.
  2. Streak spans across non-consecutive events.
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Tournament records

Most titles per tournament

More information Masters, No. ...

Tournaments won with no sets dropped

More information No., Player ...
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Calendar Masters combinations

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  • Back-to-back tournament titles.
  • Currently active combinations in bold.

Triples

More information Combination, Winners ...
  • Mike Bryan and Bob Bryan together won a season-record of four consecutive Masters by winning the Madrid–Rome–Toronto–Cincinnati titles in 2010.

Doubles

More information Combination, Winners ...
  1. Stockholm (1990–1994) and Madrid (2002–2008) preceded Shanghai as the 8th Masters event until 2008. In 2009, Madrid was moved to the clay season.
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Title defence

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  • Note: Currently active tournaments in bold.
More information Tournament, Player(s) ...
  • The Bryans have retained a record seven different tournaments, except Rome and Canada, on a record ten occasions.
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Statistics

Seeds statistics

No. 1 vs. No. 2 seeds in final

W The top seeds won the final.
L The second seeds won the final.
More information Year, Event ...

Top 4 seeds in semifinals

  • Tournament winners in bold.
More information Year, Event ...

Top 8 seeds in quarterfinals

  • Tournament winners in bold.
More information Year, Event ...

Qualifiers in final

W Qualifiers won the final.
L Qualifiers lost the final.
More information Year, Event ...

Age statistics

More information Age, Winner ...

All countrymen in final

More information Year, Event ...
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Titles won by decade

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as of 2025 Canada.

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Titles won by country

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Note: Titles, won by a team of players from same country, count as one title, not two.

as of 2025 Canada.

89 
 United States (36 players)
41 
 Australia (16 players)
33 
 Canada (5 players)
32 
 Netherlands (7 players)
27 
 India (3 players)
26 
 Croatia (4 players)
22 
 France (14 players)
20 
 Spain (10 players),  Sweden (6 players)
17 
 Bahamas (1 player)
16 
 Belarus (1 player),  Czech Republic (10 players)
15 
 Serbia (1 player)
14 
 South Africa (5 players)
13 
 Brazil (2 players)
12 
 Zimbabwe (3 players)
11 
 Argentina (4 players),
10 
 Great Britain (6 players),  Poland (6 players)
8 
 Russia (2 players)[a]
5 
 El Salvador (1 player),  Israel (2 players)
4 
 Austria (2 players),  Germany (3 players),  Romania (2 players),   Switzerland (3 players)
3 
 Finland (1 player),  Slovakia (2 players)
2 
 Belgium (3 players),  Colombia (2 players),  Mexico (1 player),  Monaco (2 players),  Uruguay (1 player)
1 
 Italy,  Pakistan,  Ukraine
  1. Not including Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev's title win at Madrid in 2023.

See also

References

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