Ranked world No. 4 on the ATP Tour, Novak Djokovic represents Serbia as a professional tennis player. He competes as a right-handed player. He has reached a career-high of No. 1. He turned professional in 2003.
Novak Djokovic captured two titles in 2025, winning Athens and Geneva. The Serbian also reached the final at Miami and five semifinals, including US Open and Wimbledon. On hard: a strong 25-7. On clay: 9-3. He put immediate pressure winning 32% against first serves, capitalized at 53% on second serve returns, and excelled under pressure winning 69% of pressure points on serve.
Djokovic won the title at Olympic Games, finals at Shanghai and Wimbledon along with three semifinals, including Australian Open and Monte Carlo in 2024. Djokovic dominated on clay with a 16-3 record. He went 15-5 on hard. He created massive pressure with 55% on second returns, seized opportunities at 43% in pressure situations on return, and clutched under pressure converting 42% of break chances.
Novak Djokovic captured seven titles in 2023, winning Paris, US Open, ATP Finals, Adelaide 1, Cincinnati, Roland Garros, and Australian Open. Djokovic also reached the final at Wimbledon and one semifinal. On hard: a strong 35-2. On clay: 12-3. He maintained pressure winning 57% on second serve delivery, put immediate pressure winning 33% against first serves, and capitalized at 55% on second serve returns.
In 2022, Novak Djokovic triumphed with three titles, winning Rome, Madrid, and Wimbledon. The Serbian also reached finals at Paris and Belgrade and three semifinals. He dominated on hard with a 17-2 record. He went 14-4 on clay. He challenged servers with 34% on first return, punished rival's second serves winning 55%, and averaged only 0.15 double faults per game.
Djokovic captured five titles in 2021, winning Paris, Wimbledon, Belgrade 2, Roland Garros, and Australian Open. The Serbian also reached finals at Rome and US Open and three semifinals. On hard: a strong 26-4. On clay: 18-3. Djokovic created massive pressure with 55% on second returns, executed at 45% on break chances, and saved as much as 66% of breakpoints faced.
In 2020, the Serbian triumphed with four titles, winning Rome, Dubai, Cincinnati, and Australian Open. Novak Djokovic also reached the final at Roland Garros and one semifinal. He dominated on clay with a 10-1 record. Djokovic went 28-4 on hard. He broke down first serves at 34% clip, created massive pressure with 58% on second returns, and defended brilliantly at 66% break points saved.
Novak Djokovic captured five titles in 2019, winning Paris, Tokyo, Astana, Wimbledon, and Australian Open. Djokovic also reached the final at Rome and four semifinals, including Roland Garros and Madrid. On clay: a strong 14-3. On hard: 33-8. He dominated on first serve with 76% points won, maintained pressure winning 57% on second serve delivery, and put immediate pressure winning 34% against first serves.
In 2018, Djokovic triumphed with four titles, winning US Open, Shanghai, Wimbledon, and Cincinnati. The Serbian also reached finals at Paris and Queen's Club and two semifinals, including Rome. Djokovic dominated on grass with a 11-1 record. He went 31-5 on hard. Competing on clay: 11-5. Djokovic defended brilliantly at 65% break points saved, averaged only 0.18 double faults per game, and maintained pressure winning 57% on second serve delivery.
The Serbian captured two titles in 2017, winning Doha and Eastbourne. Novak Djokovic also reached the final at Rome and one semifinal at Madrid. On hard: a strong 9-3. On clay: 12-4. Djokovic executed at 44% on break chances, averaged only 0.15 double faults per game, and broke down first serves at 34% clip.
In 2016, Novak Djokovic triumphed with seven titles, winning Doha, Miami, Canada, Madrid, Indian Wells, Roland Garros, and Australian Open. Djokovic also reached finals at Rome, US Open, and Tour Finals and one semifinal at Shanghai. He dominated on clay with a 16-2 record. He went 40-6 on hard. He broke down first serves at 34% clip, created massive pressure with 58% on second returns, and defended brilliantly at 67% break points saved.
Novak Djokovic captured 11 titles in 2015, winning Rome, Miami, Paris, Beijing, US Open, Shanghai, Wimbledon, Monte Carlo, Tour Finals, Indian Wells, and Australian Open. The Serbian also reached finals at Dubai, Canada, Cincinnati, Tour Finals, and Roland Garros. On clay: a strong 16-1. On hard: 55-5. He challenged servers with 33% on first return, punished rival's second serves winning 57%, and capitalized on 44% of breakpoint opportunities.
In 2014, Djokovic triumphed with six titles, winning Rome, Miami, Paris, Beijing, Wimbledon, and Indian Wells. Novak Djokovic also reached the final at Roland Garros and five semifinals, including US Open and Shanghai. He dominated on clay with a 14-2 record. Djokovic went 40-6 on hard. Djokovic avoided the trouble at just 0.12 double faults per game, challenged servers with 33% on first return, and punished rival's second serves winning 58%.
Novak Djokovic captured six titles in 2013, winning Dubai, Paris, Beijing, Shanghai, Monte Carlo, and Australian Open. Djokovic also reached finals at US Open and Wimbledon and four semifinals, including Roland Garros and Indian Wells. On hard: a strong 48-5. On clay: 11-3. He maintained pressure winning 59% on second serve delivery, avoided the trouble at just 0.12 double faults per game, and challenged servers with 35% on first return.
In 2012, Novak Djokovic triumphed with six titles, winning Miami, Canada, Beijing, Shanghai, Tour Finals, and Australian Open. The Serbian also reached finals at Rome, US Open, Cincinnati, Monte Carlo, and Roland Garros and three semifinals, including Wimbledon and Indian Wells. Djokovic dominated on hard with a 50-4 record. He went 16-4 on clay. Competing on grass: 9-3. He punished rival's second serves winning 56%, excelled with 75% success on first serve, and rarely gave away free points at second serve with 57% success.
Djokovic captured ten titles in 2011, winning Rome, Dubai, Miami, Canada, Madrid, US Open, Belgrade, Wimbledon, Indian Wells, and Australian Open. The Serbian also reached the final at Cincinnati and two semifinals, including Roland Garros. On clay: a strong 17-1. On hard: 45-4. Djokovic capitalized at 58% on second serve returns, clutched under pressure converting 48% of break chances, and maintained pressure winning 56% on second serve delivery.
In 2010, the Serbian triumphed with two titles, winning Dubai and Beijing. Novak Djokovic also reached finals at Basel and US Open and six semifinals, including Wimbledon and Shanghai. He dominated on hard with a 37-12 record. He went 10-4 on clay. Djokovic defended brilliantly at 67% break points saved, backed the serve up well with 52% on second attempts, and broke down first serves at 34% clip.
Novak Djokovic captured five titles in 2009, winning Basel, Dubai, Paris, Beijing, and Belgrade. Djokovic also reached finals at Rome, Halle, Miami, Cincinnati, and Monte Carlo and five semifinals, including US Open and Madrid. On hard: a strong 52-11. On clay: 17-4. Grass results: 8-2. Djokovic defended brilliantly at 67% break points saved, backed the serve up well with 54% on second attempts, and broke down first serves at 33% clip.
In 2008, Djokovic triumphed with four titles, winning Rome, Masters Cup, Indian Wells, and Australian Open. The Serbian also reached finals at Bangkok, Cincinnati, and Queen's Club and six semifinals, including US Open and Roland Garros. He dominated on clay with a 15-3 record. Djokovic went 43-11 on hard. He clutched under pressure converting 46% of break chances, showed resilience saving 67% breakpoints when threatened, and rarely gave away free points at second serve with 57% success.
The Serbian captured five titles in 2007, winning Miami, Canada, Vienna, Estoril, and Adelaide. Novak Djokovic also reached finals at US Open and Indian Wells and four semifinals, including Wimbledon and Roland Garros. This marked his climb to the top of the rankings. On hard: a strong 43-11. On clay: 16-5. Djokovic avoided the trouble at just 0.18 double faults per game, challenged servers with 32% on first return, and punished rival's second serves winning 53%.
In 2006, Novak Djokovic triumphed with two titles, winning Metz and Amersfoort. Djokovic also reached the final at Umag and one semifinal. He reached the top 20 for the first time. Djokovic dominated on clay with a 14-5 record. He went 14-8 on hard. He converted 45% of break chances.
The 2005 campaign saw Novak Djokovic finish 9-9 on the ATP Tour. He broke into the top 100. He recorded a win over a top-10 opponent. He dominated tiebreaks (8-2). He captured one title at San Remo Challenger. On the Challenger/ITF circuit: 12-3.
Novak Djokovic delivered an impressive 2004 campaign. He broke into the top 200. He won four titles at Hungary F1, Aachen Challenger, Budapest Challenger, and Serbia & Montenegro F5. Season record: 32-9. Results on clay: 21-4.
Novak Djokovic competed at Futures/ITF level in 2003. He captured one title at Serbia & Montenegro F3. Additional semifinals at Serbia & Montenegro F4 and Serbia & Montenegro F6. Record: 10-5. Competing on clay: 10-4.