Grand Slam men's singles champions of 2010: Australian Open champion Roger Federer (top left), and French Open, Wimbledon and US Open triple winner Rafael Nadal (top right, bottom left and right).
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Details | |
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Duration | January 4 – November 29 |
Edition | 41st |
Tournaments | 70 |
Achievements (singles) | |
Most tournament titles | Rafael Nadal (7) |
Most tournament finals | Rafael Nadal (9) |
Prize money leader | Rafael Nadal ($10,171,998) |
Points leader | Rafael Nadal (12,450) |
Awards | |
Player of the year | Rafael Nadal |
Doubles Team of the year |
Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
Most improved player of the year | Andrey Golubev |
Newcomer of the year | Tobias Kamke |
Comeback player of the year | Robin Haase |
← 2009
2011 →
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The Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) World Tour is the elite professional tennis circuit organized by the ATP. The 2010 ATP World Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments (supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)), the ATP World Tour Masters 1000, the ATP World Tour 500 series, the ATP World Tour 250 series, the ATP World Team Championship, the Davis Cup (organized by the ITF), and the ATP World Tour Finals. Also included in the 2010 calendar is the Hopman Cup, which does not distribute ranking points, and is organized by the ITF.
This is the complete schedule of events on the 2010 calendar, with player progression documented from the quarterfinals stage.
These tables present the number of singles (S), doubles (D), and mixed doubles (X) titles won by each player and each nation during the season, within all the tournament categories of the 2010 ATP World Tour: the Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP World Tour Finals, the ATP World Tour Masters 1000, the ATP World Tour 500 series, and the ATP World Tour 250 series. The players/nations are sorted by: 1) total number of titles (a doubles title won by two players representing the same nation counts as only one win for the nation); 2) cumulated importance of those titles (one Grand Slam win equalling two Masters 1000 wins, one ATP World Tour Finals win equalling one-and-a-half Masters 1000 win, one Masters 1000 win equalling two 500 events wins, one 500 event win equalling two 250 events wins); 3) a singles > doubles > mixed doubles hierarchy; 4) alphabetical order (by family names for players).