2000s 2001–2003: Juniors In 2001, Djokovic won his first title in a second-category tournament in
Messina on the U14 circuit of the
Tennis Europe Junior Tour, defeating compatriot
Bojan Božović in the final, and his second in
Livorno, In July, he won the
U14 European Championship in
Sanremo, defeating
Lukáš Lacko in singles and the doubles with Božović against Russians
Alexandre Krasnoroutskiy and Mikhail Bekker. Djokovic ended 2001 ranked No. 1 on the ETA U14 list, with Andy Murray in second place. and
Le Pontet in
Avignon. In September, he won his first ITF title in
Pančevo, In November, Djokovic won the Prince Cup in
Miami, defeating Stephen Bass in the final, His best junior Grand Slam result was reaching the
semifinals of the 2004 Australian Open. and
2003 US Open. In 2004, he recorded his first
ATP win during a
Davis Cup match against
Janis Skroderis, and later claimed his first
Challenger title in
Budapest on his 17th birthday, beating
Daniele Bracciali in the final. He debuted on the
ATP Tour main draw at the
Croatia Open Umag and secured his first victory at a tournament in
Bucharest, He impressed at the
Paris Masters by reaching the third round after defeating
Mariano Puerta, ending the year ranked world No. 78 as the youngest player in the top 100.
2006: First ATP titles and major quarterfinal In April 2006, Djokovic won both of his singles matches at a Davis Cup match against
Great Britain, leading
Serbia and Montenegro to victory. Following this, his family reportedly had discussions with the
Lawn Tennis Association about representing Great Britain. In 2009, he confirmed the talks were serious but chose to represent Serbia, stating he was "proud of being a Serbian" and that he "didn't want to spoil that just because another country had better conditions". At the
French Open, Djokovic, then world No. 63, defeated ninth seed
Fernando González en route to his first Grand Slam quarterfinal, At
Wimbledon, he reached the fourth round before losing to
Mario Ančić in five sets. Djokovic claimed his first ATP title at the
Dutch Open in
Amersfoort, defeating
Nicolás Massú in the final without dropping a set. He also made his first Masters quarterfinal at
Madrid. He ended the season ranked No. 16, the youngest in the top 20.
2007: First Masters title and major final, top 3 Djokovic began 2007 by winning the
Adelaide title, then reached the fourth round of the
2007 Australian Open, losing in straight sets to
Roger Federer, This, along with a strong showing at the
Indian Wells, where he finished runner-up, propelled him into the top 10. On clay, he defeated
Richard Gasquet in the final of the
Estoril Open, and reached the quarterfinals in
Rome and
Hamburg, losing to Nadal and
Carlos Moyá, respectively. At the
French Open, he made his first major semifinal, falling to Nadal. At
Wimbledon, Djokovic won a five-hour quarterfinal over
Marcos Baghdatis before retiring in the semifinals against Nadal due to elbow issues. Djokovic's breakthrough continued at the
Canadian Open, where he defeated world No. 3
Andy Roddick, No. 2
Nadal and No. 1
Federer to claim the title, becoming the first player since
Boris Becker in 1994 to beat the top three-ranked players in a single event. Following this,
Björn Borg remarked that Djokovic was "definitely a contender to win a Grand Slam." Djokovic would then go on to reach his first major final at the
US Open, where he had five set points in the first set and two in the second set, but lost them all before losing the match in straight sets to the top-seeded Federer. He won his fifth title of the year at the
Vienna Open, defeating
Stanislas Wawrinka in the final, and finishing the year ranked No. 3.
2008: First Major title, ATP Finals title Djokovic began the year at the
Hopman Cup alongside fellow Serbian
Jelena Janković, where they reached the finals, but ultimately lost to the United States in the decisive mixed doubles rubber. The event also marked his first competitive match against
Serena Williams. At the
Australian Open, Djokovic reached the final without dropping a set, defeating Roger Federer in the semifinals, which made him the youngest Open Era player to make the last four at all four majors. He beat unseeded
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in four sets in the final, claiming his first Grand Slam singles title. It was the first Grand Slam title in 3 years not won by
Roger Federer or
Rafael Nadal. title in
Belgrade Djokovic then reached the semifinals in
Dubai and won titles at
Indian Wells and the
Italian Open, his ninth and tenth titles, respectively. He lost to Nadal in the semifinals of both
Hamburg and the
2008 French Open. On grass, he fell to Nadal in the
Queen's Club final, and suffered a second-round loss at
Wimbledon to
Marat Safin, ending a streak of five straight major semifinals. After reaching the quarterfinals at the
Rogers Cup, he qualified for the finals in
Cincinnati, ending Nadal's 32-match win streak in the semis, ultimately, however, losing to
Andy Murray in the finals. At the
2008 Summer Olympics, he earned a bronze medal in the singles event and exited in the first round in doubles with partner
Nenad Zimonjić. Djokovic rounded off the season by winning his first year-end championship title at the
Tennis Masters Cup in Shanghai in November, beating
Nikolay Davydenko in the final.
2009: Ten finals, five titles Djokovic began the year at the
Brisbane International, where he was upset in the first round by fellow Pilić academy trainee
Ernests Gulbis. At the
Australian Open, he retired in the quarterfinals against
Andy Roddick due to heat-related illness. After a semifinal loss to
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in Marseille, Djokovic won the
Dubai Championships, defeating
David Ferrer for his 12th career title. At the
Indian Wells Masters, he lost to Roddick in the quarterfinals. He then reached the final of the
Miami Open, defeating
Roger Federer in the semifinals before losing to
Andy Murray. During the clay season, Djokovic reached the finals at both the
Monte Carlo Masters and
Italian Open, losing to
Rafael Nadal each time. He then claimed his second title of the year at the inaugural
Serbia Open, defeating
Łukasz Kubot in the final. At the
Madrid Open in May, he lost another close semifinal to Nadal in a record-setting match lasting 4 hours and 3 minutes. He exited the
French Open in the third round to
Philipp Kohlschreiber. Djokovic reached the final of the
Gerry Weber Open on grass but lost to
Tommy Haas, and then suffered another defeat to Haas in the quarterfinals of
Wimbledon. During the
2009 US Open Series, he reached the quarterfinals in
Montreal, then made the final in
Cincinnati, defeating Nadal in the semifinals before falling to Federer. At the
US Open, he reached the semifinals, where he was again defeated by Federer. He capped off the season by winning his only Masters title of the year at the
Paris Masters after defeating Nadal in the semifinals, and outlasting
Gaël Monfils in a decisive set tiebreak in the final.
2010s 2010: US Open final & Davis Cup crown After playing nearly 100 matches in 2009, Djokovic opted to skip early ATP tournaments in 2010 and began the season at the exhibition
Kooyong Classic, defeating
Tommy Haas but losing to
Fernando Verdasco and
Bernard Tomic. At the
Australian Open, he fell to
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the quarterfinals despite being a set away from victory. He then reached the semifinals in
Rotterdam and won the
Dubai Championships, defending an ATP title for the first time. In March, he led Serbia to a 3–2 win over the
United States in the
2010 Davis Cup, defeating
Sam Querrey and
John Isner. After early losses in
Indian Wells and
Miami, he split with coach
Todd Martin. He reached the semifinals of the
Monte Carlo Masters and the quarterfinals in
Rome, both times losing to Verdasco. At the
2010 Serbia Open, he withdrew while trailing
Filip Krajinović, marking his only loss to a player ranked outside the Top 200. At the
French Open, he lost to
Jürgen Melzer in the quarterfinals after leading by two sets — the only time in his career he lost a major match from that position. He captured his first ATP doubles title at the
Aegon Championships with
Jonathan Erlich. At
Wimbledon, he lost in the semifinals to
Tomáš Berdych. At the
Canadian Open, Djokovic reached the semifinals, losing to Federer. He also teamed with Nadal in doubles, marking the first pairing of world No. 1 and No. 2 players since
Jimmy Connors and
Arthur Ashe in 1976. At the US Open, Djokovic saved two match points at 4-5 in the fifth set before beating Federer in the semi-finals, but lost to Nadal in the final in four sets.
2011: One of the greatest seasons in history in the semifinals of the
2011 Wimbledon Championships, clinching the
world No. 1 ranking for the first time in his career. Djokovic opened the season by winning the
Australian Open, dropping just one set and defeating
Roger Federer in the semifinals and
Andy Murray in the final to claim his second title in Melbourne. He continued his run by beating Federer in the final of the
Dubai Championships. At
Indian Wells and
Miami, he defeated both Federer and
Rafael Nadal to claim back-to-back Masters 1000 titles—becoming only the third player to beat both in the same event twice. After winning the
Serbia Open, he extended his unbeaten streak with titles in
Madrid and the
Italian Open, defeating Nadal in straight sets in both finals—his first wins over Nadal on clay after nine straight losses. At the
French Open, Djokovic reached the semifinals before falling to Federer in four sets—his first loss of the year, snapping a 43-match win streak and ending a perfect 41–0 start to the season. Five weeks later, Djokovic claimed his first
Wimbledon title, defeating Nadal in the final, and secured the world No. 1 ranking for the first time in his career. Federer served for the match and had two match points in the US Open semi-finals, but Djokovic won in five sets. He then beat Nadal in four sets in the final for his first US Open title and third major in 2011.
2012: Australian Open and year-end titles Djokovic began the season by winning the
Australian Open, defeating
David Ferrer in the quarterfinals and
Andy Murray in a five-set semifinal lasting 4 hours and 50 minutes. He faced off against
Rafael Nadal in their third consecutive major final meeting after last year's Wimbledon and US Open. Djokovic won in 5 hours and 53 minutes, which was the longest major final and longest match in Australian Open history. Djokovic then lost to
John Isner in the semifinals of
Indian Wells but retained his
Miami title by defeating Murray. Djokovic fell to Nadal in the finals of both
Monte Carlo and the
Italian Open. At the
French Open, he reached his first final at the tournament, defeating
Roger Federer in the semis. Attempting to hold all four majors at once, he lost to Nadal in four sets. At
Wimbledon, he was again beaten by eventual champion Federer in the semifinals, ceding his no. 1 ranking to Federer. Djokovic was Serbia's flag bearer at the
2012 Summer Olympics in London. He beat
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga to reach the semifinals but lost to Murray and then to
Juan Martín del Potro in the bronze medal match, finishing fourth. He defended his
Rogers Cup title, dropping just one set, but lost the
Cincinnati Open final to Federer. At the US Open, Djokovic lost in the final in five sets to Murray. Djokovic then won titles at the
China Open and
Shanghai Rolex Masters, notably saving five championship points against Murray in the latter. Despite losing his opening round at the
Paris Masters, he reclaimed the No. 1 spot after Federer withdrew from the tournament. He capped off the season by winning his 2nd
ATP Finals title, beating Federer in the final.
2013: Australian Open and year-end titles Djokovic began his 2013 season at the
2013 Hopman Cup, representing Serbia with
Ana Ivanovic. He won three of his four singles matches, including a final-round win over
Fernando Verdasco, but Serbia lost the final 1–2 to Spain. At the
Australian Open, he defeated
Stan Wawrinka in a memorable fourth-round match lasting over five hours, and went on to beat
Andy Murray in the final to win a record third consecutive Australian Open title in the Open Era. Djokovic next helped Serbia take a 2–0 lead over Belgium in the
2013 Davis Cup World Group first round, with a straight-sets win over
Olivier Rochus. He then won the
2013 Dubai Tennis Championships, defeating
Tomáš Berdych in the final. At
Indian Wells, Djokovic's 22-match winning streak was ended by
Juan Martín del Potro in the semifinals. At the
Miami Masters, he was upset in the fourth round by
Tommy Haas. In Davis Cup quarterfinals, Djokovic helped Serbia defeat the United States with wins over
John Isner and
Sam Querrey. He then won the
2013 Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters, defeating
Rafael Nadal in straight sets to end Nadal's 46-match winning streak at the event. He suffered early exits at the
Madrid Open and
Rome Masters, losing to
Grigor Dimitrov and Berdych, respectively. At the
2013 French Open, Djokovic advanced to the semifinals, defeating Wawrinka, Dimitrov,
Philipp Kohlschreiber, and
Tommy Haas, before losing a dramatic five-set match to Nadal. At
Wimbledon, Djokovic defeated Del Potro in a historic semifinal lasting 4 hours and 44 minutes, but lost the final to Murray in straight sets. Djokovic was a finalist at the
US Open, where he lost to Nadal in four sets. He later won the
China Open and the
Shanghai Masters, extending his unbeaten streak in Asia to 20 matches. He then claimed the
Paris Masters, defeating
David Ferrer in the final. Djokovic ended the year by winning the
2013 ATP World Tour Finals, beating Nadal in the final. He concluded the season with a 24-match winning streak and later announced that
Boris Becker would join his team as head coach for 2014.
2014: Wimbledon and ATP Finals titles, four Masters Djokovic began the year by winning the
Mubadala World Tennis Championship. At the
Australian Open, he reached the quarterfinals with four straight-set wins before losing to
Stanislas Wawrinka in five sets, ending his 25-match win streak in Melbourne and 14 consecutive Grand Slam semifinals. He won the
Indian Wells Masters, defeating
Roger Federer, and the
Miami Masters by beating
Rafael Nadal. A wrist injury affected his
Monte Carlo campaign, where he lost to Federer in the semifinals. After recovery, he won the
Italian Open over Nadal and donated his $500,000 prize to victims of the
2014 Southeast Europe floods. At the
French Open, Djokovic dropped only two sets en route to the final but lost to Nadal in four sets, his first loss to him after four wins. Djokovic won his second
Wimbledon title by defeating Federer in five sets in the final, reclaiming the world No. 1 ranking. He suffered early exits at the
Canadian Open (to
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga) and Cincinnati (to
Tommy Robredo). At the
US Open, he reached the semifinals but lost to
Kei Nishikori. He won a fifth
China Open title in six years, and after a semifinal loss to Federer in
Shanghai, claimed the
Paris Masters without dropping a set. At the
ATP Finals, he set a record by dropping just nine games in the round-robin stage. By reaching the semifinals, Djokovic secured the year-end No. 1 ranking for the third time, tying Nadal for the fifth most. He won the title after
Roger Federer withdrew from the final due to a back injury, which marked the first walkover in a final in the 45-year history of the tournament.
2015: Career-best season: three majors, six Masters, China Open and ATP Finals title Djokovic began the season at the
Qatar Open in Doha, but lost in the quarterfinals against
Ivo Karlović in three tight sets. He then played at the
Australian Open, where he made it through the first five rounds without dropping a set. In the semifinals, he faced defending champion
Stan Wawrinka, this time prevailing in 5 sets, and then beat
Andy Murray in the final to win his 5th Australian Open title and 8th major overall. He next competed at the
Dubai Championships and lost to Federer in the final. After 2 weeks, Djokovic defeated
John Isner and Andy Murray en route to the
Indian Wells Masters title, beating Federer in three sets. In
Miami, he defeated David Ferrer and John Isner en route to winning his fifth title, defeating Andy Murray in three sets. Djokovic thus became the first player to complete the
Sunshine double three times. In April, Djokovic clinched his second
Monte-Carlo Masters by beating Tomáš Berdych in the final, and thus became the first man to win the first three
ATP Masters 1000 titles of the season. Djokovic withdrew from the 2015 Madrid Masters, but won the
Italian Open, making it 4 out of 4 titles in Masters events entered by Djokovic in the season. This final was notable for being the only clay court final ever contested between Djokovic and Federer. He continued his good form on clay at the
French Open by reaching the final without dropping a set in the first five rounds, including a quarterfinal clash with
Nadal and a five-set semifinal victory over Andy Murray which took two days to complete. However, he lost championship match to
Stan Wawrinka in four sets. Five weeks later, he beat
Kevin Anderson in the fourth round in five sets, and then went on to claim his third
Wimbledon title with a win over Roger Federer. Djokovic had the chance to become the first man in history to complete
Career Golden Masters in
Cincinnati, but he lost the final to Federer (Djokovic would accomplish the feat in later years). At the
US Open, Djokovic reached the final for the sixth time in his career, achieving the feat of reaching all four Grand Slam finals in a single calendar year. In the final, he faced Federer once again, defeating him in four sets to win his third Grand Slam title of the year and his tenth major overall. He returned to
Beijing in October, winning the title for the sixth time, defeating Nadal in straight sets in the final to bring his overall record at the tournament to 29–0. Djokovic then reached the final of the
Paris Masters, where he defeated Murray in straight sets, taking his fourth title there and a record sixth ATP Masters tournament in one year. After losing to Federer in the round-robin stage of the
ATP Finals, in a rematch final, he beat Federer in straight sets to win his fifth ATP Finals title and becoming the first player to win the Finals four consecutive times. By the end of the season, Djokovic made a season-record 15 consecutive finals, reaching the championship match of every top-level tournament he played (four in majors, eight in Masters, and the final at the ATP Finals). He won 11 titles including a season-record 10
Big Titles. Djokovic set a season-record of 16,585 for most ranking points accumulated as world No. 1. and had a season-record 31 victories over top-10 players, including a 15–4 winning record against the other members of the Big Four. The 2015 season is Djokovic's most successful season as of 2022, and it is considered one of the greatest seasons in tennis history.
2016: 'Nole Slam', four Masters titles, and ranking points record after winning the
2016 French Open, completing "Nole Slam" and his first career Grand Slam Djokovic won his 60th career title in
Doha, defeating
Rafael Nadal in 73 minutes. He broke his ATP ranking points record, reaching 16,790. Djokovic then claimed his sixth
Australian Open, beating
Roger Federer in the semifinals and
Andy Murray in the final. After recovering from an eye infection at the
Dubai Championships, he won his fifth
Indian Wells Masters title, beating Nadal and
Milos Raonic. Djokovic's dominance meant world Nos. 2 and 3 combined points still wouldn't surpass him. On 3 April 2016, Djokovic won the
Miami Open without dropping a set, claiming his sixth title and tying
Andre Agassi's record. This was his fourth
Sunshine Double, the most in history, and third consecutive. The win made him the all-time ATP prize money leader with $98.2 million. After an early exit at the
Monte-Carlo Masters, Djokovic won the
Madrid Open, beating Murray in the final. The next week at the
Rome Masters, Murray defeated Djokovic; Djokovic still beat Nadal and
Kei Nishikori in earlier rounds. Djokovic won the
French Open, defeating Murray in four sets, completing the historic
Nole Slam. This made Djokovic the eighth player to achieve a
Career Grand Slam, third after
Don Budge and
Rod Laver to hold all four major titles simultaneously, and the first to earn $100 million in prize money. His ranking points rose to a record 16,950. At
Wimbledon, Djokovic's 30-match Grand Slam winning streak ended with a third-round loss to
Sam Querrey, his earliest Slam exit since the 2009 French Open. In late July, Djokovic returned to form, winning his fourth
Canadian Open title, his 30th Masters overall. At the US Open, he lost the final to Wawrinka in four sets.
2017: Split with the team and injury hiatus In January, Djokovic defended his title in
Doha, defeating world No. 1
Andy Murray. At the
Australian Open, he lost in the second round to No. 117
Denis Istomin, marking his first early exit since
2008 and his first loss at a major to a player outside the top 100. In February and March, he was eliminated before the semifinals by
Nick Kyrgios at the
Mexican Open and
Indian Wells Masters. In April, Djokovic reached the quarterfinals of the
Monte-Carlo Masters, losing to
David Goffin. He then split with longtime coach
Marián Vajda, fitness coach
Gebhard Phil-Gritsch, and physiotherapist Miljan Amanović to find a new spark. He reached the semifinals at the
Madrid Masters, losing to
Rafael Nadal, and was runner-up at the
Rome Masters, losing to
Alexander Zverev. On 21 May, Djokovic announced
Andre Agassi as his new coach, starting at the
French Open, where he lost in the quarterfinals to
Dominic Thiem. He began the grass season at the
Eastbourne International, winning the title by beating
Gaël Monfils—his only tournament win without Vajda until their 2022 split. At
Wimbledon, he retired in the quarterfinals against
Tomáš Berdych due to an elbow injury. On 26 July, Djokovic announced he would miss the
US Open and the rest of the season to recover from his injury. This ended his streak of 51 consecutive Grand Slam appearances since his debut in 2005. Djokovic ended the year No. 12, his lowest ranking since 2006.
2018: Surgery, two majors, Career Golden Masters In January, Djokovic won the
Kooyong Classic exhibition against
Dominic Thiem. At the
2018 Australian Open, he reached the fourth round before losing to
Chung Hyeon. In late January, he underwent elbow surgery. He returned to practice by early March, and played at
Indian Wells a week later, losing in the second round to
Taro Daniel. He also lost early at the
Miami Open to
Benoît Paire. Reuniting with coach
Marián Vajda at the
Monte-Carlo Masters, Djokovic defeated
Dušan Lajović and
Borna Ćorić before losing to Dominic Thiem. He said, "After two years finally I can play without pain." Following an early loss at
Barcelona to
Martin Kližan, he showed improvement at the
Madrid Open by beating
Kei Nishikori—his first top 20 win in 10 months—but lost to
Kyle Edmund in the second round. He then participated at the
Italian Open but lost to eventual champion Rafael Nadal in the semifinal. After failing to defend his finalist points from 2017, Djokovic's ranking fell to No. 22, his first time being out of the top 20 since October 2006. He then lost to unseeded
Marco Cecchinato in the quarterfinals of the
French Open. In the second-longest Wimbledon semifinal to date, Djokovic beat Nadal in five sets played over two days. Djokovic then defeated
Kevin Anderson in the final in straight sets to win his fourth Wimbledon title and 13th overall major title, and returned to the top 10 in the rankings. Djokovic then beat top seed
Roger Federer in straight sets in the final of the
Cincinnati Open and thus became the first singles player to complete the Career Golden Masters. At the US Open, Djokovic defeated
Juan Martín del Potro in straight sets, winning his third US Open and 14th major title overall. Djokovic then participated at the
Shanghai Rolex Masters and won his 4th title at the tournament and 2nd Masters title of the year, beating
Borna Ćorić in the final. He did not drop a set nor have his serve broken during the tournament, and his ranking rose to No. 2. Following Nadal's withdrawal from the
Paris Masters, Djokovic regained the No. 1 ranking, but lost to unseeded
Karen Khachanov in the final. At the
ATP Finals, he reached the final stage winning all three of his round robin matches and securing the year-end No. 1 for a fifth time, but was upset by Zverev.
2019: Wimbledon and 7th Australian Open titles Djokovic began 2019 at the
Qatar Open, losing in the semifinals to
Roberto Bautista Agut. As the top seed at the
Australian Open, he defeated
Rafael Nadal in the final to claim his record seventh Australian Open and 15th
major title. He was then upset by
Philipp Kohlschreiber at the
Indian Wells Masters third round, and lost in the fourth round of the
Miami Open to Bautista Agut. On clay, Djokovic reached the quarterfinals of the
Monte-Carlo Masters, losing to
Daniil Medvedev. During the
Madrid Open, he celebrated his 250th week at
world number 1 in the
ATP rankings and won the title by defeating
Stefanos Tsitsipas. At the
Italian Open, he reached the final after beating
Juan Martín del Potro, but lost to Nadal. At the
French Open, Djokovic reached the semifinals without dropping a set, becoming the first man to reach 10 consecutive French Open quarterfinals. He lost a marathon five-set match to
Dominic Thiem, ending a 26-match winning streak in majors and his bid for a second 'Nole Slam'. Djokovic defended his title at
Wimbledon, beating
Roger Federer in a record 4-hour 57-minute five-set final. Despite winning fewer points, Djokovic saved two championship points to claim his fifth Wimbledon and 16th major title. He lost in the semifinals of the
Cincinnati Open to eventual champion Medvedev, and retired injured in the fourth round of the
US Open against
Stan Wawrinka. In October, Djokovic won the
Japan Open over
John Millman but lost in the quarterfinals of the
Shanghai Masters to Tsitsipas. He ended the season and decade by winning his fifth
Paris Masters title against
Denis Shapovalov, regarded as the most successful player in men's tennis during the decade.
2020s 2020: Australian Open title, 2nd Career Golden Masters At the inaugural
2020 ATP Cup, Djokovic led Serbia to victory with six wins, including over
Daniil Medvedev in the semifinals and
Rafael Nadal in the final. At the
Australian Open, he beat
Roger Federer in the semifinals and defeated
Dominic Thiem in five sets in the final, earning his eighth Australian Open and 17th
Grand Slam title. He regained the world No. 1 ranking and became the first player in the
Open Era to win Grand Slams in three different decades. It was also his first comeback win from two sets to one down in a major final. Djokovic then claimed his fifth title at the
Dubai Championships, defeating
Stefanos Tsitsipas in the final. In June, during the
Adria Tour he organized, Djokovic tested positive for
COVID-19, along with several other participants, prompting criticism over the event's lack of safety protocols. Djokovic later apologized, saying they believed the tournament met all health guidelines, but acknowledged they "were wrong". He later described the criticism as part of a "witch hunt". Djokovic was disqualified from the US Open during his fourth-round match after taking a ball and hitting it towards the advertising hoarding, unintentionally striking a lineswoman in the process. Djokovic lost in straight sets in the French Open final to Nadal.
2021: Major titles on all three surfaces Djokovic began the year at the
2021 ATP Cup, winning both singles matches, but Serbia exited in the group stage. He then won his ninth
Australian Open title and 18th major overall, defeating
Daniil Medvedev in the final. On 1 March, Djokovic tied and then surpassed
Roger Federer's Open Era record of 310 weeks as world No. 1. He suffered early losses at the
Monte-Carlo Masters (to
Dan Evans) and
Serbia Open (to
Aslan Karatsev), and reached the final of the
Italian Open, defeating
Stefanos Tsitsipas and
Lorenzo Sonego, before losing to
Rafael Nadal. At the
French Open, he beat Nadal in a four-set semifinal and came from two sets down to defeat Tsitsipas in the final. He became the first man in the Open Era to win a major after coming from two sets down twice in the same event, and the first to win all four majors at least twice in the
Open Era. At
Wimbledon, he earned his 100th grass-court win en route to the final, where he defeated
Matteo Berrettini to win his sixth title and 20th major, tying
Federer and
Nadal. He became the second man to win majors on all three surfaces in a single year (a "Surface Slam"), and the fifth in the Open Era to achieve the
Channel Slam (French Open and Wimbledon in the same year). At the
2020 Summer Olympics, Djokovic sought a gold medal, but lost to
Alexander Zverev in the semifinals and to
Pablo Carreño Busta in the bronze match. In
mixed doubles, partnering
Nina Stojanović, they reached the semifinals but withdrew from the bronze medal match due to Djokovic's shoulder injury. Djokovic entered the US Open in contention for the
Grand Slam, a feat in men's singles tennis achieved only by
Don Budge in 1938 and
Rod Laver in 1962 and 1969. Djokovic defeated Zverev in five sets in the semifinals. In the final, he "looked subdued throughout as he made a high number of uncharacteristic errors" and lost to Medvedev in straight sets.
2022: Australian Open controversy Djokovic was set to start his 2022 season at the
ATP Cup in
Sydney but withdrew. To compete in the
Australian Open, players were required to be vaccinated against
COVID-19 or have a medical exemption. Djokovic received an exemption from
Tennis Australia and the
Department of Health (Victoria), citing a positive COVID-19 test on 16 December 2021. He was granted a visa on 18 November 2021 and arrived in Melbourne on 5 January, but was detained by the
Australian Border Force for failing to meet entry requirements for unvaccinated travellers. Djokovic later admitted an error in his travel declaration form, as he had been in Spain shortly before arriving. His visa was cancelled, and he was held in a detention hotel pending appeal. On 10 January, the
Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia ruled in Djokovic's favour, ordering his release and noting that he was denied sufficient time to consult with lawyers and tennis officials before his interview. However, on 14 January,
Alex Hawke, the
Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs, cancelled Djokovic's visa again under the
Migration Act 1958, citing concerns for public health and order. The
Federal Court of Australia upheld the decision, and Djokovic was deported on 16 January.
2022: After Australia In February, Djokovic returned to the
Dubai Championships, where vaccination was not required. He lost in the quarterfinals to
Jiří Veselý, resulting in the loss of his
world No. 1 ranking to
Daniil Medvedev. It was the first time since 2004 that a player outside the
Big Four held the top spot. Djokovic withdrew from the
Indian Wells Masters and
Miami Open due to U.S. entry restrictions on unvaccinated foreigners. Despite not playing, he regained No. 1 when Medvedev lost early at Indian Wells. He began his clay season at the
Monte-Carlo Masters, losing his opening match to
Davidovich Fokina. At the
Serbia Open, he reached the final but lost to
Andrey Rublev. In May, he was beaten by
Carlos Alcaraz in the
Madrid Open semifinals. A week later, he won the
Italian Open, his sixth title there and a record-extending 38th Masters crown, after defeating
Stefanos Tsitsipas in the final. In the semis, he claimed his 1,000th career win by beating
Casper Ruud. At the
French Open, he advanced to the quarterfinals without dropping a set, but lost to
Rafael Nadal in their record 59th match, ending his title defense and again dropping to No. 2. At
Wimbledon, he earned his 80th win at each major with a first-round victory over
Kwon Soon-woo, becoming the first player to do so. He reached a record 32nd Grand Slam final after defeating
Cameron Norrie in the semifinals and beat
Nick Kyrgios in four sets to claim his seventh Wimbledon and 21st major title, surpassing
Roger Federer and moving one behind Nadal. Due to U.S. travel restrictions for unvaccinated foreigners, Djokovic was unable to enter the country and withdrew from the
US Open. Djokovic then reached the
Rolex Paris Masters final as the defending champion, but lost to
Holger Rune, which was the first time he lost a Masters final after winning the first set. At the
ATP Finals, Djokovic won his record-equaling 6th title, going undefeated in the round-robin stage and beating Casper Ruud in the final. Djokovic ended the year as world No. 5.
2023: Record-breaking 24th major & 7th ATP Finals titles Djokovic opened the year with his 92nd title at the
Adelaide International, saving a championship point to beat
Sebastian Korda. At the
Australian Open, despite a hamstring issue, he defeated
Stefanos Tsitsipas in the final to claim a record-extending
10th title and reclaim the No. 1 ranking. He missed the
Indian Wells and
2023 Miami Open due to U.S. entry restrictions. During the clay season, he exited early at the
Monte-Carlo Masters and
Banja Luka Open, and lost in the
Rome quarterfinals. At the
French Open, Djokovic defeated world No. 1
Carlos Alcaraz in the semis and beat
Casper Ruud in the final to win a record-breaking 23rd major, becoming the first man to achieve a
triple Career Grand Slam. He also regained the top ranking. At
Wimbledon, Djokovic reached his 9th final but lost to Alcaraz in five sets, ending a 34-match winning streak at Wimbledon. Djokovic then won the
Cincinnati Open, beating Alcaraz in 3 hours and 49 minutes in the longest best-of-three-set ATP final, hailed as one of the greatest matches ever. At the
US Open, he triumphed over Medvedev in straight sets to win his fourth US Open title and a record-extending 24th men's singles
major title overall. Djokovic became the oldest US Open men's singles champion in the Open Era. Djokovic ended his season by winning the
ATP Finals, clinching the year-end No.1 ranking for a record eighth time.
2024: Olympic gold, Career Super Slam, oldest ATP No. 1 final at the
2024 Summer Olympics At the
Australian Open, Djokovic reached the semifinals but lost to world No. 4
Jannik Sinner in four sets, ending his 33-match win streak at the event and marking his first semifinal defeat there. He called it "one of the worst Grand Slam matches I've ever played". Nonetheless, he equaled
Roger Federer's record of 58 Grand Slam singles quarterfinals and retained his world No. 1 ranking. At
Indian Wells Masters, he lost in the third round to
Luca Nardi, ranked No. 123—the lowest-ranked player to defeat him at a Masters 1000 or Grand Slam. At the
2024 Monte-Carlo Masters, he reached the semifinals but lost to
Casper Ruud. In
Rome, after being accidentally struck by a water bottle post-match, he lost in the third round to
Alejandro Tabilo. At the
2024 Geneva Open, he earned his 1,100th career win on his 37th birthday, becoming the third man in the
Open Era to reach that mark, and holding the highest win percentage among them (83.5%). At the
French Open, Djokovic survived a five-set match against
Lorenzo Musetti that ended at 3:07 a.m.—the latest finish in tournament history. In the fourth round, he defeated
Francisco Cerúndolo in his longest French Open match (4h39m), surpassing Federer's records for most Grand Slam match wins and quarterfinal appearances. However, he suffered a torn
medial meniscus in his right knee during that match and withdrew before the quarterfinals, losing the No. 1 ranking to Sinner. At the
Wimbledon Championships, Djokovic reached his 37th Grand Slam final, aiming to equal Federer's record of eight titles, but lost in straight sets to
Carlos Alcaraz in a repeat of the 2023 final. At the
2024 Summer Olympics, Djokovic defeated
Matthew Ebden,
Rafael Nadal,
Dominik Koepfer,
Stefanos Tsitsipas, and
Lorenzo Musetti to reach his first Olympic final. He then beat
Carlos Alcaraz in straight sets to win the
gold medal, completing a
Career Golden Slam and Career Super Slam.
2025: 100th ATP title and further records broken Djokovic opened the 2025 season at the
Brisbane International, losing to
Reilly Opelka in the quarterfinals. His second-round match at the
Australian Open marked his 430th career major main draw singles match, surpassing Roger Federer's all-time record. He beat
Carlos Alcaraz in four sets in the quarter finals. Djokovic retired in his semifinal match against
Alexander Zverev due to a muscle tear after only one set was played. At
Doha, he lost to
Matteo Berrettini in the first round. This marked the first time Djokovic lost in any first round since the
2016 Summer Olympics. Djokovic's next tournament was the
Indian Wells Open, where he suffered a second-round defeat to lucky loser
Botic van de Zandschulp – the 2nd year in a row where he lost to a lucky loser at the same tournament, following
Luca Nardi. At the
2025 Miami Open, Djokovic beat lucky loser
Camilo Ugo Carabelli in the third round to claim his record 411th career main draw win at the Masters 1000 level, surpassing Nadal's previous record of 410. He lost in the final to
Jakub Menšík. In May 2025, it was announced that Andy Murray would no longer be working as Djokovic's coach, by mutual agreement reached after Djokovic began working with Murray in November 2024. After Murray's departure Djokovic's assistant coach and analyst,
Boris Bošnjaković assumed full coaching responsibility for the remainder of the season. Djokovic took a last minute entry to the
2025 Geneva Open, where he defeated
Hubert Hurkacz in the final to claim the 100th ATP singles title of his career, becoming the first ever tennis player to win at least one ATP singles title in twenty consecutive seasons, and the 3rd tennis player in the Open Era to have won 100 or more career titles (after
Jimmy Connors and Federer). At the
French Open, Djokovic reached a record-extending 51st major semifinal, where he lost in straight sets to world No. 1
Jannik Sinner. By winning the quarterfinals, he recorded his 101st win at the tournament, the second most after
Rafael Nadal. At
Wimbledon, Djokovic was again defeated by Sinner in the semifinal (his record-extending 52nd semifinal), with Djokovic noting that the "age, the wear and tear of the body" meant he was limited in his ability to beat players like Sinner or Alcaraz. It was the first time he failed to make the Wimbledon final since 2017. At the US Open, he lost in straight sets in the semi-finals to Alcaraz. At the inaugural
Hellenic Championship, Djokovic defeated
Lorenzo Musetti in the final to claim his
101st career
ATP Tour-level title and his
72nd title won on hard courts, surpassing an all-time record he jointly held with
Roger Federer. Aged 38 years and 5 months old, Djokovic became the oldest men's singles champion on the ATP Tour since its establishment in 1990, and the
third-oldest men's singles tour-level champion in the
Open Era.
2026: Oldest Australian Open finalist In the semi-finals of the
2026 Australian Open, Djokovic defeated
Jannik Sinner to advance to his 11th final at
Melbourne Park, becoming the oldest finalist down under at the age of 38. However, Djokovic's quest for a record-extending 25th major title ended in the final, where he was defeated by
Carlos Alcaraz. The result allowed Alcaraz to become the youngest male player to achieve a
Career Grand Slam. == Rivalries ==