2009 ATP World Tour


The Association of Tennis Professionals World Tour is the elite professional tennis circuit organised by the ATP. The 2009 ATP World Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments, 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, and the ATP World Tour Finals. Also included in the 2009 calendar is the Hopman Cup, which does not distribute ranking points, and is organised by the ITF.
2009 is remembered for being the year that saw Pete Sampras' Grand Slam singles record be beaten by Roger Federer, who won his 15th title at Wimbledon. Federer also completed his Career Grand Slam at the French Open.

Tour changes

The ATP reinstated the world tour to its name as the organisation rebranded itself as the ATP World Tour. ATP World Tour tournaments in 2009 are classified as ATP World Tour Masters 1000, ATP World Tour 500, and ATP World Tour 250. Broadly speaking the Tennis Masters Series tournaments became the new Masters 1000 level and ATP International Series Gold and ATP International Series events became ATP 500 level and 250 level events.
The Masters 1000 includes tournaments at Indian Wells, Miami, Monte Carlo, Rome, Madrid, Toronto/Montreal, Cincinnati, Shanghai and Paris. The end-of-year event, the Tour Finals, moved to London. Hamburg has been displaced by the new clay court event at Madrid, which is a new combined men's and women's tournament, and the indoor hard court event in Madrid was replaced by an outdoor hard court Masters tournament in Shanghai. From 2011, Rome and Cincinnati will also be combined tournaments. Severe sanctions will be placed on top players skipping the Masters 1000 series events, unless medical proof is presented. Plans to eliminate Monte Carlo and Hamburg as Masters Series events led to controversy and protests from players as well as organisers. Hamburg and Monte Carlo filed lawsuits against the ATP, and as a concession it was decided that Monte Carlo remains a Masters 1000 level event, with more prize money and 1000 ranking points, but it would no longer be a compulsory tournament for top-ranked players. Monte Carlo later dropped its suit. Hamburg was "reserved" to become a 500 level event in the summer. Hamburg did not accept this concession, but later lost its suit.
The 500 level includes tournaments at Rotterdam, Dubai, Acapulco, Memphis, Barcelona, Hamburg, Washington, Beijing, Tokyo, Basel and Valencia.
The ATP & ITF have declared that 2009 Davis Cup World Group and World Group Playoffs award a total of up to 500 points. Players accumulate points over the 4 rounds and the playoffs and these are counted as one of a player's four best results from the 500 level events. An additional 125 points are given to a player who wins all 8 live rubbers and wins the Davis Cup.
Otherwise, the domain name of their website was changed to "www.atpworldtour.com".

Schedule

This is the complete schedule of events on the 2009 calendar, with player progression documented from the quarterfinals stage.
;Key
Grand Slam tournaments
ATP World Tour Finals
ATP World Tour Masters 1000
ATP World Tour 500
ATP World Tour 250
Team events

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

Statistical information

These tables present the number of singles, doubles, and mixed doubles total number of titles cumulated importance of those titles a singles > doubles > mixed doubles hierarchy; 4) alphabetical order.

Key

Titles won by player

Titles won by nation

Title information

The following players won their first main circuit title in singles, doubles, or mixed doubles:
;Singles
;Doubles
;Mixed Doubles
The following players defended a main circuit title in singles, doubles, or mixed doubles:
These are the ATP Rankings of the top twenty singles players, doubles players, and the top ten doubles teams on the ATP Tour, at the end of the 2008 ATP Tour, and of the 2009 season, with number of rankings points, number of tournaments played, year-end ranking in 2008, highest and lowest position during the season, and number of spots gained or lost from the 2008 to the 2009 year-end rankings. The 2008 year-end rankings include the number of points under the 2008 points system, and doubled, as they were at the end of the year by the ATP, to fit the 2009 points system. The doubled year-end rankings were never officially published though, as the first rankings of 2009 already counted the drop of the 2008 season openers' points due to a calendar change.

Singles

Doubles (Individual)

Doubles

Prize money leaders

#CountryPlayerSinglesDoublesYear-to-date
1.Roger Federer$8,761,805$6,305$8,768,110
2.Rafael Nadal$6,414,604$51,911$6,466,515
3.Novak Djokovic$5,438,063$38,408$5,476,471
4.Juan Martín del Potro$4,712,743$40,344$4,753,087
5.Andy Murray$4,397,231$23,826$4,421,057
6.Nikolay Davydenko$3,636,773$22,387$3,659,160
7.USAAndy Roddick$2,333,357$145,362$2,478,719
8.Robin Söderling$2,294,548$19,237$2,313,785
9.Fernando Verdasco$1,863,864$52,766$1,916,630
10.Jo-Wilfried Tsonga$1,633,191$185,361$1,818,552

Statistics leaders

As of December 21, 2009.

Best 5 Matches by ATPWorldTour.com

Point distribution

Following is a list of notable players or top 50 who announced their retirement from professional tennis during the 2009 season: