Next Generation ATP Finals
Tournament information
Founded2017 (2017)
Editions5
LocationMilan, Italy (2017–2022)
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (2023–2027)
VenuePalaLido (2017–2022)
King Abdullah Sports City (2023–2027)
CategoryExhibition
SurfaceHard (indoor)
Draw8S
Prize moneyUS$2,000,000 (2023)
Websitenextgenatpfinals.com
Current champions (2023)
SinglesSerbia Hamad Medjedovic

The Next Generation ATP Finals (branded as the Next Gen ATP Finals) is an annual men's professional exhibition tennis tournament organized by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the best 21-and-under players of the season. The event debuted in 2017 at the PalaLido in Milan, where it was also staged for the next four editions, before it was moved to King Abdullah Sports City in Jeddah, beginning in 2023.

Ranking points, prize money and other features

The tournament does not distribute points for the ATP rankings for the participants. The ATP does not count it as an official ATP Tour tournament victory, but matches count towards official win–loss season record. Prize money worth US $2,275,000 is distributed and counts to the players' totals. From the beginning, the tournament regularly has incorporated new and experimental features that may or may not be introduced into other tennis events later on. It pioneered the implementation of electronic line-calling (so called 'Hawk-Eye Live' completely replacing human line-judges) back in 2017.[1] Other experimental features include scoring systems different from recognized tennis matches, players communicating with their coaches via headphones, and so on.

History

Following a competitive bid process, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) announced that the Italian Tennis Federation, in association with the Italian Olympic Committee, would organise a new ATP tournament featuring the world’s top 21-and-under singles players of the ATP Tour season. The first five editions of the Tournament were hosted in Milan, Italy from 2017 to 2022.[2] Already in the first year, a special circumstance occurred. The 20-year-old Alexander Zverev played such a successful season that he was qualified at the same time for the Next Generation ATP Finals and for the ATP Finals of the best eight players from 2017. As the events were dated close and scheduled directly one after the other, the Hamburg native opted for the latter option.[3]

Format

Played over five days, the format for the competition consists of two round robin groups, followed by the semi-finals and final. Played on a singles-only court, the competition features the best seven qualified 21-and-under players of the season, plus one wild card.[4]

Rules

A number of rule changes from the normal ATP format are used for the competition:[4]

Qualification

The Top 7 players in the Emirates ATP Race to Milan will qualify. The eighth spot will be reserved for a wild card, the winner of a qualifying tournament. Eligible players must be 21-and-under as of the end of that calendar year (born 2001 or later for 2022 edition).[6]

Results

Singles

Venue Year Champion Runner-up Score in final
Milan 2017 South Korea Chung Hyeon Russia Andrey Rublev 3–4(5–7), 4–3(7–2), 4–2, 4–2
2018 Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas Australia Alex de Minaur 2–4, 4–1, 4–3(7–3), 4–3(7–3)
2019 Italy Jannik Sinner Australia Alex de Minaur 4–2, 4–1, 4–2
2020 No competition due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021 Spain Carlos Alcaraz United States Sebastian Korda 4–3(7–5), 4–2, 4–2
2022 United States Brandon Nakashima Czech Republic Jiří Lehečka 4–3(7–5), 4–3(8–6), 4–2
Jeddah 2023 Serbia Hamad Medjedovic France Arthur Fils 3–4(6–8), 4–1, 4–2, 3–4(9–11), 4–1

Next Gen ATP Finals appearances

Key
W Winner
F Runner-up
SF Lost in semi-finals
RR Lost in Round Robin group stage
(A) Alternate (did not play from the beginning)
(A') Alternate (played from the beginning, original player withdrew before the tournament)
(R) Withdrew during the tournament
(WC) Entered as a Wildcard
(NP) Did not play
Older format (2017–2018 only)
3rd Won third place match
4th Lost third place match
Note

When there are more than eight players listed for any year, it is usually due to withdrawal by one or more players because of injury. When a player withdraws early in the tournament, his place is filled by the next-highest qualifier. Participants are listed in order of number of appearances and best result. The 2020 edition was not played due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Player # Best
result
Years
Year of best result underlined (Wins in bold)
Qualified
but not played
W–L
United States Brandon Nakashima 2 W 2021, 2022 7–2
Russia Andrey Rublev 2 F 2017, 2018 6–4
Australia Alex de Minaur 2 F 2018, 2019 8–2
United States Frances Tiafoe 2 SF 2018, 2019 3–4
Switzerland Dominic Stricker 2 SF 2022(A'), 2023 4–4
Italy Lorenzo Musetti 2 RR 2021, 2022 2023 2–4
South Korea Chung Hyeon 1 W 2017 5–0
Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas 1 W 2018 2019 5–0
Italy Jannik Sinner 1 W 2019 (WC)[7] 2021, 2022 4–1
Spain Carlos Alcaraz 1 W 2021 2022, 2023 5–0
Serbia Hamad Medjedovic 1 W 2023 5–0
United States Sebastian Korda 1 F 2021 4–1
Czech Republic Jiří Lehečka 1 F 2022 3–2
France Arthur Fils 1 F 2023 4–1
Russia Daniil Medvedev 1 3rd 2017(A') 2–2
Croatia Borna Ćorić 1 4th 2017 3–1
Spain Jaume Munar 1 4th 2018(A') 1–4
Serbia Miomir Kecmanović 1 SF 2019(A') 2–2
Argentina Sebastián Báez 1 SF 2021(A') 2–2
United Kingdom Jack Draper 1 SF 2022 2–2
France Luca Van Assche 1 SF 2023 2–2
Russia Karen Khachanov 1 RR 2017 1–2
Canada Denis Shapovalov 1 RR 2017 2018, 2019 1–2
United States Jared Donaldson 1 RR 2017 0–3
Italy Gianluigi Quinzi 1 RR 2017(WC) 0–3
United States Taylor Fritz 1 RR 2018 1–2
Italy Liam Caruana 1 RR 2018(WC) 0–3
Poland Hubert Hurkacz 1 RR 2018(A') 1–2
France Ugo Humbert 1 RR 2019 1–2
Norway Casper Ruud 1 RR 2019 1–2
Sweden Mikael Ymer 1 RR 2019(A') 1–2
Spain Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 1 RR 2019(A') 1–2
Argentina Juan Manuel Cerúndolo 1 RR 2021 0–3
Denmark Holger Rune 1 RR 2021(A') 2022, 2023 1–2
France Hugo Gaston 1 RR 2021(A') 0–3
Italy Francesco Passaro 1 RR 2022(A') 1–2
Chinese Taipei Tseng Chun-hsin 1 RR 2022 0–3
Italy Matteo Arnaldi 1 RR 2022(A') 0–3
Italy Flavio Cobolli 1 RR 2023 1–2
Italy Luca Nardi 1 RR 2023 1–2
Jordan Abdullah Shelbayh 1 RR 2023(WC) 1–2
United States Alex Michelsen 1 RR 2023 0–3
Germany Alexander Zverev 0 2017, 2018 0–0
Canada Félix Auger-Aliassime 0 2019, 2021 0–0
United States Jenson Brooksby 0 2021 0–0
United States Ben Shelton 0 2023 0–0

Subsequent achievements of Next Gen ATP Finals players

Rankings

World No. 1s

Player Next Gen appearance Achieved World No. 1 Ref.
Russia Daniil Medvedev 2017 28 February 2022 [8]
Spain Carlos Alcaraz 2021 12 September 2022 [9]

Top Ten

Player Next Gen appearance Highest Ranking Ref.
Norway Casper Ruud 2019 2 [10]
Germany Alexander Zverev 2017, 2018 [11]
Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas 2018, 2019 3 [12]
Denmark Holger Rune 2021, 2022 4
Italy Jannik Sinner 2019, 2021, 2022
United States Taylor Fritz 2018 5
Russia Andrey Rublev 2017, 2018
Canada Félix Auger-Aliassime 2019, 2021 6
Russia Karen Khachanov 2017 8
Poland Hubert Hurkacz 2018 9
Canada Denis Shapovalov 2017, 2018, 2019 10
United States Frances Tiafoe 2018, 2019

Grand Slams

Grand Slam winners

Player Next Gen appearance Grand Slam titles won Ref.
AU FR WB US Total
Russia Daniil Medvedev 2017 2021 1 [13]
Spain Carlos Alcaraz 2021 2023 2022 2 [14]

Grand Slam finalists

  • Bold: Player won the tournament
  • Number of titles won are within parentheses
Player Next Gen appearances Grand Slam finals Ref.
AU FR WB US Total
Russia Daniil Medvedev 2017 2021, 2022 2019, 2021, 2023 5 (1) [13]
Germany Alexander Zverev 2017[lower-alpha 1], 2018[lower-alpha 1] 2020 1 (0) [15]
Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas 2018, 2019[lower-alpha 1] 2023 2021 2 (0) [16]
Norway Casper Ruud 2019 2022, 2023 2022 3 (0) [17]
Spain Carlos Alcaraz 2021 2023 2022 2 (2) [14]
  1. 1 2 3 Player qualified but withdrew

See also

References

  1. Herman, Martyn (2017-09-18). "Tennis: Electronic calls to replace line judges at Next Gen Finals". Reuters. Retrieved 2021-08-28.
  2. "Milan To Host Inaugural Season-Ending Next Gen ATP Finals From 2017 – ATP World Tour – Tennis".
  3. "Two Chances". 2017.
  4. 1 2 "ATP Announces Trial Of Rule Changes & Innovation For Next Gen ATP Finals In Milan". ATP. 16 May 2017.
  5. "ATP Announces 2020 ATP Tour Calendar". atptour.com. March 13, 2019. Retrieved March 29, 2020. In addition, all ATP tournaments on the 2020 calendar will feature the Shot Clock, one of many innovations stemming from the award-winning Next Gen ATP Finals in Milan
  6. "Introducing Next Gen ATP Finals". ATP Tour. 19 November 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  7. As of the October 28 deadline, Sinner reached the ranking of 8th player born in 1998 or later, available for the tournament.
  8. Tennis.com. "Ranking Reaction: Daniil Medvedev is officially No. 1 on the ATP rankings". Tennis.com. Retrieved 2022-03-10.
  9. "Carlos Alcaraz Wins US Open Title & Rises To World No. 1 | ATP Tour | Tennis". ATP Tour. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  10. "Alcaraz, 19, wins US Open; youngest-ever No. 1". 11 September 2022. Archived from the original on 12 September 2022. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  11. ATP Staff (8 June 2022). "Zverev Faces Extended Break After Ankle Surgery". ATP Tour. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  12. https://www.atptour.com/en/players/stefanos-tsitsipas/te51/overview
  13. 1 2 "Daniil Medvedev | Titles and Finals | ATP Tour | Tennis". atptour.com. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  14. 1 2 "Carlos Alcaraz | Titles and Finals | ATP Tour | Tennis". atptour.com. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  15. "Alexander Zverev | Titles and Finals | ATP Tour | Tennis". atptour.com. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  16. "Stefanos Tsitsipas | Titles and Finals | ATP Tour | Tennis". atptour.com. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  17. "Casper Ruud | Titles and Finals | ATP Tour | Tennis". atptour.com. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
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