
Novak Djokovic added his name to the history books once more Sunday at the Miami Open presented by Itau.
The Serbian defeated Jakub Mensik to become the third man on record to earn 100 tour-level titles, joining Jimmy Connors (109) and Roger Federer (103) in the small group. Djokovic now also stands alone with a record seven Miami trophies.
The 37-year-old now owns 73 'Big Titles', which are a combination of Grand Slam championships, trophies at the Nitto ATP Finals and ATP Masters 1000 tournaments, and Olympic singles gold medals. He has earned at least one Big Title in 17 of the past 19 seasons.
Djokovic has been chasing his historic 100th title since he took home the gold medal at last year's Paris Olympics. He had his first chance at the milestone in October in the Rolex Shanghai Masters final, where Jannik Sinner triumphed against him in straight sets.
But nearly 19 years after lifting his first tour-level trophy in 2006 at Amersfoort, Djokovic took advantage of his second chance at No. 100 against Mensik. This was his first hard-court victory since the 2023 Nitto ATP Finals.
Djokovic's win was his first at a Masters 1000 tournament since the 2023 Rolex Paris Masters. He has claimed 41 trophies at the level, five more than Rafael Nadal, who is second in series history (since 1990) with 36. Only three men — Djokovic (41), Nadal (36) and Roger Federer (28) — have won more than 20 Masters 1000 titles.
Djokovic has won one ‘Big Title’ for every 3.2 events played (73/230). Only one other player, Nadal (one per 3.5 events), has tallied Big Titles at a rate greater than one for every four events played.
Current and Former Champions' Big Titles Won (20+ Big Titles, Records Since 1990)
Player | Grand Slams | NATPF | 1000s | Total^ (Avg) |
N. Djokovic | 24/77 | 7/16 | 41/133 | 73/230 (3.2) |
R. Nadal | 22/67 | 0/11 | 36/128 | 59/208 (3.5) |
R. Federer | 20/81 | 6/17 | 28/138 | 54/240 (4.4) |
P. Sampras | 14/52 | 5/11 | 11/83 | 30/147 (4.9) |
A. Agassi | 8/61 | 1/13 | 17/90 | 27/164 (6.1) |
A. Murray | 3/61 | 1/8 | 14/120 | 20/191 (9.5) |
^Includes Olympic Games gold medals and tournament participations. Djokovic won Olympic singles gold in 2024, Murray in 2012 and 2016, Nadal in 2008 and Agassi in 1996.