ATP Ranking: Jannik Sinner remains world No. 1, the ranking

ATP Ranking Jannik Sinner remains world No 1 the ranking

Jannik Sinner retains his place as world number one despite his quarter-final defeat

After a tournament of Wimbledon which saw Carlos Alcaraz retain his title, the ATP ranking of this Monday, July 15, sees its top 10 move slightly. If the first five remain identical, with Sinner ahead of Djokovic, Alcaraz, Zverev and Medvedev, it is the Australian Alex de Minaur who becomes the sixth player in the world, gaining three places. As a result, Andrey Rublev and Casper Ruud lose two and one place respectively.

There are, however, many changes from the world Top 15-20. Ugo Humbert drops back to fifteenth while Lorenzo Musetti climbs nine places to slip just behind the Frenchman in the ranking. Holger Rune continues to fall and loses two more places. He is now 17th. The biggest progressions are for Ruusuvuori (70th, +17), Roberto Bautista Agut (75th, +37) and Comesana (100th, +22).

Among the other French, Mannarino is 25th (-1) and sees Arthur Son get closer (28th, +6). Gaël Monfils also gains two places (31st) and gets closer to the seeded players for the US Open. Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard continues his meteoric rise and gains 14 places. He is 44th and enters the top 50 for the first time. Corentin Moutet (63rd, -2) and Arthur Rinderknech (66th, +10) are not far behind either. Hugo Gaston loses 10 places (81st) while Arthur Cazaux gains 6 places (92nd). Constant Lestienne is the last Frenchman in the Top 100 (94th, -2).

What is the ATP ranking?

Jannik Sinner has been world number 1 since Roland-Garros, but the fight is set to be fierce. The ATP ranking:

What is the ATP Race ranking?

The first ATP Race ranking is led by the Italian Jannik Sinner. With his Roland-Garros and Wimbledon double, Carlos Alcaraz is getting closer to the Italian.

What are the differences between the ATP ranking and the Race ranking?

Unlike the “classic” ATP ranking, which is updated every week taking into account the points won over the previous 52 weeks, the ATP Race ranking only takes into account the points won during the current season.

The ATP ranking consists of awarding points based on each player’s performance during major competitions. In total, the points accumulated are valid for 52 weeks.

Each tournament awards a different number of points. In Grand Slam, the winner acquires 2000 points, the finalist 1200, the semi-finalist 720, … In Master 1000 victory allows to obtain 1000 points, the final 600, … A victory in ATP 500 earns 500 points, 250 for ATP 250, between 50 and 175 points for Challenger tournaments and between 15 and 25 points for Futures tournaments.

The ranking is updated every week and the points are valid for one year. The ATP ranking therefore corresponds to all the points obtained by a player over the last 52 weeks. Each Monday, the player therefore loses the points obtained one year previously.

lnte1