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Laver Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
International men's indoor tennis tournament
Tennis tournament
Laver Cup
Current event2025 Laver Cup
ATP Tour
Founded2017 (2017)
Editions8 (2025)
LocationEuropean city, world city rotation
SurfaceHard (indoor)
Draw2 teams (Team Europe vs. Team World)
Websitehttps://lavercup.com/
Men's pro tennis
  • National representation

TheLaver Cup is an international indoorhard court men'steam tennis tournament betweenTeam Europe andTeam World, the latter of which is composed of players from all other continents except Europe. Held annually since 2017,[1] the tournament is intended to be theRyder Cup of the tennis world.[2] It normally takes place two weeks after theUS Open, with the location rotating between various host cities (that usually do not have anATP Tour event); alternating yearly between European cities and cities in the rest of the world.[3]

In addition to the guaranteed participation fees which are based upon the players'ATP rankings, each member of the winning team receives $250,000 in prize money, but the tournament itself does not count towards the players' point totals in theATP Tour for that year.[4][5] In May 2019, the Laver Cup became an officially sanctioned ATP Tour event,[6] and the Laver Cup and the ATP renewed their agreement in 2024.[7]

Matches during the Laver Cup tournament differ from conventional three-set matches played on the ATP Tour; in the event when the match is tied at one set all, a 10-point "match tiebreak" is played instead of a deciding final set.[8] In addition, unlike conventional ATP tour matches, coaching of match participants is commonly applied courtside by teammates and team captains.

Format

[edit]

The competition pits six top European players against six of their counterparts from the rest of the world. Each team is led by a team captain, who is a tennis legend. Three of the six players qualify based on their ATP singles ranking as of the Monday following theFrench Open in June. Three are "captain's picks", announced by the start of theUS Open, in August.

There are 12 matches played over three days (nine singles and three doubles). Each match victory on day 1 is worth one point, on day 2 two points, and on day 3 three points. The first team to claim 13 points wins the tournament. Therefore, the winning team can only be decided on day 3.

There are six singles matches on the first two days (3 each day) and all six team players plays one of those matches. No player plays singles more than twice. At least four of the six team members take part in doubles. So, one team player (doubles specialist) could play all three doubles matches with three other team players. All matches start as two sets, a 10-point “match tiebreak” is played if the match is level at one set all.

In the event both teams are tied at 12 points each, a fifth match known as “The Decider” is played on day 3, whereby one set is played as a regular set with ad scoring and a tiebreak.

In the event that only one match is required on Sunday (last previous occurrence was at the2023 Laver Cup), an exhibition match is played following the trophy ceremony.[3]

Trophy

[edit]

The Laver Cup trophy was designed and made by London-based Goldsmiths and Silversmiths,Thomas Lyte, in collaboration with London design agency, Dreamwerk. The trophy contains a number of distinctive features that directly reflectRod Laver's career. The trophy is shaped to reflect Laver’s famous ‘Rocket’ moniker, while the 200 notches around the rim of the trophy individually signify the number of career titles won by the Australian.[9]

The trophy features four rings at its base, each of which represents Laver’s Grand Slam sweeps in 1962 and 1969. Molten metal from part of Laver’s New England Merchant Bank Trophy from the US Pro Tennis Championships was also incorporated into the body of the trophy. It took over 400 hours to complete and stands at a height of 66cm and weighs 14kg.[10]

Thomas Lyte produced a series of mini-trophies for the winners of the competition. Mirroring the Laver Cup itself, the half-height miniatures were first awarded to the winners of the 2017 tournament.[11]

Tournament schedule

[edit]
Laver Cup tournament schedule[12]
DaySessionMatchesStart time
(local time)
Points
per match
Points
available
1Day2 singles1 p.m.14
Night1 singles, 1 doubles7 p.m.
2Day2 singles1 p.m.28
Night1 singles, 1 doubles7 p.m.
3Day1 doubles, 3 singles12 p.m.312

History

[edit]

The tournament is named after AustralianRod Laver, a tennis player widely regarded as one of the greatest in thehistory of the sport (He won all four major titles in the same calendar year, winning theGrand Slam twice in singles, in 1962 and 1969; the latter remains the only time a man has done so in the Open Era.)Roger Federer's management company, TEAM8, Brazilian businessmanJorge Paulo Lemann, andTennis Australia partnered to create the Laver Cup.[13] Roger Federer was inspired to create a tennis team tournament based on the biennialRyder Cupgolf tournament, which features the best golfers from the United States playing against the best golfers from Europe.[14] However, Laver Cup differs as it is purely an invitational event based on past historical performances; selection of (and the playing agreement with) the tournament participants are not automatically based from the highest ranked players of the recent ATP Tour world rankings.

FormerrivalsBjörn Borg of Sweden (Team Europe) andJohn McEnroe of the United States (Team World) were announced to serve as captains for at least the first three editions.[15] After the 2019 edition, they announced that they would reprise their roles as team captains for a fourth straight edition.[16]

2017: Inaugural edition

[edit]
TheO2 Arena in Prague during the first Laver Cup.[17]
Main article:2017 Laver Cup

The first edition was held inPrague from 22 to 24 September 2017, at theO2 Arena. Team Europe defeated Team World 15–9. Despite the 6 point score difference, this was a very tight battle from day 1. In the last match, Roger Federer defeated Nick Kyrgios 4–6, 7–6(8–6), [11–9] after coming back from 8–5 down in the final tiebreak, as well as saving a match point at 9–8.[18]

Team Europe
Captain:SwedenBjörn Borg
PlayerRank
SpainRafael Nadal1
SwitzerlandRoger Federer2
GermanyAlexander Zverev4
CroatiaMarin Čilić5
AustriaDominic Thiem7
Czech RepublicTomáš Berdych19
Team World
Captain:United StatesJohn McEnroe
PlayerRank
United StatesSam Querrey16
United StatesJohn Isner17
AustraliaNick Kyrgios20
United StatesJack Sock21
CanadaDenis Shapovalov51
United StatesFrances Tiafoe72
  • Singles rankings as of 18 September 2017

2018

[edit]
Main article:2018 Laver Cup

The second edition was held inChicago from 21 to 23 September 2018, at theUnited Center. Team Europe defeated Team World 13–8.

Team Europe
Captain:SwedenBjörn Borg
PlayerRank
SwitzerlandRoger Federer2
SerbiaNovak Djokovic3
GermanyAlexander Zverev5
BulgariaGrigor Dimitrov7
BelgiumDavid Goffin11
United KingdomKyle Edmund16
Team World
Captain:United StatesJohn McEnroe
PlayerRank
South AfricaKevin Anderson9
United StatesJohn Isner10
ArgentinaDiego Schwartzman14
United StatesJack Sock17
AustraliaNick Kyrgios27
United StatesFrances Tiafoe40
  • Singles rankings as of 17 September 2018

2019

[edit]
2019 Laver Cup at the Palexpo
Main article:2019 Laver Cup

The third edition was held inGeneva from 20 to 22 September 2019, at thePalexpo. Team Europe defeated Team World 13−11.

Team Europe
Captain:SwedenBjörn Borg
PlayerRank
SpainRafael Nadal2
SwitzerlandRoger Federer3
AustriaDominic Thiem5
GermanyAlexander Zverev6
GreeceStefanos Tsitsipas7
ItalyFabio Fognini11
Team World
Captain:United StatesJohn McEnroe
PlayerRank
United StatesJohn Isner20
CanadaMilos Raonic24
AustraliaNick Kyrgios27
United StatesTaylor Fritz30
CanadaDenis Shapovalov33
United StatesJack Sock210
  • Singles rankings as of 16 September 2019

2021

[edit]
Main article:2021 Laver Cup

The fourth edition was held inBoston from 24 to 26 September 2021, at theTD Garden.[19] Team Europe defeated Team World 14−1.

Team Europe
Captain:SwedenBjörn Borg
PlayerRank
RussiaDaniil Medvedev2
GreeceStefanos Tsitsipas3
GermanyAlexander Zverev4
RussiaAndrey Rublev5
ItalyMatteo Berrettini7
NorwayCasper Ruud10
Team World
Captain:United StatesJohn McEnroe
PlayerRank
CanadaFélix Auger-Aliassime11
CanadaDenis Shapovalov12
ArgentinaDiego Schwartzman15
United StatesReilly Opelka19
United StatesJohn Isner22
AustraliaNick Kyrgios95
  • Singles rankings as of 20 September 2021

2022

[edit]
Team World gets their first win at the 2022 Laver Cup.
Main article:2022 Laver Cup

The fifth edition was held inLondon from 23 to 25 September 2022, atthe O2 Arena.

This tournament marked the retirement ofRoger Federer.[20] Team World defeated Team Europe for the first time by a margin of 13−8.

Team Europe
Captain:SwedenBjörn Borg
PlayerRank
NorwayCasper Ruud2
SpainRafael Nadal*3
GreeceStefanos Tsitsipas6
SerbiaNovak Djokovic7
United KingdomAndy Murray43
SwitzerlandRoger Federer*nr
ItalyMatteo Berrettini*15
United KingdomCameron Norrie*8
Team World
Captain:United StatesJohn McEnroe
PlayerRank
United StatesTaylor Fritz12
CanadaFélix Auger-Aliassime13
ArgentinaDiego Schwartzman17
United StatesFrances Tiafoe19
AustraliaAlex de Minaur22
United StatesJack Sock128
  • Singles rankings as of 19 September 2022
  • nr = not ranked
  • * = Federer and Nadal only played a doubles match on Day 1, and were replaced by alternates Berrettini and Norrie from Day 2.

2023

[edit]
Main article:2023 Laver Cup

The sixth edition was held inVancouver from 22 to 24 September 2023, atRogers Arena. Team World defeated Team Europe 13−2.

Team Europe
Captain:SwedenBjörn Borg
PlayerRank
Andrey Rublev6
NorwayCasper Ruud9
PolandHubert Hurkacz16
SpainAlejandro Fokina25
FranceArthur Fils44
FranceGaël Monfils142
Team World
Captain:United StatesJohn McEnroe
PlayerRank
United StatesTaylor Fritz8
United StatesFrances Tiafoe11
United StatesTommy Paul13
CanadaFélix Auger-Aliassime14
United StatesBen Shelton19
ArgentinaFrancisco Cerúndolo21
  • Singles rankings as of 18 September 2023

2024

[edit]
Main article:2024 Laver Cup

The seventh edition was held inBerlin from 20 to 22 September 2024, atUber Arena. Team Europe defeated Team World 13–11.

Team Europe
Captain:SwedenBjörn Borg
PlayerRank
GermanyAlexander Zverev2
SpainCarlos Alcaraz3
Daniil Medvedev5
NorwayCasper Ruud9
BulgariaGrigor Dimitrov10
GreeceStefanos Tsitsipas12
Team World
Captain:United StatesJohn McEnroe
PlayerRank
United StatesTaylor Fritz7
United StatesFrances Tiafoe16
United StatesBen Shelton17
ChileAlejandro Tabilo22
ArgentinaFrancisco Cerúndolo31
AustraliaThanasi Kokkinakis78
  • Singles rankings as of 16 September 2024

2025

[edit]
Main article:2025 Laver Cup

The eighth edition was held inSan Francisco from 19 to 21 September 2025, atChase Center. Team World defeated Team Europe 15–9.

Team Europe
Captain:FranceYannick Noah
PlayerRank
SpainCarlos Alcaraz1
GermanyAlexander Zverev3
DenmarkHolger Rune11
NorwayCasper Ruud12
Czech RepublicJakub Menšík17
ItalyFlavio Cobolli25
Team World
Captain:United StatesAndre Agassi
PlayerRank
United StatesTaylor Fritz5
AustraliaAlex de Minaur8
ArgentinaFrancisco Cerúndolo21
United StatesAlex Michelsen32
BrazilJoão Fonseca42
United StatesReilly Opelka62
  • Singles rankings as of 15 September 2025

2026

[edit]
Main article:2026 Laver Cup

The ninth edition will be held inLondon from 25 to 27 September 2026, atthe O2 Arena.

Team Europe
Captain:FranceYannick Noah
PlayerRank
SpainCarlos Alcaraz1
Team World
Captain:United StatesAndre Agassi
PlayerRank
United StatesTaylor Fritz6
  • Singles rankings as of 17 November 2025

Records and statistics

[edit]

Tournament editions

[edit]
YearWinnersScoreRunners-upLocationVenue
2017Team Europe15–9 Team WorldPrague, Czech RepublicO2 Arena
2018Team Europe13–8 Team WorldChicago, United StatesUnited Center
2019Team Europe13–11 Team WorldGeneva, SwitzerlandPalexpo
2020No competition due to theCOVID-19 pandemic
2021Team Europe14–1 Team WorldBoston, United StatesTD Garden
2022Team World13–8 Team EuropeLondon, United KingdomThe O2 Arena
2023Team World13–2 Team EuropeVancouver, CanadaRogers Arena
2024Team Europe13–11 Team WorldBerlin, GermanyUber Arena
2025Team World15–9 Team EuropeSan Francisco, United StatesChase Center
2026 London, United KingdomThe O2 Arena
Laver Cups held in Europe

Team statistics

[edit]
TeamMatches (points) wonLaver
Cups
won
Day 1 (1 point)Day 2 (2 points)Day 3 (3 points)Total
SglDblTotalSglDblTotalSglDblTotalSglDblTotal
Team Europe17 (17)2 (2)19 (19)13 (26)3 (6)16 (32)9 (27)3 (9)12 (36)39 (70)8 (17)45 (87)5
Team World7 (7)6 (6)13 (13)11 (22)5 (10)16 (32)7 (21)5 (15)12 (36)25 (50)16 (31)41 (81)3

Captains statistics

[edit]
CaptainTeamNatFirst
year
Last
year
Laver Cups
AppWon
Björn BorgEuropeSweden2017202475
John McEnroeWorldUnited States2017202472
Andre AgassiWorldUnited States2025202511
Yannick NoahEuropeFrance2025202510

Players

[edit]

Records

[edit]
RecordRecord holder(s)
Most appearances6GermanyAlexander Zverev
Most Laver Cups won5Germany Alexander Zverev
Most total matches played16United StatesJack Sock,Germany Alexander Zverev
Most singles matches won7Germany Alexander Zverev
Most doubles matches won9United States Jack Sock
Most total matches won10United States Jack Sock
Best win percentage(minimum 6 matches)75%SpainCarlos Alcaraz,United StatesBen Shelton
Most singles points won17Germany Alexander Zverev
Most doubles points won19United States Jack Sock
Most total points won21Germany Alexander Zverev
Most total points won in a tournament8Spain Carlos Alcaraz(2024)
Most total points won undefeated in a tournament7SwitzerlandRoger Federer(2017),AustraliaAlex de Minaur(2025)

Statistics

[edit]

Players are sorted by points win–loss. Players who are no longer active are shown initalics.

PlayerTeamNatFirst
year
Last
year
Laver CupsMPMatches win–lossPoints win–loss
AppWonSglDblTotalW%SglDblTotal
Alexander ZverevEuropeGermany2017202565167–42–39–756%17–94–521–14
Jack SockWorldUnited States2017202241161–39–310–663%1–419–520–9
Roger FedererEuropeSwitzerland2017202243126–02–48–467%15–03–818–8
John IsnerWorldUnited States2017202140122–54–16–650%5–1110–215–13
Taylor FritzWorldUnited States2019202653106–21–17–370%14–41–115–5
Carlos AlcarazEuropeSpain202420262183–13–16–275%8–27–115–3
Frances TiafoeWorldUnited States2017202452113–43–16–555%7–75–312–10
Ben SheltonWorldUnited States202320242182–14–16–275%4–28–312–5
Casper RuudEuropeNorway202120255294–12–26–367%5–16–411–5
Félix Auger-AliassimeWorldCanada202120233262–22–04–267%4–35–09–3
Alex de MinaurWorldAustralia202220252253–01–14–180%6–02–28–2
Nick KyrgiosWorldAustralia201720214091–43–14–544%2–95–27–11
Stefanos TsitsipasEuropeGreece201920244394–11–35–456%5–32–77–10
Rafael NadalEuropeSpain201720223272–11–33–443%4–32–46–7
Andrey RublevEuropeRussia202120232161–12–23–350%1–25–46–6
Matteo BerrettiniEuropeItaly202120222152–01–23–260%3–02–45–4
Novak DjokovicEuropeSerbia201820222151–21–12–340%2–52–14–6
Francisco CerúndoloWorldArgentina202320253243–10–03–175%4–30–04–3
Kevin AndersonWorldSouth Africa201820181031–11–02–167%2–31–03–3
Daniil MedvedevEuropeRussia202120242231–20–01–233%2–50–02–5
Alex MichelsenWorldUnited States202520251140–11–21–325%0–12–42–5
Jakub MenšíkEuropeCzech Republic202520251031–11–02–167%1–31–02–3
Dominic ThiemEuropeAustria201720192232–10–02–167%2–30–02–3
Grigor DimitrovEuropeBulgaria201820242232–00–12–167%2–00–22–2
Alejandro TabiloWorldChile202420241020–11–01–150%0–12–02–1
Denis ShapovalovWorldCanada201720213060–31–21–517%0–41–41–8
Marin ČilićEuropeCroatia201720171121–00–11–150%1–00–31–3
David GoffinEuropeBelgium201820181121–00–11–150%1–00–21–2
Tommy PaulWorldUnited States202320231120–11–01–150%0–21–01–2
Kyle EdmundEuropeUnited Kingdom201820181111–00–01–0100%1–00–01–0
João FonsecaWorldBrazil202520251111–00–01–0100%1–00–01–0
Reilly OpelkaWorldUnited States202120252140–20–20–40%0–20–60–8
Hubert HurkaczEuropePoland202320231030–10–20–30%0–20–50–7
Sam QuerreyWorldUnited States201720171030–20–10–30%0–50–20–7
Tomáš BerdychEuropeCzech Republic201720171130–10–20–30%0–20–40–6
Milos RaonicWorldCanada201920191020–20–00–20%0–50–00–5
Andy MurrayEuropeUnited Kingdom202220221020–10–10–20%0–10–30–4
Holger RuneEuropeDenmark202520251020–10–10–20%0–20–20–4
Gaël MonfilsEuropeFrance202320231020–10–10–20%0–10–20–3
Diego SchwartzmanWorldArgentina201820223130–30–00–30%0–30–00–3
Arthur FilsEuropeFrance202320231020–10–10–20%0–10–10–2
Cameron NorrieEuropeUnited Kingdom202220221010–10–00–10%0–20–00–2
Flavio CobolliEuropeItaly202520251010–10–00–10%0–10–00–1
Fabio FogniniEuropeItaly201920191110–10–00–10%0–10–00–1
Alejandro FokinaEuropeSpain202320231010–10–00–10%0–10–00–1
Thanasi KokkinakisWorldAustralia202420241010–10–00–10%0–10–00–1
PlayerTeamNatFirstLastAppWonMPSglDblTotalW%SglDblTotal

Participating nations

[edit]
NationTeamNumber of players
201720182019202120222023202420252026TotalDiff.
ArgentinaWorld11111162
AustraliaWorld111111173
AustriaEurope1121
BelgiumEurope111
BrazilWorld111
BulgariaEurope1121
CanadaWorld1221173
ChileWorld111
CroatiaEurope111
Czech RepublicEurope1122
DenmarkEurope111
FranceEurope222
GermanyEurope11111161
Great BritainEurope1233
GreeceEurope111141
ItalyEurope111143
NorwayEurope1111151
PolandEurope111
RussiaEurope21142
SerbiaEurope1121
South AfricaWorld111
SpainEurope111111173
SwitzerlandEurope111141
United StatesWorld433234331269
Total(24 nations)1212121214121212210046

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Laver Cup to become an annual event".Laver Cup. 2018-07-10.
  2. ^"Laver Cup is our Ryder Cup, says Novak Djokovic". Sky Sports. Retrieved2018-09-25.
  3. ^ab"How Laver Cup Works".Laver Cup. Retrieved2021-09-23.
  4. ^"In Laver Cup's Debut, Europe Towers Over the World".New York Times. 2017-09-21.
  5. ^Clarey, Christopher (2017-09-24)."A Promising Debut for the Laver Cup, Buoyed by Two Timeless Stars".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2017-09-27.
  6. ^"Tennis: Laver Cup becomes official ATP event".Reuters. 2019-05-24.
  7. ^"Laver Cup & ATP announce five-year extension to partnership | ATP Tour | Tennis".
  8. ^Tignor, Steve."In Laver Cup, and now ATP Cup, the super-tiebreaker is having its day".Tennis.com. Retrieved2022-09-24.
  9. ^benloke (2019-07-17)."Laver Cup trophy shines at International Tennis Hall of Fame | News".Laver Cup. Retrieved2025-07-14.
  10. ^"Makers of the Laver Cup".Thomas Lyte. Retrieved2025-07-14.
  11. ^"International Tennis Hall of Fame".www.tennisfame.com. Retrieved2025-07-14.
  12. ^"Tournament Schedule".Laver Cup. Retrieved2022-09-24.
  13. ^"Dynamic Doubles Duo: Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal to team up in inaugural Laver Cup".Tennis.com. 2016-08-24.
  14. ^"In Spirit Of Ryder Cup, A Competition To Honor Rod Laver".New York Times. 2016-01-29.
  15. ^"What is the Laver Cup, why are Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal playing and how excited should we be about it?".The Telegraph. 2017-09-20.
  16. ^"Borg and McEnroe to extend Laver Cup rivalry".Laver Cup. 2019-09-22.
  17. ^"Breaking the boundaries: Laver Cup embraces innovation".Laver Cup. 2017-09-24. Retrieved2017-09-27.
  18. ^"Team Europe wins Laver Cup after epic Federer victory".Laver Cup. 2017-09-24. Retrieved2023-09-28.
  19. ^"Laver Cup Boston 2020 moved to 2021".Laver Cup. 2020-04-17.
  20. ^"Roger Federer bids emotional farewell in doubles defeat alongside Rafael Nadal".The Guardian. 24 September 2022.

External links

[edit]
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