Skip to content

Eight wonders

Sky Sports profiles each of the eight contenders for the ATP World Tour Finals at the O2 Arena.

Sky Sports profiles the eight contenders for the ATP World Tour Finals at the O2 Arena.

Latest Tennis Stories

Novak Djokovic

The Serb has taken the tennis world by storm this season, winning three of the four Grand Slams and claiming a record five Masters events. However, his remarkable efforts seem to have taken their toll with an ongoing shoulder injury scuppering his chances of title glory in Basel and Paris. Click here for full Novak Djokovic profile

Rafael Nadal

Despite being world number two, Nadal is only the fourth favourite with Sky Bet to triumph in the O2 Arena following a relatively disappointing year. The world number two has also never won the season-ending event before with his best effort coming last year when he was beaten in three sets by Roger Federer. Click here for full Rafael Nadal profile.

Andy Murray

With Djokovic battling injury, Murray dominated the Asian stretch of the Tour with titles in Bangkok, Tokyo and Shanghai, but came unstuck in Paris. The world number three has lost by the slightest of margins in his last two visits to the O2 Arena, failing to make the knockout stages on games difference in 2009 before losing in a third-set tie-break to Nadal in the semis the following year. Click here for full Andy Murray profile

Roger Federer

The only active player with a better indoor record than Murray is the Swiss master Federer, who has won 17 indoor titles during his remarkable career. Federer will be looking to etch another record in the history books in London by winning the event for a sixth time, which would put him one clear of Ivan Lendl and Pete Sampras. Click here for full Roger Federer profile

David Ferrer

Ferrer was the first out of the chasing pack to book his place in the Tour Finals after another solid yet unspectacular year, making the fourth round of all four Grand Slams. Spain's number two reached the final in his first appearance at the season-ending event back in 2007 but failed to make it past the round-robin stage in his only appearance since last year. Click here for full David Ferrer profile

Tomas Berdych

At a career high of world number six, Berdych is proving somewhat of a late bloomer on the ATP Tour with appearances in the quarter-finals of all but two of this year's Masters events. However, the Czech number one has just the single Masters title to his name, from back in 2005 in Paris, so will do well to improve on his round-robin exit at the season's finale last year. Click here for full Tomas Berdych profile

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga

Somewhat of a specialist on the surface, Tsonga looks the danger man of the 'other four' with five of his seven career titles coming indoors. The Frenchman seems to rise to the challenge of taking on the game's big names, having already beaten Federer and Nadal this year. Click here for full Jo-Wilfried-Tsonga profile

Mardy Fish

Fish is the only debutant in this year's event following his most impressive season to date. The 29-year-old flourished under the status of America's number one with one title and two final appearances. However, Fish's fine form has been halted by injury in the build-up to the 02 Arena-based event with his last victory coming over a month ago. Click here for full Mardy Fish profile

Around Sky