Best Win Percentage at Grand Slams
Best Win Percentage at Grand Slams
At the top of the Open Era list for Best Win Percentage at Grand Slams stands Bjorn Borg, who compiled 141-17 at the majors for a winning percentage of 89.24%. Borgโs number is the classic Grand Slam benchmark because it was built on extraordinary efficiency, with a peak that came alive especially at Roland Garros and Wimbledon.
Behind him comes Novak Djokovic, the large-sample standard, with 404-57 and 87.64%. Djokovicโs case is different from Borgโs: he has carried that level across a far bigger body of major matches, while still protecting an elite winning rate across all four Slam tournaments.
Very close behind is Rafael Nadal, at 314-44 and 87.71%, driven above all by his unmatched Roland Garros record. Then comes
Roger Federer, with 369-60 and 86.01%, the model of long-run Grand Slam consistency.
Just behind that quartet, Rod Laver,
Pete Sampras,
Jimmy Connors and
Ivan Lendl keep the all-time majors conversation dense with different kinds of greatness: pure shotmaking, big-match violence, relentless volume and long career excellence.
| # | Player | Wins | Losses | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 141 | 17 | 89.24% | |
| 2 | 314 | 44 | 87.71% | |
| 3 | 404 | 57 | 87.64% | |
| 4 | 91 | 13 | 87.50% | |
| 5 | 369 | 60 | 86.01% | |
| 6 | 60 | 10 | 85.71% | |
| 7 | 203 | 38 | 84.23% | |
| 8 | 92 | 19 | 82.88% | |
| 9 | 233 | 49 | 82.62% | |
| 10 | 222 | 49 | 81.92% | |
| 11 | 93 | 21 | 81.58% | |
| 12 | 167 | 38 | 81.46% | |
| 13 | 224 | 53 | 80.87% | |
| 14 | 93 | 22 | 80.87% | |
| 15 | 163 | 40 | 80.30% | |
| 16 | 144 | 37 | 79.56% | |
| 17 | 178 | 47 | 79.11% | |
| 18 | 106 | 28 | 79.10% | |
| 19 | 200 | 57 | 77.82% | |
| 20 | 125 | 40 | 75.76% |