FUT Champions Cup
64 (32 for each console)
$200k ($50k for the winner)
Five stages held from
Novemberand May.
Top four players qualify for
the next stage automatically.
Group and knockout stages for each console followed by a two-legged
final (one leg on each console).
Stage 1:
Stage 2:
Stage 3:
Stage 4:
Participants
Prize pool
Format
Holder
Tekkz
NRaseck 7
Ollelito
Zezinho
FIFA eNations Cup
20
$100k ($40k for the winner)
Two players per team - one PS4,
one Xbox.
Group stage ties are three-legged:
a 1v1 match on each console followed by a 2v2.
Knockout stage ties are two-legged: a 1v1 match on each console with 2v2 used as a tie-breaker.
Maestro
DaXe
Participants
Prize pool
Format
Holder
France
and
FIFA eClub World Cup
24
$100k ($40k for the winner)
Two players per team - one PS4, one Xbox.
Group stage ties are three-legged: a 1v1 match on each console followed by a 2v2.
Knockout stage ties are two-legged: a 1v1 match and a 2v2 match, with a second 1v1 used as a tie-breaker.
and
Joksan
Complexity Gaming
MaXe vip
Participants
Prize pool
Format
Holder
eChampions League
64
$280k ($100k for the winner)
Qualifiers, group stage and final contested as separate events.
Group and knockout stages for each console followed by a two-legged final (one leg on each console).
Chris Holly
Participants
Prize pool
Format
Holder
FIFA eWorld Cup
32 (16 for each console)
$500k ($250k for the winner)
Group and knockout stages for each console followed by a two-legged final (one leg on each console).
MoAuba
Participants
Prize pool
Format
Holder
Global Series play-offs
PS4:
nicolas99fc
Participants
Prize pool
Format
Holder
128 (64 for each console)
$500k ($75k for each console’s winner)
For each console, a group stage is used to eliminate half of the players.
The remaining 32 players on each console contest a single-match knockout stage to determine a winner.
Xbox:
Stokes
End of an era:
Based on the 2021 ATP Tour schedule
who will win the 2020 ATP Finals?
Quarter-finalist
To commemorate the end of the ATP Finals’ 12-year stay in London, we’ve analysed what it’s taken to win the tournament in this period.
Age of finalists
Nobody over the age of 30 has won the ATP Finals in London, and only 2 players aged under 25 have done so.
Australian Open
Wimbledon
US Open
French Open
4
3
1
0
1
1
2
5
3
1
3
1
Age at start of tournament
Winner of previous...
Champion
Runner-up
Semi-finalist
66.7%
61.9%
59.1%
59.1%
42.9%
40.0%
35.3%
22.2%
Performance in ATP Masters
Only one player has won the ATP Finals in London without also winning at least one ATP Tour Masters 1000 event that year.
0
Stefanos Tsitsipas (2019)
Nikolay Davydenko (2009), Roger Federer (2010), Roger Federer (2011), Grigor Dimitrov (2017), Alexander Zverev (2018)
1
5
5
ATP Masters wins
Novak Djokovic (2012), Novak Djokovic (2013), Novak Djokovic (2014), Novak Djokovic (2015), Andy Murray (2016)
2 or more
1
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
2
0
0
0
1
2
1
2
2
1
Performance in the Grand Slams
Since the ATP Finals moved to London in 2009, the winner of the French Open has never triumphed, but four Australian Open winners have done so.
9 of the 11 London champions were either one of the two youngest or the two oldest finalists that year.
Age rank (oldest to youngest)
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
5th
6th
7th
8th
3
1
0
1
0
1
3
2
Previous ATP Finals wins
All of the last four champions - and six of the last eight runners-up - had not won the tournament before.
2016
2017
2018
2019
Champion
Runner-up
(best previous ATP Finals performance)
Andy Murray
(semi-finals)
Novak Djokovic
(winner)
Grigor Dimitrov
(never qualified)
David Goffin
(group)
Alexander Zverev
(group)
Novak Djokovic
(winner)
Stefanos Tsitsipas
(never qualified)
Dominic Thiem
(group)
Pre-tournament seedings
8 of the 11 London ATP finals winners were one of the top 3 seeds.
Winners
Seed
4
3
2
2
Losing
finalists
Semi-finalists
Group stage
1st
2
3
1
5
2nd
2
1
4
4
3rd
0
0
5
6
4th
1
3
3
4
5th
2
1
3
5
6th
0
0
3
8
7th
0
0
1
10
8th
Head-to-head record
Here’s how this year’s eight finalists rank based their combined win percentage against the other seven since the start of 2019.
Novak Djokovic
Rafael Nadal
Dominic Thiem
Daniil Medvedev
Stefanos Tsitsipas
Andrey Rublev
Alexander Zverev
Diego Schwartzman