The 2024 tennis season is approaching its grand finale at the ATP Finals (10-17 November) in Turin.
Returning to the Italian city for the penultimate time in the cycle, the tournament will see the best eight men’s singles players and doubles pairs battle for end-of-season glory.
The eight qualifiers are the year’s best-performing men in the ATP Rankings up to 9 November, though only counting points won in 2024.
These include performances at the Grand Slams, ATP Masters 1000 tournaments, and other high-ranking competitions. Results from the Olympic Games Paris 2024 do not count towards players’ points tallies and totals.
Defending champion Novak Djokovic ruled himself out five days before the tournament gets underway on 10 November, citing injury despite being on the verge of qualifying.
Here are the singles and doubles players who have qualified for the ATP Finals in November.
2024 ATP Finals: Qualified singles players
World number one Jannik Sinner was the first player to book his place at the ATP Finals, having sat on top of the rankings since June. Sinner returns to home soil in Turin where he aims to avenge his 2023 final defeat and go one better.
Tokyo 2020 Olympic champion Alexander Zverev knows what it takes to win, as he targets a third ATP Finals title after victories in 2018 and 2021.
New world number two Carlos Alcaraz became the third player to qualify for the season finale, in a year where he has won two Grand Slams and has a 100% win record against rival Sinner.
For the sixth year in a row, 2020 champion Daniil Medvedev is heading to the ATP Finals, alongside fifth-ranked player and US Open finalist Taylor Fritz.
The final three players to qualify are Casper Ruud, Alex de Minaur and Andrey Rublev, who qualifies in ninth and in Djokovic's absence.
2024 ATP Finals: Qualified doubles pairs
The ATP Finals doubles lineup is complete, led by world number one duo Marcelo Arévalo and Mate Pavić in their first season as a partnership.
There will be Italian representation in both the singles and doubles finals for the first time since they have been hosted in Italy, courtesy of Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori.
Australians Max Purcell and Jordan Thompson, the recent winners of the US Open, have also booked their spot alongside world number two pairing and the 2023 ATP Finals runners up, Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos.