Novak Djokovic
At 38, Novak Djokovic is still hunting a record-breaking 25th Grand Slam title, and the tennis world can't look away.
Novak Djokovic is the most decorated men’s singles tennis player in history. The Serbian champion holds 24 Grand Slam titles, the all-time male record, along with the record for most weeks ranked World No. 1, and an Olympic gold medal claimed at Paris 2024. He is, by any objective measure, the Greatest of All Time in the men’s game, even if the debate will never fully die.
Born on 22 May 1987 in Belgrade, Djokovic turned professional in 2003 and spent the better part of two decades dismantling every record in sight. His rivalry with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, the so-called “Big Three” era, redefined what longevity in elite tennis looks like. Now, with both Federer retired and Nadal also having stepped away, Djokovic remains the last of that generation still competing at the highest level.
As of mid-2026, Djokovic is ranked around No. 4 in the world, aged 38, and showing no signs of retirement. He reached the final of the 2026 Australian Open, defeating Carlos Alcaraz’s future rival Jannik Sinner in the semi-finals before losing the final to Alcaraz, proof that he is still a genuine threat at every Major he enters.
The reason people search for him relentlessly is simple: every tournament he enters could be the one where he claims that 25th Slam. He operates at an age when most professionals have long since retired, which makes every match feel like a historical footnote in the making.