Tennis Match Results — Today’s ATP & WTA Scores
This page is your scoreboard for professional tennis: final scores and set-by-set results from ATP and WTA tournaments, all four Grand Slams and the major team competitions. Results are added as matches finish, so whether you missed a night session at the US Open or an early start in Melbourne, the outcome is waiting for you here.
Latest Tennis Results From Tournaments Worldwide
Professional tennis is played somewhere in the world almost every day of the year, and this results feed follows all of it. During a standard tour week you will find scores from every active ATP and WTA event — from the grass of Hertogenbosch and Stuttgart in June to the indoor hard courts of the autumn swing. When the calendar reaches its peaks, coverage scales with it: complete round-by-round results from the Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the US Open, every Masters 1000 and WTA 1000 draw, plus the ATP Finals, WTA Finals, United Cup, Davis Cup and Billie Jean King Cup. Each entry shows the final score with full set details, the tournament and round, and a link to our original pre-match prediction where one exists. That last detail matters: instead of results existing in isolation, every score on this page connects back to the analysis published before the match, letting you see how the forecast played out in reality.
How Quickly Match Results Are Updated
Speed matters when you are following a tournament across time zones, so results appear in this feed shortly after the final point is played. For the biggest events — Grand Slam matches, Masters finals, decisive Davis Cup ties — scores are typically published within minutes of the handshake at the net. Set-by-set details are included from the start, and fuller match statistics are added once official data becomes available from the tournament. Suspended and rain-delayed matches, a regular feature of Wimbledon fortnights, are clearly marked and updated as soon as play resumes or the match is completed the following day. Retirements and walkovers are labelled too, because an unfinished match tells a very different story from a completed one when you later use these results for analysis.
What You’ll Find on Every Tennis Result Page
A bare scoreline answers only one question — who won — while the details around it explain how and why. That is the philosophy behind the way results are presented on AVF Predictions. Alongside the headline score, each match result includes the information that turns a number into a story:
- Final score with a full set-by-set breakdown, including tie-break points;
- Tournament, round, surface and match date;
- Key serve statistics — aces, double faults, first-serve percentage;
- Pressure numbers — break points saved and converted by both players;
- Match duration and, where relevant, notes on retirements or interruptions;
- A link to our pre-match prediction for direct forecast-versus-reality comparison.
Taken together, these details let you reconstruct the shape of a match you never watched: a 7-6, 7-6 scoreline with twenty aces describes a serving duel, while 6-4, 1-6, 6-4 hints at momentum swings that raw results tables would hide completely.
Understanding Tennis Match Statistics
Reading tennis statistics well is a skill, and a few core numbers do most of the explanatory work. The table below summarises the metrics you will meet most often on our result pages and what each one actually tells you about a match:
| Statistic | What it means | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| First-serve % | Share of first serves landed in | The foundation of holding serve, especially on grass |
| Break points converted | Break chances turned into games won | The clearest measure of clutch returning |
| Break points saved | Break chances denied on serve | Shows composure under maximum pressure |
| Aces / double faults | Free points won and given away | Quick read on serving dominance or fragility |
| Winners vs unforced errors | Aggression balance | Separates controlled attacking from risky hitting |
None of these figures means much in isolation, which is why we present them together. A player can lose despite more winners, or win while facing more break points — and spotting those patterns across many results is precisely how deeper tennis understanding is built.
Using Past Results to Predict Future Matches
Results are not just a record of the past; they are the raw material of every forecast we publish. Each completed match feeds our statistical database, refining what we know about a player’s form curve, surface preferences and behaviour in tight moments. This is where the results section and the predictions section of AVF Predictions work as one system. A semifinal result from the grass of Queen’s Club sharpens our Wimbledon forecasts a week later; early hard-court results in summer reshape expectations for the US Open. Head-to-head records grow match by match, and deciding-set or tie-break tendencies only become visible once enough results accumulate. For readers, the practical takeaway is simple: if you want to anticipate where a tournament is heading, spend time in the results archive. Trends like a top seed dropping unexpected sets in early rounds, or a qualifier winning matches in straight sets, are usually visible here before they become headlines.
ATP, WTA and Grand Slam Results in One Place
The alternative to a page like this is fragmentation — one app for ATP scores, another site for WTA results, a third source for Challenger events and team competitions. AVF Predictions exists to remove that friction by gathering tennis results from every level of the professional game into a single, consistently formatted feed. Men’s and women’s tennis receive equal coverage, Grand Slams sit alongside ATP 250 and WTA 250 events, and team formats like the United Cup are presented with the same clarity as individual draws. The feed is searchable and organised by tournament, so finding yesterday’s Stuttgart quarterfinal takes seconds, and archived results remain available long after a trophy has been lifted. Bookmark this page during the majors especially: across the two weeks of Wimbledon or the US Open, with matches finishing around the clock, a single reliable results hub is the easiest way to stay on top of the entire draw.