Sports

Tennis Legends Deep Dive Quiz 🎾

Federer, Nadal, Djokovic β€” the greatest rivalry in sports history.

Tennis Legends Quiz: Test Your Knowledge

Rafael Nadal won the French Open 14 times β€” the most dominant performance at a single sporting event in history, winning 112 of 116 matches on Parisian clay. Between Nadal, Roger Federer, and Novak Djokovic, three men won 66 of 79 Grand Slam titles contested between 2003 and 2023, an era of dominance unlike anything sport has ever seen.

How It Works

Each round presents 10 randomized multiple-choice questions drawn from a pool of 50, so every playthrough is different. You get instant feedback with explanations after each answer, plus a shareable score at the end.

What You'll Learn

You'll explore the Big Three's Grand Slam records, the history of all four majors, legendary matches like the 2008 Wimbledon final, the women's game from Billie Jean King to Serena Williams, and fascinating facts about scoring, equipment evolution, and the sport's greatest upsets.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is the GOAT of tennis?

The debate between Federer, Nadal, and Djokovic is one of sport's greatest. Djokovic holds the all-time record with 24 Grand Slam titles (as of 2024), ahead of Nadal's 22 and Federer's 20. Nadal's 14 French Open titles and Djokovic's record weeks at world No. 1 each make a compelling case, while Federer's elegance and cultural impact transcend mere statistics.

What are the 4 Grand Slams?

The four Grand Slams are the Australian Open (January, Melbourne, hard court), the French Open (May–June, Paris, clay), Wimbledon (June–July, London, grass), and the US Open (August–September, New York, hard court). Winning all four in the same calendar year is called a Calendar Grand Slam β€” achieved only by Don Budge (1938), Rod Laver (1962, 1969), Steffi Graf (1988), and Margaret Court (1970).

What was the greatest tennis match ever played?

The 2008 Wimbledon final between Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer is widely considered the greatest tennis match ever played. Nadal won 6–4, 6–4, 6–7, 6–7, 9–7 in a match that lasted nearly five hours and was interrupted twice by rain. Broadcaster John McEnroe called it the greatest match he had ever seen. The 2012 Australian Open final between Djokovic and Nadal, lasting 5 hours 53 minutes, is another contender.

Last updated: March 2026