Novak Djokovic has slipped to seventh in the ATP Tour rankings despite winning Wimbledon, where ranking points were stripped in this year’s tournament.
Players from Russia and Belarus were banned from competing at the third major of the year due to the ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
The ATP and WTA retaliated by stripping ranking points from the event at the All England Club, where the likes of world No1 Daniil Medvedev and Andrey Rublev did not feature.
Moscow-born Elena Rybakina, who switched to represent Kazakhstan four years ago, lifted the women’s title in the singles competition, while Djokovic triumphed for a fourth straight time in the men’s event.
Yet, Djokovic has lost 2,000 rankings points – the standard total awarded to a grand slam singles champion – after winning in SW19 last year, with no such rewards available on this occasion.
That meant the Serbian has dropped from third place to seventh, his lowest position since August 2018 when he fell to 10th.
Djokovic moved within just one major title of Rafael Nadal’s record of 22 Grand Slams and the Spaniard has jumped up one spot to third.
— ATP Tour (@atptour) July 10, 2022
Medvedev and Alexander Zverev are unmoved as the respective top two after losing just 180 rankings points in the latest edition. Both missed Wimbledon, with the Russian banned and the German still injured.
Stefanos Tsitsipas, Casper Ruud and Carlos Alcaraz make up the top six after climbing a place each, while Rublev, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Jannik Sinner are the trio behind Djokovic.
Nick Kyrgios appeared in his maiden major final against Djokovic at Wimbledon as world No40, the lowest-ranked Grand Slam male finalist since Marcos Baghdatis (54) at the Australian Open in 2006.
Just a day later Kyrgios has dropped five places to 45th in the rankings, losing 90 points from his third-round berth last year.
If the ban was not imposed, the Australian would have broken into the top 20.
Cameron Norrie is another loser from the ranking points fallout. His run to the semi-finals at the London major would have seen him climb to eighth, but instead he has to settle for 11th.