This is a 24-year-old with a wonderful story, from loss and setback to the pinnacle of her sport. From finding herself fatherless while at the US Open transporation tent to flying up the rankings from No. 957 in the world to No. 17 in less than two months.
It's a shocking rise to the top for Sloane Stephens, who has hovered near it before. With her final two victories at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, everything has changed.
"When Venus made her Open debut in 1997 and went all the way to the final, she was called a 'party crasher,'" Steve Tignor wrote for TENNIS after this event concluded. "Twenty years later, African-Americans are no longer the outliers in U.S. women’s tennis; they’re the tradition."
Stephens won her title with grace, surrendering just three games to Keys in the final, but showing kindness for her disappointed foe after the last ball had been struck. As to how it felt beating Madison Keys to win title, Stephens had one word for late-night TV host Jimmy Kimmel: "Sucky."