This 17-point roundup is about the players who put it all on and inside the lines at the rowdiest major event of the season. The hits started early, and they certainly kept coming.
Check out No. 4 here.
The likes of Rafael Nadal and Sloane Stephens certainly had their day and their way with this event. That said, doubles and junior winners aplenty also netted big-stage championships. For one, Jean-Julien Rojer made his mark on this U.S. Open by way of a Statue of Liberty-themed shirt drenched in not just sweat—he got quite enough of that alongside Horia Tecau to win the men's doubles title—but in love for the United States, his home since age 12. Rojer's speech about the shirt during the pair's trophy ceremony cemented his sporting legacy.
Here's a look at a few more of the doubles, junior and wheelchair champs who left major impressions on Flushing Meadows:
Martina Hingis and Latisha Chan seized on a tantalizing opportunity to claim the women's doubles title by a decisive 6-3, 6-2 count. They clinched the title on, of all things, a Hingis forehand winner: