We’ve featured some incredible feats from 2024 this week, like Coco Gauff becoming the youngest woman to beat the Top 2 at the same event since 2006, Aryna Sabalenka becoming just the second woman in 27 years to win both hard-court majors in the same season, and Iga Swiatek becoming the first woman in the Open Era to win Roland Garros three years in a row as the No. 1 seed.

Today, we shift over to the men’s tour—and to an all-time record.

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Carlos Alcaraz made a sensational run to the Roland Garros title this year, battling from two-sets-to-one down in both of his last two rounds, defeating Jannik Sinner in the semifinals, 2-6, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3, and Alexander Zverev in the final, 6-3, 2-6, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2.

He was the first man in the Open Era to win back-to-back five-setters in the semifinals and final of Roland Garros.

But he created even more history with his triumph in Paris.

With his first two Grand Slam titles coming at the 2022 US Open on hard courts and 2023 Wimbledon on grass, by winning 2024 Roland Garros on clay, Alcaraz—at just 21 years old—became the youngest man ever to win Grand Slam titles on all three surfaces.

The previous record belonged to Rafael Nadal, who completed his surface set of Grand Slams at 22 at the 2009 Australian Open.

Jimmy Connors was the first man to do it when he won the US Open in 1978, which was the first major played on hard. By that time he had already won three on grass (the Australian Open, Wimbledon and US Open in 1974) and one on clay (the US Open in 1976).

Only seven men total have ever completed the trifecta.

MEN TO WIN MAJORS ON HARD, GRASS AND CLAY (listed by age—event listed where surface set completed):

  • Carlos Alcaraz, 21 [at 2024 Roland Garros]
  • Rafael Nadal, 22 [at 2009 Australian Open]
  • Mats Wilander, 23 [at 1988 Australian Open]
  • Jimmy Connors, 26 [at 1978 US Open]
  • Roger Federer, 27 [at 2009 Roland Garros]
  • Novak Djokovic, 29 [at 2016 Roland Garros]
  • Andre Agassi, 29 [at 1999 Roland Garros]

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Another fun fact: Alcaraz is actually the first man ever to win his first three Grand Slam titles on three different surfaces.

Everyone else on the above list won multiple Grand Slam titles on at least one other surface before completing their set.

And since completing his set, Alcaraz added another Wimbledon title to his resume, meaning he now has one Grand Slam title on hard courts, two on grass courts and one on clay courts.

The Spaniard is now an Australian Open title away from completing a Career Slam, and if he can conquer Melbourne in 2025, 2026 or 2027 at age 21, 22 or 23, he would break Nadal’s record for youngest man to complete a Career Slam in the Open Era (Nadal was 24).

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Not only is the 21-year-old Alcaraz the youngest man ever to capture Grand Slam titles on all three surfaces, he's actually the youngest man ever to even reach Grand Slam FINALS on all three surfaces.

Not only is the 21-year-old Alcaraz the youngest man ever to capture Grand Slam titles on all three surfaces, he's actually the youngest man ever to even reach Grand Slam FINALS on all three surfaces.

Our Stats of the Year countdown wraps up tomorrow with No. 1…