Now that the finals are set in New York, USOpen.org is tallying up the 2022 US Open numbers through Day 12 at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.
0 — Players remaining in the men’s or women’s singles draw that have previously won a US Open singles title.
1 — By defeating Caroline Garcia in the semifinals on Thursday, Ons Jabeur has become the first woman from the African continent to reach the semifinals of the US Open.
1 — By defeating Karen Khachanov in the semifinals on Friday, Casper Ruud becomes Norway’s first US Open finalist.
2 — Number of men’s singles players that still have a shot to finish the US Open as the No.1-ranked player in the world. Four-time champion Rafael Nadal has been eliminated from contention today, it’s down to Alcaraz and Ruud on Sunday in New York.
2-2 — Jabeur and Iga Swiatek have split their four previous meetings.
3 — Number of US Open wins earned by Ruud in four appearances prior to the 2022 US Open.
3 — Carlos Alcaraz will bid to become the third player to win a major title after winning three consecutive five-setters at the event. The feat was previously achieved by Stefan Edberg at the 1992 US Open and Gustavo Kuerten at Roland Garros in 1997.
4 — Alcaraz becomes the fourth man in the Open Era to advance to the US Open final on his second main draw appearance.
4 — Countries represented in this weekend’s US Open singles finals: Spain, Norway, Poland and Tunisia.
5 — Swiatek will bid to become the fifth active WTA player with three or more major singles titles when she faces Jabeur in Saturday’s women’s singles final.
6 — Swiatek leads all players with six ATP titles in 2022. The 21-year-old Pole will bid for her seventh against Jabeur in Sunday’s women’s singles final.
7 — Ranking of Ruud entering this year’s US Open. If the Norwegian can win Sunday’s final, he will make the biggest rankings jump to No.1 in ATP Open Era history.
8-0 — Frances Tiafoe’s record in tiebreaks at the 2022 US Open, the American breaks Pete Sampras’ US Open record (set in 2000) for most tiebreaks won without losing one in a single tournament. Tiafoe entered the tournament with a 16-11 record in tiebreaks in 2022, and a 78-75 overall in breakers.
8 — Years since the No.1-seeded player won a US Open women’s singles title (Serena Williams in 2014). Top-seeded Swiatek will bid to do it on Sunday.
9-0 — Swiatek’s record in her last eight matches against Top 10 players. She has dropped just one set across the nine.
10 — By reaching the US Open final, Poland’s Swiatek becomes the 10th active player to have reached three or more Grand Slam finals.
13:28 — Time spent on court by Alcaraz in his last three matches.
17 — 19-year-old Alcaraz becomes the youngest Grand Slam finalist in more than 17 years, since Nadal reached the Roland Garros final in 2005.
19 — By falling to Ruud in the semifinals, Khachanov has now lost 19 consecutive matches against the Top 10.
19 — Years since an American man has won the US Open men’s singles title. Andy Roddick was the last man to achieve the feat, in 2003.
19 — 19-year-old Alcaraz will bid to become the ATP’s youngest No.1 in history on Sunday.
18:27 — Time spent on court through six matches by Ruud.
20:20 — Time spent on court in six matches by Alcaraz.
2-0 — Alcaraz’s career record against Ruud.
36 — Alcaraz becomes the first player to reach a US Open final on his second main draw appearance in 36 years, since Miloslav Mečíř in 1986. He is the fourth player in history to reach a US Open final on his second main draw appearance (also Jan Kodeš in 1971 and Tom Okker in 1968).
40-6 — Swiatek’s record at the Slams since the beginning of her first Roland Garros title run in September of 2020.
50 — Thanks to his performance in New York, Alcaraz (50-9) reaches the 50-win mark for the first time in his career.
55 — Length of the rally played by Ruud and Khachanov on the last point of the opening set tiebreak. It is the longest of the tournament by 19 strokes.
116 — Australia’s Nick Kyrgios leads all men in the ace category at the US Open.
128 — The fastest recorded serve on the women’s side was recorded by Coco Gauff. The American was clocked at 128 mph during her second-round win over Elena Gabriela Ruse.
141 — The fastest serve of the 2022 US Open, cracked by Alexander Bublik in the first round.
1990 — Alcaraz is the second youngest US Open men’s singles finalist, and the youngest since Sampras claimed the title 32 years ago, in 1990.
2008 — Roger Federer remains the last man to complete a successful US Open title defense, after top-seeded Daniil Medvedev fell to Kyrgios on Day 7. Federer won five straight titles from 2004-08.
2014 — Top-seeded Swiatek is bidding to become the first world No. 1 to win the women’s singles title in Queens since Williams in 2014.
2019 — Khachanov’s last Top 10 win, which came in 2019 at Montreal.
