0: First-time Grand Slam winners at this year’s US Open.
1: Jannik Sinner becomes the first Italian to win the US Open men’s singles title. It’s been a great Slam for the Italians. In Mixed Doubles, Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori became the first all-Italian pair to secure a Mixed Doubles Grand Slam title in tennis history.
2: Number of major titles won by Aryna Sabalenka in 2024. Sabalenka, Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner top the Grand Slam singles leaderboard this year with two apiece.
3: By reading her maiden Slam final, Jessica Pegula became the third American woman to reach a US Open final after turning 30, following Martina Navratilova and Serena Williams.
4: Sabalenka has become the fourth player to win the Cincinnati and US Open women’s singles title in the same season in the Open Era, along with Kim Clijsters (2010), Serena Williams (2014) and Coco Gauff (2023).
5: Sabalenka becomes the fifth player during Open Era to win both Women’s Singles hardcourt Grand Slams titles during the same season after Monica Seles (1991, '92), Steffi Graf (1988, '89), Angelique Kerber (2016) and Martina Hingis (1997).
5. Pegula became the fifth player in the past decade to defeat three former Women’s Singles Grand Slam finalists en route to the US Open final. The other four went on to win the title. Flavia Pennetta (2015), Angelique Kerber (2016), Sloane Stephens (2017) and Gauff (2023). Pegula defeated Sofia Kenin (round 2), Iga Swiatek (quarterfinal) and Karolina Muchova (semifinal).
6: Number of second-round losses that Hubert Hurkacz has suffered in his US Open career. The No.7 seed has never been past round two in Flushing Meadows in seven appearances.
7: For the first time in over seven years, Novak Djokovic failed to reach the round of 16 at a major. It had not happened since the 2017 Australian Open, when the 24-time major champion lost in the second round to 117-ranked Denis Istomin.
8: Sabalenka is the eighth fastest woman to reach 50 Grand Slam main draw hard court wins in the Open Era. During the Open Era only Chris Evert (55), Martina Hingis (55), Martina Navratilova (56), Monica Seles (53), Serena Williams (58), Steffi Graf (54) and Venus Williams (57) have taken fewer matches to earn 50 hard court wins at the Slams.
9: Number of months missed due to wrist surgery by Muchova. The world No. 52 injured her wrist at last year’s US Open, and didn’t return to the tour until June of this year. The 28-year-old reached the semifinals for the second consecutive year at Flushing Meadows.
10: ATP players that reached the semifinals of the US Open without dropping a set at the last 20 editions of the tournament. Great Britain’s Jack Draper achieved the feat in 2024.
11: Length of Sinner’s current win streak, which started with his title run last month at the Cincinnati Open.
12: Midmatch retirements during the Flushing fortnight. Four for the women and eight for the men.
12:08 a.m.: The latest ever start of a US Open match. It happened this year as the third-round clash between Sabalenka and Ekaterina Alexandrova didn’t start until eight minutes after midnight.
13-1: Sinner’s record on the North American hard courts this summer. The Italian lost in the quarterfinals at Montreal before winning titles in Cincinnati and the US Open.
14: Djokovic suffered his 14th career US Open loss against Alexei Popyrin in the third round at Flushing Meadows, dropping his career record to 90-14 overall.
15: Number of years since the American men had produced a Grand Slam finalist. Taylor Fritz stopped the clock on this stat by becoming the first American men’s singles Grand Slam finalist since Andy Roddick at Wimbledon in 2009.
16: Age of Iva Jovic, who became the youngest American to win a main draw match at the US Open since 2020 with her 6-4, 6-4 win over Poland’s Magda Linette. Jovic also reached the semifinals of the Girls’ Singles tournament.
17: Fritz’s 17 wins at the Slams (17-4) in 2024 are the most by an American since 2003.
18: Fritz became the first American to contest a US Open men’s singles final since 2006, and the fourth American to play in a major final this century, along with Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi, and Andy Rodick.
19: Number of five-setters played by the men at the 2024 US Open.
19: Years since we last saw an all-American men’s semifinal at the US Open. Agassi faced Robby Ginepri in 2005, with Agassi losing to Roger Federer in the final. In 2024 it was Fritz and Frances Tiafoe.
20: The length of the longest rally in the women's final, won by Sabalenka on a Pegula unforced error at 3-2 in the second set.
21: Years since an American man has won a major title. Fritz gave it his best shot on Sunday against Sinner in the men’s singles final, but came up short in his bid to become the first American man to win a major since Andy Roddick at the 2003 US Open.
22: Years since a full Grand Slam season has passed without a member of tennis’s fabled Big 3–Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer–winning a major singles title. It last happened in 2002, the year before Federer won his first Wimbledon title. The winds of change blew with significant force in 2024, with Alcaraz and Fritz sweeping the four Grand Slam men’s singles titles on offer.
23: Length of Zhang Shuai’s losing streak. The Chinese extended a tour-level record run of futility, losing to Ashlyn Krueger in the first round. She more than made up for it in the women’s doubles competition, however. Two-time Grand Slam doubles champion Zhang reached the final with Kristina Mladenovic.
24: For the first time since 1993, all four men’s singles major titles in a single season have been won by players under the age of 24–Alcaraz, 21, Roland-Garros, Wimbledon; Sinner, 22, Australian Open; Sinner, 23, US Open.
27-1: Sabalenka’s record on hard courts at the majors since the start of 2023.
28: Jordan Thompson and Max Purcell became the first all-Aussie duo to win the men’s doubles title in New York since 1996, defeating Kevin Krawietz and Tim Puetz in the final.
30: Age of Pegula, who was the only thirty-something to make it as far as the semis at the Open this year.
35-2: Sinner’s astounding record on hard courts thus far in 2024.
36: For the first time in 36 years, since the Australian Open switched to hard courts in 1988, a man and a woman have swept through the hard court Slams in the same year. Sabalenka and Sinner both ran the table, going 14-0 at the hard court majors.
37: Number of three-set matches played on the women’s side during the 2024 US Open.
38: Number of double faults hit by Gauff through four rounds, which led all women’s singles players.
39: Longest rally of the 2024 US Open, played by Adam Walton of Australia and Alexandre Muller of France. Walton won the point but lost the first-round match, 3-6, 7-6(7), 6-3, 6-4.
75: Average speed of Sabalenka’ second-serve returns heading into the women’s final, which was the fastest of all four finalists–male or female.
79: Career wins by Djokovic in Arthur Ashe Stadium. No player has more wins on Ashe than the 24-time major champion. He added two to his tally in 2024.
85: Fritz led all players with 85 aces across the fortnight.
90: Number of US Open wins recorded by Djokovic. By picking up two wins last week in Flushing Meadows, the four-time champion took sole possession of second place on the all-time men’s singles match win list. Only Jimmy Connors has more, with 98.
125: Gauff fired the fastest recorded serve by a woman: a 125 MPH screamer during her fourth-round loss to Emma Navarro.
143: The fastest serve of the 2024 US Open: a 143 MPH bomb by Ben Shelton during his third-round loss to Tiafoe.
144: The 2024 US Open was the 144th staging of the event, which dates back to 1881.
2016: It has been eight years since a woman last swept to the title of both hard court majors in the same season. Sabalenka is the first to achieve the feat since former World No.1 Angelique Kerber in 2016.
2:15 a.m.: Closing time of Zheng Qinwen’s round of 16 victory over Donna Vekic, which goes down as the latest ever finish to a women’s match at the US Open.
2:35 a.m.: Closing time of the second latest finish in US Open history. On the same night, Alexander Zverev finished off Tomas Martin Etcheverry in four sets in Louis Armstrong Stadium, a contest that finished 15 minutes shy of the record for the latest US Open finish ever.
5:35: Length of the longest match in US Open history, which was played in the first round and won by Daniel Evans. The Brit rallied from 4-0 down in the fifth set to defeat Karen Khachanov, 6-7(6), 7-6(2), 7-6(4), 4-6, 6-4.
3,139: Aces struck at the 2024 US Open: 812 by the women and 2,337 by the men.
832,640: Number of fans that visited the US Open during the two weeks of main draw, a new record.
1,048,669: Number of fans that came through the gates of the Billie Jean King Tennis Center during the three weeks that started with qualifying. The US Open surpassed one million attendees for the first time in 2024, and produced an 8% increase in attendance over 2023.
3,600,000: Prize money earned by each singles' champion.
75,000,000: Total prize money compensation handed out at the 2024 US Open.
