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With every ace, winner and on-court triumph during the first week of Roland Garros, Frances Tiafoe, Madison Keys, Coco Gauff, Taylor Townsend and Evan King were sliding their way toward an accomplishment never seen in professional tennis.

For the first time, an African-American reached the quarterfinals (or better) in all five of the professional disciplines—men’s singles, women’s singles, men’s doubles, women’s doubles and mixed doubles—at a single Grand Slam tournament.

Over the course of the past 75 years, Black Americans have had an evolving impact on the sport, particularly at the game’s most prestigious events. Groundbreaking victories by Althea Gibson and Arthur Ashe and career-defining runs at majors by MaliVai Washington and Zina Garrison inspired a generation of major singles champions like Venus and Serena Williams, Sloane Stephens, Gauff and Keys.

And while Roland Garros might have arguably been the least likely Slam to be the site of such an historic feat, this group of Americans has been making solid headway on the terre battue for years. Keys, Gauff and Townsend have all reached the semifinals or better at Roland Garros, in different disciplines than their 2025 runs, in prior campaigns.

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Coco Gauff is through to the second week of Roland Garros for the fifth year in a row. She's only 21.

Coco Gauff is through to the second week of Roland Garros for the fifth year in a row. She's only 21.

Leading the charge has been Gauff. The No. 2 singles seed entered this year’s tournament with a solid dose of momentum on her side, having reached back-to-back finals at major clay tournaments in Madrid and Rome. The first half of her 2025 campaign hasn’t lived up to her lofty expectations, but it appears as if she’s righted the ship: the 2022 Roland Garros finalist (and last year’s doubles champion) is now back in the semifinals after a three-set win over Keys.

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Australian Open champion Madison Keys reached her third Roland Garros quarterfinal in singles. Three years ago, she made the semifinals in doubles on the terre battue.

Australian Open champion Madison Keys reached her third Roland Garros quarterfinal in singles. Three years ago, she made the semifinals in doubles on the terre battue.

The reigning Australian Open women’s singles champion, Keys battled through to the second week with a mix of performances that were both dominant and gutsy. When she wasn’t winning her matches in straight sets (over Daria Saville and Katie Boulter), she was fighting off multiple match points (against Sofia Kenin). After her unexpected title run in Melbourne, the 2018 Roland Garros semifinalist kept hopes of a calendar Slam alive with her four victories, running her Grand Slam match-winning streak to 11, before Gauff stopped her charge on Wednesday.

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Prior to this year's run, Tiafoe had never gone beyond the third round at Roland Garros.

Prior to this year's run, Tiafoe had never gone beyond the third round at Roland Garros.

On the men’s singles side, Tiafoe has had an inconsistent year by his standards, entering Roland Garros with a record barely above .500 (13-12). However, as he’s demonstrated on multiple occasions over the course of his career, the 27-year-old plays his best tennis on the biggest stages. Something clicked from the first ball when he hit the clay in Paris, as he posted straight-set victories through his first four matches, including over his countryman Sebastian Korda and Spanish veteran Pablo Carreno Busta. Lorenzo Musetti, one of the tournament favorites, stopped the 16th seed’s run, but Tiafoe leaves Paris with a quarterfinal-or-better run at three of the four majors in his career.

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Taylor Townsend, into the mixed doubles final with Evan King—after a quarterfinal run in women's doubles—spoke with Tennis Channel's Prakash Amritraj about her comeback from a concussion at Roland Garros.

Taylor Townsend, into the mixed doubles final with Evan King—after a quarterfinal run in women's doubles—spoke with Tennis Channel's Prakash Amritraj about her comeback from a concussion at Roland Garros. 

Taylor Townsend is coming back from concussion | Interview

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Like Tiafoe, there were question marks on how Townsend would perform in Paris, but for entirely different reasons: She missed the entire clay-court swing due to a concussion she suffered in Miami. The 29-year-old made it back to the court in time for Roland Garros, falling in the final round of singles qualifying, but landed a spot in the main draw as a lucky loser. That event ended early, but there was still women’s and mixed doubles to play—fields in which she’s been dominant in the past few years. A former finalist in Paris with Leylah Fernandez in 2023, Townsend had her own calendar-Slam run in play, after she won the Australian Open this year with Katerina Siniakova.

The top seeds were upset in the quarterfinal round, but Townsend is still alive in mixed doubles with her fellow Chicagoan and lefty King. They’ll play in the final Thursday morning after a 3-6, 7-6 (2), 12-10 victory on Wednesday.

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While Keys might be the feel-good story of 2025, King isn’t far behind. The University of Michigan alum and his partner, Christian Harrison, have grinded away on the ATP Tour for years, but have experienced multiple breakthroughs throughout this season: winning two titles, making deep runs at the Masters 1000 tournaments and bounding up the rankings to Top 20 positions. The pair got off to a rough start on the clay after so much success on U.S. hard courts, but notched a semifinal showing in Madrid, followed by a quarterfinal in Rome. Hardly playing any majors over the course of their respective careers, the duo is through to the semifinals in Paris and will face the British veterans Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski on Thursday.

Grand Slam success is what every professional tennis player aspires to, with a chance to add their names to the record books. In Paris this year, Gauff, Keys, King, Townsend and Tiafoe have already made history. And with compatriots like Ben Shelton, Asia Muhammad, Hailey Baptiste and so many more on the rise, they could be poised to repeat the feat—or improve upon it—in the years to come.