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.