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Riffing off of the Holger Rune conversation, here's a chart I posted awhile ago, updated to the present:
As the title says, it is the age every big title winner born from 1946 on won their first - whether a Slam, Masters, Tour Finals, Alt Tour Finals, or Olympics (so excluding players that might have won--or did win--a big title equivalent before the Open Era, like Laver, Rosewall, Newcombe, Ashe, etc). See the key for color-coding.
Rune is one of 13 players to win their first big title as a teenager. The other 12 include 8 all-time greats, a probable all-time great in the making (Alcaraz), one single Slam winner (Chang) who is probably among the better "second tier" players, and just two guys who never won Slams (Andrei "The Other" Medvedev, Alberto Mancini).
Medvedev won four Masters early on and reached one Slam final; Mancini had a short career and won three titles, two of which were Masters. Both weren't regulars in the top 10: Medvedev spent a total of 61 weeks in the top 10 over two seasons, 177 in the top 20, and 375 in the top 50; Mancini spent just 21 weeks in the top 10, 62 in the top 20, and 190 in the top 50.
In other words, rankings-wise, they weren't comparable to more recent "second tier" types like Berdych and Tsonga, and even guys like Monfils and Gasquet spent more time in the top 10/20 - who were not only more consistently in the top 10/20, but had much longer careers. Compare:
Weeks in top 5/10/20/50:
A Medvedev: 6/61/177/375
A Mancini: 0/21/62/190
T Berdych: 29/369/583/717
JW Tsonga: 12/260/523/581
R Gasquet: 0/146/421/763
G Monfils: 0/96/454/805
This is a bit of an aside and connected to another inquiry I had about the changing nature of "second tier" types and how we cannot really judge them by big titles, because they tend to pick up the scraps left behind by the elite. Guys like Medvedev and Mancini were basically clay specialists who played during a Rafa-less era; they had to compete with excellent clay players like Sergi Bruguera and Thomas Muster, and a bit later Carlos Moya and Gustavo Kuerten, but no Rafa (or Novak, Roger, and Andy). Whereas guys like Berdych and Tsonga had a hard time breaking through the impenetrable wall that was the Big Four. Again, the point being that while it is a bit easier to judge true elites by Slams and other big titles, it is more difficult to judge second tier players that way.
Anyhow, I post this chart to show the range of precedents for somewhat similar players to Rune. Note also the players in blue - they're all youngish players in the top 100 who haven't yet won a big title, and their current age (as of Feb 4). For instance, you can look at poor Felix Auger-Aliassime who, at age 23, has not yet won a big title, and speculate that his upside--at least according to historic precedents--is somewhere in the Nastase-Smith-Wawrinka range, what I sometimes call "near great" players.
It is too easy to say that because of this chart, Rune is likely to to be at least an ATG, as 8 of 11 (not counting Alcaraz) were true ATGs (and it is likely to be 9 of 12, or 75%). Certainly it seems likely he wins at least a Slam or two, but the Other Medvedev and Mancini remind us that sometimes players who breakthrough as teenagers and win a big title don't become true elite players, let alone all-time greats.
It is also interesting to note that every ATG won their first big title at age 21 or younger, that is before their 22nd birthday--Lendl and Connors being the late-bloomers. I wouldn't be surprised if we eventually see someone extend this by a year, but it does clearly show that the vast majority of elite players reach something close to their prime by age 21 or so.
The chart also illustrates just how unique Stan Wawrinka was: not only did he not win his first of three Slams until he was 28, but it was his first big title. He really is singular in Open Era history.
As the title says, it is the age every big title winner born from 1946 on won their first - whether a Slam, Masters, Tour Finals, Alt Tour Finals, or Olympics (so excluding players that might have won--or did win--a big title equivalent before the Open Era, like Laver, Rosewall, Newcombe, Ashe, etc). See the key for color-coding.
Rune is one of 13 players to win their first big title as a teenager. The other 12 include 8 all-time greats, a probable all-time great in the making (Alcaraz), one single Slam winner (Chang) who is probably among the better "second tier" players, and just two guys who never won Slams (Andrei "The Other" Medvedev, Alberto Mancini).
Medvedev won four Masters early on and reached one Slam final; Mancini had a short career and won three titles, two of which were Masters. Both weren't regulars in the top 10: Medvedev spent a total of 61 weeks in the top 10 over two seasons, 177 in the top 20, and 375 in the top 50; Mancini spent just 21 weeks in the top 10, 62 in the top 20, and 190 in the top 50.
In other words, rankings-wise, they weren't comparable to more recent "second tier" types like Berdych and Tsonga, and even guys like Monfils and Gasquet spent more time in the top 10/20 - who were not only more consistently in the top 10/20, but had much longer careers. Compare:
Weeks in top 5/10/20/50:
A Medvedev: 6/61/177/375
A Mancini: 0/21/62/190
T Berdych: 29/369/583/717
JW Tsonga: 12/260/523/581
R Gasquet: 0/146/421/763
G Monfils: 0/96/454/805
This is a bit of an aside and connected to another inquiry I had about the changing nature of "second tier" types and how we cannot really judge them by big titles, because they tend to pick up the scraps left behind by the elite. Guys like Medvedev and Mancini were basically clay specialists who played during a Rafa-less era; they had to compete with excellent clay players like Sergi Bruguera and Thomas Muster, and a bit later Carlos Moya and Gustavo Kuerten, but no Rafa (or Novak, Roger, and Andy). Whereas guys like Berdych and Tsonga had a hard time breaking through the impenetrable wall that was the Big Four. Again, the point being that while it is a bit easier to judge true elites by Slams and other big titles, it is more difficult to judge second tier players that way.
Anyhow, I post this chart to show the range of precedents for somewhat similar players to Rune. Note also the players in blue - they're all youngish players in the top 100 who haven't yet won a big title, and their current age (as of Feb 4). For instance, you can look at poor Felix Auger-Aliassime who, at age 23, has not yet won a big title, and speculate that his upside--at least according to historic precedents--is somewhere in the Nastase-Smith-Wawrinka range, what I sometimes call "near great" players.
It is too easy to say that because of this chart, Rune is likely to to be at least an ATG, as 8 of 11 (not counting Alcaraz) were true ATGs (and it is likely to be 9 of 12, or 75%). Certainly it seems likely he wins at least a Slam or two, but the Other Medvedev and Mancini remind us that sometimes players who breakthrough as teenagers and win a big title don't become true elite players, let alone all-time greats.
It is also interesting to note that every ATG won their first big title at age 21 or younger, that is before their 22nd birthday--Lendl and Connors being the late-bloomers. I wouldn't be surprised if we eventually see someone extend this by a year, but it does clearly show that the vast majority of elite players reach something close to their prime by age 21 or so.
The chart also illustrates just how unique Stan Wawrinka was: not only did he not win his first of three Slams until he was 28, but it was his first big title. He really is singular in Open Era history.