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With Roland Garros just around the corner, Felix Auger-Aliassime hits a nifty career milestone this week, as he’s spending his 100th career week in the Top 10 of the ATP rankings.

He’s done it in four separate stints, from November 15th to 21st, 2001 (one week), January 10th to September 11th, 2022 (35 weeks), October 17th, 2022 to June 11th, 2023 (34 weeks) and October 27th, 2025 to present (30 weeks and counting).

The Canadian, who’s currently at his career-high ranking of No. 5, is just the third man born in the 2000s to hit triple-digit career weeks in the elite, after exactly who you’re thinking.

MOST CAREER WEEKS IN TOP 10, MEN BORN IN 2000s:

  • 213 weeks: Carlos Alcaraz [born in 2003]
  • 186 weeks: Jannik Sinner [born in 2001]
  • 100 weeks: Felix Auger-Aliassime [born in 2000]
  • 86 weeks: Holger Rune [born in 2003]
  • 54 weeks: Lorenzo Musetti [born in 2002]
  • 49 weeks: Ben Shelton [born in 2002]
  • 43 weeks: Jack Draper [born in 2001]

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Auger-Aliassime joins an even more exclusive list of Canadians with that long of a tenure in the Top 10 of the ATP rankings—he’s just the second to do so, after Milos Raonic, who spent 151 weeks in the elite across the 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017 seasons.

Denis Shapovalov is the only other Canadian ever to reach the ATP Top 10, spending 10 weeks there across 2020 and 2021.

As for Canadian women, 2019 US Open champion Bianca Andreescu holds the record for most career weeks in the WTA Top 10, spending 85 weeks in the elite across the 2019, 2020 and 2021 seasons (that total doesn’t include the 20 weeks the WTA rankings were frozen in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic).

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