Aleksandar Vukic is the Sydney-born Australian who reached the tour the long way — through a college lecture hall. The son of Montenegrin parents who emigrated to Australia fleeing the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s, he spent four years at the University of Illinois, earned three All-American honors and a finance degree, and only turned full-time pro after graduating in 2018. That late start defines the arc: years of Futures and Challenger grinding before the ranking caught the ball-striking.
The game runs front-to-back through the serve. At 6-foot-2 and right-handed, Vukic leans on a heavy first delivery and flat groundstrokes to shorten points and bail himself out of trouble — the profile of a player who can take a set off anyone on a hot serving day but whose second-serve and return numbers leave the floor lower than the ceiling. On quick courts, that combination has made him a recurring qualifying-draw spoiler.
The career has been built on persistence rather than a single breakout. He qualified for his Grand Slam debut at Roland-Garros in 2020 and has been a regular main-draw presence at the majors since, with his best runs threading three-set survival tests rather than blowouts. A top-100 mainstay, he's the kind of name seeded players don't want early — capable of pushing the Australian Open field at home and trading sets with bigger reputations at the US Open.
This season Vukic sits right at world No. 100, the familiar tightrope where every match swings ranking points and direct entry into the next Slam. For a 30-year-old who chose the diploma before the tour, holding that line — and serving his way back into it whenever it slips — remains the whole job.