Tommy Paul is the American who came up on dirt and built a game for everything else. Raised in North Carolina and a former world No. 3 junior, he won the 2015 French Open boys' singles title by defeating fellow American Taylor Fritz in the final, turned pro that same year, and — unusual for an American male — showed a preference for clay, winning the Junior French Open and his first five ITF Futures singles titles on the surface. The dirt apprenticeship is the backstory; what he became is a flat-hitting, quick-footed hardcourter whose movement and timing turn rallies into chess.
What fans watch him for is the athleticism — the slide-and-redirect defense, the early-strike backhand, the willingness to take time away from bigger servers. He doesn't overpower; he reroutes. The serve can be a liability against the elite tier, but the return and the legs keep him in long matches where lesser movers leak first.
The arc is one of "steady steps," to use his own framing. He recorded the biggest win of his career defeating world No. 2 Rafael Nadal in the second round of the 2022 Paris Masters. Then came the breakthrough: his first Grand Slam semifinal at the 2023 Australian Open, beating Ben Shelton to become the first American man to reach that stage since Andy Roddick in 2009, before falling to Novak Djokovic. In 2024 he claimed his biggest title at Queen's Club, reached the Wimbledon quarterfinals for the first time, and earned Olympic doubles bronze alongside Taylor Fritz.
The ceiling arrived in mid-2025. Paul surged to a career-high No. 8 in June after a clay season that included a semifinal run in Rome — where he took a set from Jannik Sinner — and a quarterfinal at Roland-Garros. Now ranked 28th, he's the proven-but-unfinished American: a man who's reached the last eight on all three surfaces and is still chasing the major final the résumé keeps hinting at.