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Oldest ATP 500 Clay Court Title Winners

Oldest ATP 500 Clay Court Title Winners

This record tracks the oldest clay-court title winners in the Open Era, focusing on the men’s singles champions who won on clay court at the oldest ages and set the standard for longevity on one of tennis’s most demanding surfaces.

At the summit sits πŸ‡¦πŸ‡ΊKen Rosewall, who owns the highest age in the record with Gstaad 1975 at 40 years and 246 days. He is not a one-off at the top of the ranking: the next three lines are also his, with Houston WCT 1975 at 40 years and 169 days, then Tokyo 1973 at 38 years and 340 days and Osaka 1973 at 38 years and 334 days.

The only player who comes close to challenging that veteran ceiling with any consistency is πŸ‡·πŸ‡ΈNovak Djokovic. His clay title age line includes Geneva 2025 at 37 years and 362 days, Paris Olympics 2024 at 37 years and 68 days, and Roland Garros 2023 at 36 years and 6 days, proving that the modern record still has a clear second pillar.

Beyond those two, the rest of the top 20 shows how unusual the record is. πŸ‡©πŸ‡΄Victor Estrella Burgos reached Quito 2017 at 36 years and 188 days; πŸ‡¦πŸ‡ΊRod Laver won San Juan WCT 1975 at 36 years and 157 days; πŸ‡­πŸ‡·Nikola PiliΔ‡ took Aviles 1975 at 36 years and 32 days; and πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡ΈRafael Nadal appears later with Roland Garros 2022 at 35 years and 354 days. In this record, clay longevity is not a single-name story: it is Rosewall at the ceiling, Djokovic as the modern exception, and a long tail of champions whose clay titles still clustered well into their mid-to-late thirties.