AUGUSTA, GA. â When Rory McIlroy closed out his own career Grand Slam â winning all four of golfâs majors â last year at the Masters, he didnât just end a long drought of career Grand Slam winners in golf. He kickstarted whatâs looking like a remarkable convergence of talent in both menâs golf and tennis.
Prior to McIlroyâs win, just 10 men had completed the career Grand Slam in golf or tennis. Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Novak Djokovic all managed the feat three times over, Rafael Nadal did it twice. Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Rod Laver, Andre Agassi and Roger Federer all delivered, as well. (Caveats apply; the tennis record dates to the start of the Open era in 1968, while golfâs time period stretched back to 1934.)Â
Earlier this year, Carlos Alcaraz completed a remarkably quick ascent to the top of the career slam pinnacle, notching all four in less than four years. And over the next few months, thereâs a very good chance weâll see two more ⊠and maybe three, if the golf gods are smiling. Itâs a remarkable confluence of talent, and weâre clearly living in what weâll call the good olâ days a couple decades from now.Â
One more note: Thereâs one career achievement level even higher than a career grand slam ⊠but weâll get to that in a moment. First, letâs break down the new crop of champions.
The newest members
Rory McIlroy
Grand Slam markers: U.S. Open (2011), PGA Championship (2012), Open Championship (2014), Masters (2025)
Chances needed to close out career slam: 10
Perspective: A lesson in tenacity. Augusta National bedeviled McIlroy for a decade and a half before he finally mastered it in 2025.Â
Carlos Alcaraz
Grand Slam markers: U.S. Open (2022), Wimbledon (2023), French Open (2024), Australian Open (2026)
Chances needed to close out career slam: 2
Perspective: Alcaraz is simply an immediately dominant figure. With seven career slams before turning 23, heâs already just one more Australian Open win from a double career slam.Â
On the brink
Jannik Sinner
Grand Slam markers: Australian Open (2024), U.S. Open (2024), Wimbledon (2025)
Chances needed to close out career slam: None yet, first French Open chance is in May
Perspective: Like Alcaraz, Sinner came out firing; heâs won all four of his slams since 2024. And heâll be dueling with Alcaraz for every one over the next decade.Â
Scottie Scheffler
Grand Slam markers: Masters (2022), PGA Championship (2025), Open Championship (2025)
Chances to close out career slam: None yet, first U.S. Open chance is in June
Perspective: Well, that was quick. In just two months, Scheffler went from âcan he win anywhere but Augusta?â to âwill he win everywhere on earth?â His first crack at the career Grand Slam will be at Shinnecock in June, and heâll be the favorite to snag it.
Jordan Spieth
Grand slam markers: Masters (2015), U.S. Open (2015), Open Championship (2017)
Chances to close out career slam: 9 and counting
Perspective: Spieth came close to wrapping up the deal in 2019 when he finished T3 at the PGA, but since then has slowly backslid. He missed the cut last year at the PGA for the first time since 2014.
Phil Mickelson
Grand slam markers: Masters (2004), PGA Championship (2005), Open Championship (2013)
Chances to close out career slam: 12 and counting
Perspective: Mickelsonâs six (!) second-place finishes in the U.S. Open are a brutal slap from the golf gods. Heâs missed the cut the last four U.S. Opens, and the window is just about nailed shut.Â
Thereâs no guarantee that Scheffler or Sinner will close out their slams; history is replete with legendary names who didnât quite get it done. Arnold Palmer and Tom Watson, for all their skills, could never quite win the PGA Championship, and Jimmy Connors couldnât ever win the French Open.Â
The Golden Slam: The absolute pinnacle
Sure, a career Grand Slam is great, but you know whatâs even better? Throwing an Olympic gold medal on top of that pile. Three menâs tennis players have completed a Golden Slam: Agassi, Nadal and Djokovic. Since golf was absent from the Olympics from 1904 to 1916, Nicklaus, Woods et. al. didnât have a chance to claim one, but you know who did? Scottie Scheffler, of course, with one of the great rounds of the 21st century: a closing 62 at Paris 2024. (Keep an eye out for Xander Schauffele, too, 2020 gold medal winner and two-time major champ. If he wins the Masters next week, the U.S. Open gets even more interesting.)Â
Why are we seeing all this excellence in one narrow slice of sports history? We could create some kind of hypothesis about training methods and nutrition, but those would apply to the competition, as well. The truth, honestly, defies any hardcore data analysis: McIlroy, Alcaraz, Scheffler and Skinner are simply magnificently gifted athletes who would have thrived in any era of their chosen sport, and itâs our good fortune that theyâre all at the height of their powers in ours.
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