On Sunday, three champions won tournaments in Europe for important personal milestones. What did it mean for each of them, and how will it help their careers in the near future? ?

1

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga

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The Frenchman has had a wild year with several disappointing first and second-round exits, along with a slew of tournament titles. In Antwerp on Sunday, he won his fourth title of 2017— a career record for the 32-year-old. The last time he won more than two tournaments in a season was 2009 (three).

Tsonga, ranked No. 15, has an outside chance of getting to the ATP Finals in London, but he needs great runs in Vienna and Paris.

2

Juan Martin del Potro

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After dealing with injury setbacks for much of the first half of the season, Del Potro won his first title of 2017 by taking out an in-form Grigor Dimitrov. It’s the second straight year that the Argentine has won Stockholm and marks the 20th title of his career.

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Best of all, Del Potro gained important ground for a shot at joining the field in London. The 29-year-old needs deep runs in Basel and Paris to close the 440-point gap behind Pablo Carreno Busta. Kevin Anderson and Sam Querrey are also ahead of Del Potro.

3

Damir Dzumhur

Who is Dzumhur? Well, for starters, he’s the first player ever to win St. Petersburg and Moscow in the same year. The Bosnian escaped with four three-set matches last week and leaves as the king of Russian tennis.

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For his strong fall runs, the 25-year-old has reached a career-high of No. 31. He’s got a good chance at being seeded at the Australian Open—not bad for a player that was ranked No. 94 in June.