Stan Wawrinka is on the verge of making history at a Challenger Tour event in Rennes.
The three-time Grand Slam champion, who was not awarded a wildcard for this year’s US Open, is closing in on his first title since 2020, having reached the final of the Open de Rennes, where he will play first seed Hugo Gaston.
Wawrinka has struggled this year at ATP Tour-level competitions, crashing out in the early stages of several tournaments, but he has found some success on the Challenger circuit.
He recently made the semifinals in Cancun, and earlier this season, he advanced to the final in Aix-en-Provence before suffering defeat to Borna Coric.
Now, however, Wawrinka is bidding to become the oldest Challenger Tour champion in history.
Photo by VALERY HACHE/AFP via Getty ImagesThe oldest Challenger Tour champions in history
The record is currently held by Ivo Karlovic, who clinched the 2018 title in Calgary at the age of 39 years and seven months.
Since then, a handful of stars have claimed titles in their late 30s, but have not been able to surpass Karlovic.
Fernando Verdasco won the Monterrey crown in 2022 at 38 years and three months, before Richard Gasquet emerged victorious at the Cassis Challenger event in 2024.
PlayerAgeTitleIvo Karlovic39 years, 7 monthsCalgary 2018Fernando Verdasco38 years, 3 monthsMonterrey 2022Richard Gasquet38 years, 2 monthsCassis 2024Dick Norman38 years, 1 monthMexico City 2009Stephane Robert37 years, 8 monthsBurnie 2018Fabio Fognini37 years, 6 monthsMontemar 2024Bob Carmichael37 years, 6 monthsHobart 1978Stephane Robert37 years, 5 monthsKobe 2017Tommy Robredo37 years, 1 monthParma 2019Tommy Robredo37 years, 1 monthPoznan 2019Marin Cilic36 years, 8 monthsNottingham 2025The oldest Challenger Tour champions in history
Wawrinka, now aged 40 years and eight months, has his second chance of the year to secure the record, having failed to do so in Aix-en-Provence.
His opponent, Gaston, holds a 1-0 winning record against him, having beaten the Swiss star in the third round of the 2020 French Open.
Photo by Mateo Villalba/Getty ImagesStan Wawrinka’s struggles at tour-level events in 2025
Wawrinka kicked off his 2025 campaign at the Australian Open, where, in round one, he was taken out by Lorenzo Sonego.
He continued to play on the ATP circuit, but suffered three more consecutive first-round exits in Montpellier, Rotterdam, and Marseille, before featuring at a Challenger event for the first time this season in Naples.
His sole appearance at a Masters 1000 competition came to an end in the first round when he lost to Alejandro Tabilo, and the veteran’s Grand Slam season finished up at Roland Garros, where he bowed out in his opening match with Jacob Fearnley.
Since the French Open, Wawrinka has entered just two ATP events, Gstaad and Umag, recording two losses and one victory.