Zootennis


Schedule a training visit to the prestigious Junior Tennis Champions Center in College Park, MD by clicking on the banner above

Friday, January 30, 2026

Hance and Frodin Reach Australian Open Junior Semifinals, Traralgon Champions Upset in Quarterfinals; Peers Defends AO Mixed Title; Bender and Gardality Advance to Les Petits As Doubles Final; Brady Reaches San Diego W100 Semifinals

Thea Frodin and Keaton Hance both advanced to Saturday's semifinals at the Australian Open Junior Championships, but there was little similarity in the manner they accomplished that acheivement.

Frodin, the No. 8 seed, needed just over an hour to defeat No. 13 seed Mariia Makarova 6-3, 6-0, winning the final nine games of the match.

The 17-year-old from California had 16 winners and 13 unforced errors and never faced a break point despite getting only 45 percent of her first serves in.

Makarova was unable to get back on track after a close first half of the opening set. The 16-year-old from Russia made 23 unforced errors and hit just eight winners, and had only a few game points in those last nine games, when the match was all but decided.

Frodin will face unseeded Ekaterina Tupitsyna of Russia, who battled back to beat Traralgon champion Xinran Sun of China 3-6, 7-5, 7-5. Sun was up 4-2 in the second set and served for the match at 5-4 in the third, but Tupitsyna continued to take aggressive cuts and aim for the lines to earn the biggest win of her junior career.

Frodin needed less time to win her match than it took her boyfriend Hance to claim his first set in his 7-6(7), 6-4 win over No. 11 seed Kuan-Shou Chen of Taiwan.

Much of that was due to Hance's 51 unforced errors, that saw him go from 2-0 up in the first set to Chen serving for it at 5-4. But despite all the forehand errors, some of which could no doubt be attributed to the speed and consistency Chen, Hance kept competing, and after saving a set point in that game with a deep ball that handcuffed Chen, broke back. He then lost serve again, but again broke back to send the set into a tiebreaker.

Up 6-5 in the tiebreaker, Hance then lost both of his serves with unforced errors, but he saved a second set point with a perfectly executed volley; on his second set point, he finally ended 75-minute set with a forehand winner.

The second set looked to be firmly in Hance's control when he broke his fellow 17-year-old for a 4-1 lead, but Hance then proceeded to lose his next two service games without earning a game point in either. 

But in Chen's service game, Hance got an opportunity at 30-40 and outlasted Chen in a long rally, with Chen eventually hitting a forehand wide to put Hance up 5-4. Somewhat surprisingly, given the history of the match, Hance closed it out easily, with four first serves, two of his 29 winners and two return errors by Chen.

Hance will face No. 8 seed Zangar Nurlanuly of Kazakhstan, who needed nearly three hours to shake unseeded Kai Thompson of Hong Kong 3-6, 7-6(4), 6-4. Nurlanuly is in his second consecutive junior slam semifinal, after becoming the first player from his country to advance that far at the US Open.

In the bottom half, No. 3 seed Ryo Tabata of Japan made his second career junior slam final four, with the Roland Garros semifinalist beat No. 5 seed Jamie Mackenzie of Germany 6-7(4), 6-4, 7-6(7) in two hours and 45-minutes, saving four match points serving at 5-6 in the third set.

Tabata will face Ziga Sesko of Slovenia, who avenged his two 2025 losses to Traralgon champion Luis Guto Miguel 6-2, 7-6(5). Sesko has not lost a set this week after losing in the third round last week in Traralgon.

Hance and Nurlanuly met for the only time way back in 2022 in the ITF World Junior Tennis team event for 14U players, and that is also the same tournament where Sesko got his win over Tabata in their only other meeting.

Three unseeded teams and one No. 1 team will compete in the doubles finals Saturday.

The Australian wild card team of Ymerali Ibraimi and Cooper Kose will face Conner Doig of South Africa and Dimitar Kisimov of Bulgaria for the boys title.

Top seeds Alena Kovackova and Jana Kovackova of the Czech Republic will play for their second straight junior slam doubles title, with the US Open champions facing compatriots Tereza Hermanova and Denisa Zoldakova in the girls doubles final.

In the Australian Open mixed doubles final Friday, wild cards John Peers and Olivia Gadecki of Australia defended their title, beating unseeded Kristina Mladenovic and Manuel Guinard of France 4-6, 6-3, 10-8 in the final. Peers, a former standout at Middle Tennessee State and Baylor, and Gadecki are the first team to defend a mixed title at the Australian Open since Jana Novotna and Jim Pugh(UCLA) accomplished that in 1988 and 1989. For more on the mixed doubles final, see this article from the ATP website.

The Les Petits As singles semifinals and doubles finals are set, and despite all the chaos the first four days of the tournament, there is still a good chance a seed will win all four events.

Two Swiss boys have advanced to the singles semifinals, with qualifier Richard Mitchell facing No. 9 seed Luis Bernardo Saraiva of Portugal in the top half.

No. 10 seed Jonas Waelti of Switzerland will face last week's champion at Bolton, Lyoma Hotelier of Japan, the No. 16 seed.

Top seed Elizaveta Anikina may have faced her toughest test in the third round against Bolton champion and No. 16 seed Anna Kapanadze of the United States, but Anikina was back to her previous form today, surrending just two games. She will play No. 5 seed Polina Kashitsyna of Russia, who has yet to drop a set in her four wins.

Unseeded Vasilisa Marchenko of Russia will face a third Russian finalist, No. 10 seed Aleksandra Karabanova, after Karabanova defeated unseeded Nadia Poznick, the last American in singles, 6-0, 6-1.

No. 4 seeds Karabanova and Kashitsyna will play for the doubles title against unseeded compatriots Varvara Makarova and Ildana Zaripova. Makarova and Zaripova defeated Poznick and Czech partner Beata Maresova 6-2, 7-5 in the semifinals today.

The unseeded American doubles team of Daniel Gardality and David Bender will play for the boys doubles title after beating Hotelier and Reita Yamanaka of Japan 6-2, 6-4 in today's semifinals. They will face No. 5 seeds Martin Adamca and Matteo Sanson of Slovakia in the championship match.

Live streaming and live scoring is available here.

At the W100 in San Diego, former UCLA All-American Jennifer Brady's comeback is proceeding smoothly, with the 30-year-old advancing to the semifinals. 

Brady, who accepted a wild card into her first event since October of 2023, beat No. 3 seed Cadence Brace of Canada, a sophomore at LSU, 7-5, 6-4 in today's quarterfinals. She will play No. 5 seed Elvina Kalieva, who beat top seed Louisa Chirico 7-6(7), 6-3.

No. 6 seed Mary Stoiana(Texas A&M) is through to the semifinals after LSU sophomore Kayla Cross of Canada, the No. 4 seed, retired trailing 5-2 in the first set. Stoiana will face No. 2 seed Elli Mandlik, who needed two hours and 20 minutes to get past 15-year-old qualifier Kristina Liutova 6-2, 4-6, 7-5.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Frodin and Hance Reach Quarterfinals at Australian Open Junior Championships; Poznick Advances in Singles and Doubles at Les Petits As; Karki, Johnson Post Wins at Naples M15; Liutova, Brady Through at W100 San Diego

Seventeen-year-olds Thea Frodin and Keaton Hance begin their final year of ITF Junior Circuit competition with their first junior slam singles quarterfinals after picking up straight-sets victories Thursday at the Australian Open Junior Championships.


Frodin, seeded No. 8, defeated unseeded Antonina Sushkova of Ukraine 6-4, 7-5, while Hance, the No. 4 seed, got past unseeded Simone Massellani of Italy 6-0, 6-4. 

Frodin will face No. 13 seed Mariia Makarova of Russia Friday(tonight in the United States), with Hance's opponent No. 11 seed Kuan-Shou of Taiwan. 

No. 6 seed Xinran Sun of China, last week's Traralgon J300 champion, will play unseeded Ekaterina Tupitsyna in the other quarterfinal in the top half. No. 10 seed Kanon Sawashiro of Japan faces No. 3 seed Ksenia Efremova of France and No. 11 seed Yushan Shao of China will play unseeded Rada Zolotareva of Russia in the bottom half quarterfinals.

Unseeded Kai Thompson of Hong Kong faces No. 8 seed Zangar Nurlanuly of Kazakhstan in the top quarterfinal, with the survivor playing the Hance-Chen winner. 

In the bottom half, No. 5 seed Jamie Mackenzie of Germany, a TCU signee, will face No. 3 seed Ryo Tabata of Japan and No. 2 seed and Traralgon champion Luis Guto Miguel of Brazil will play No. 7 seed Ziga Sesko of Slovenia.

Miguel and Sesko are the only quarterfinal opponents who have met before, with Miguel beating Sesko twice last year, in the quarterfinals of the J300 in Belgium and the semifinals of the J300 in Canada. Miguel won the title at both events.

There are no Americans left in doubles, which is extremely rare, with at least one American boy claiming the Australian Open doubles title every year from 2022 through 2025, and at least one US girl winning in three of the last four years.

Thursday's third round matches featuring Americans:
Keaton Hance[4] d. Simone Massellani(ITA) 6-0, 6-4
Thea Frodin[8] d. Antonina Sushkova(URK) 6-4, 7-5

Doubles quarterfinals:
Ymerali Ibraimi and Cooper Kose[WC](AUS) d. Vihaan Reddy and Juan Miguel Bolivar Idarraga(COL) 6-2, 6-4
Connor Doig(RSA) and Dimitar Kisimov(BUL) d. Keaton Hance and Tanishk Konduri[4] 7-6(5), 7-6(4) 

Alena and Jana Kovackova[1](CZE) d. Capucine Jauffret and Tahila Kokkinis(AUS) 6-2, 6-2
Mariia Makarova and Rada Zolotareva(RUS) d. Thea Frodin and Anastasija Cvetkovic(SRB)[3] 6-4, 7-5 
Tereza Hermanova and Denisa Zoldakova(CZE) d. Melije Clarke and Nancy Lee 6-4, 6-3

Jessica Pegula lost to Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan 6-3, 7-6(7) in the women's semifinals, ending the string of American women in a slam final at five.

Christian Harrison and Neal Skupski(LSU) of Great Britain will play in the men's doubles final after beating the winners of the last two slams, Marcel Granollers of Spain and Horacio Zeballos of Argentina, 6-3, 7-6(7).  They will play the Australian wild card team of Jason Kubler and Marc Polmans in Saturday's final. 

The quarterfinals are set for at the Les Petits As in Tarbes France, with unseeded Nadia Poznick the sole American remaining in singles. 

Poznick, a blue chip from Ann Arbor, beat Ania Curuia of Romania 6-1, 3-6, 6-2 today in the third round. No. 16 seed Anna Kapanadze, who won the title last week in Bolton England, played top seed Elizaveta Anikina of Estonia in the only girls match that  featured two seeds, with Anikina rebounding for a 3-6, 6-2, 6-3 win.

No. 15 seed Rex Kulman lost to qualifier Richard Mitchell of Switzerland 6-4, 6-2.

Poznick will face No. 10 seed Aleksandra Karabanova of Russia in the quarterfinals. 

Poznick will play in the doubles semifinals Friday with international partners. Poznick and Beata Maresova of the Czech Republic, who are unseeded, will play the unseeded pair of Varvara Makarova and Ildana Zaripova of Russia in the semifinals.

The unseeded American pair of Daniel Garadality and David Bender have also reached the doubles semifinals, where they will play the unseeded Japanese pair of Reita Yamanaka and Lyoma Hotelier.

Live streaming and live scoring can be found here.

At the M15 this week in Naples Florida, both 18-year-old Ronit Karki and 16-year-old wild card Andrew Johnson have reached the quarterfinals of an ITF men's World Tennis Tour tournament for the first time with wins in the second round today. 

Johnson, who opted to skip the Australian Open Junior this year, defeated qualifier Adam Lynch(Barry) 6-2, 6-1; Lynch had beaten top seed Tristan McCormick(Notre Dame, Georgia) in the first round. Johnson sill play No. 8 seed Will Grant(Florida) Friday.

Stanford signee Karki, who received entry via the iTF's Junior Reserve program, beat No. 4 seed Sebastian Gima of Romania 7-5, 7-5 and will play Ryan Colby(USC, Georgia) in the quarterfinals.


Several notable results from the W100 in San Diego, with 15-year-old qualifier Kristina Liutova beating Juliet Pareja 6-2, 6-3 in the first round and then getting a 3-2 first set retirement win over No. 7 seed Arianne Hartono(Ole Miss) of the Netherlands in the second round today. She will face either No. 2 seed Elli Mandlik or qualifier Ema Burgic(Baylor) of Bosnia.

And former UCLA star Jennifer Brady, who had been out for over two years due to injury, has won her first two matches, beating Katarina Jokic(Georgia) of Serbia 6-4, 0-6, 6-3 in the first round and No. 8 seed Kayla Day 6-4, 6-2 in the second round today.  Brady will play either LSU sophomore Cadence Brace of Canada, the No. 3 seed, or wild card Alexis Nguyen, a North Carolina signee, in Fridays' quarterfinals.

Also through to a quarterfinal meeting are No. 6 seed Mary Stoiana(Texas A&M) and LSU sophomore Kayla Cross of Canada.

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Top Seed Kovackova Loses in Third Round of Australian Open Junior Championships; Pegula Through to Women's Semifinals; All Top Eight Boys Seeds Out after Round 2 at Les Petits As; ITA Team Indoor Fields Set, Locations Determined

Top seed Alena Kovackova followed her younger sister Jana, the No. 2 seed, out of the Australian Open Junior Championships Wednesday, losing to No. 13 seed Mariia Makarova 7-6(3), 7-5 in the third round. Kovackova was the only seed to exit Wednesday, when only half of the round of 16 matches were played, but three unseeded players booked their places in a junior slam quarterfinal for the first time: Kai Thompson of Hong Kong, a Central Florida recruit; Ekaterina Tupitsyna and Rada Zolotareva.


The two Americans remaining in singles play their third round matches Thursday(tonight in the US): Thea Frodin and Keaton Hance. The ITF Junior Circuit website has articles about both of them: Frodin is featured here and Hance is featured here.

In Thursday's doubles quarterfinals, five teams featuring Americans are in action.

Thursday's matches featuring Americans:

Third round singles:
Keaton Hance[4] v Simone Massellani(ITA)
Thea Frodin[8] v Antonina Sushkova(URK)

Doubles quarterfinals:
Vihaan Reddy and Juan Miguel Bolivar Idarraga(COL) v Ymerali Ibraimi and Cooper Kose[WC](AUS)
Keaton Hance and Tanishk Konduri[4] v Connor Doig(RSA) and Dimitar Kisimov(BUL)

Capucine Jauffret and Tahila Kokkinis(AUS) v Alena and Jana Kovackova[1](CZE)
Thea Frodin and Anastasija Cvetkovic(SRB)[3] v Mariia Makarova and Rada Zolotareva(RUS)
Melije Clarke and Nancy Lee v Tereza Hermanova and Denisa Zoldakova(CZE)

The only American remaining in the Australian Open men's and women's singles is Jessica Pegula, who beat Amanda Anisimova 6-2, 7-6(1) in the quarterfinals Wednesday.  She will face Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan in Thursday's semifinal.

Ben Shelton(Florida) lost to Jannik Sinner of Italy 6-3, 6-4, 6-4.

Christian Harrison, playing with Great Britain's Neal Skupski(LSU), is the only American left in doubles. The No. 6 seeds will play No. 3 seeds Marcel Granollers of Spain and Horacio Zeballos of Argentina in the semifinals Thursday. Granollers and Zeballos are the reigning Roland Garros and US Open doubles champions. 

The chaos continued at Les Petits As Wednesday, with all of the boys top eight seeds now out after the second round. Boys top seed Anastasis Mosaikos of Cyprus lost today to French wild card Timeo Malandain 7-6(3), 7-6(5) and No. 3 seed Rafael Papoian lost to qualifier Richard Mitchell of Switzerland 3-6, 6-4, 6-4.

I don't know if they've changed the seeding process this year, but it's been as poor a result from the seeds as I can remember in my two decades of following the tournament in Tarbes.

The top seed in the girls draw, Elizaveta Anikina of Estonia, is still alive; she will face No. 16 seed and Bolton champion Anna Kapanadze of New York in the third round Thursday. There are a total of six seeds left in the girls singles draw, with IMG International and Junior Orange Bowl 14s champion Ayaka Iwasa of Japan, the No. 4 seed, among them.

In addition to Kapanadze, two other Americans have advanced to the third round: No. 15 seed Rex Kulman and unseeded Nadia Poznick.

Live streaming and live scoring is available here.

After a lot of messy weather for the Kickoff Weekend regionals, the fields are finally set for the ITA Division I women's (February 6-10) and men's (February 13-17) Team Indoor Championships next month.

Two of the women's teams who will travel to Illinois did not play a match due to their opponents being unable to complete the trip: Georgia and Texas. The Texas A&M women ended up playing their one match, against Arizona State, at the Hawkins Indoor Center at Baylor. All the men's regional finals were played, but the results from the men's regionals were unprecedented, with three No. 4 seeds advancing and seven hosts failing to qualify.

Kickoff Weekend final match results:

WOMEN:

*North Carolina[1] d. UNC-Charlotte[2] 4-0
*Virginia[1] d. Southern California[2] 4-0
*Tennessee[1] d. Clemson[4] 4-3
*Duke[1] d. South Carolina[3] 4-0
Oklahoma State[2] d. Texas Tech[1]* 4-0
*Georgia[1] advanced to Team Indoor without playing a match
*LSU[1] d. UCLA[2] 4-1
*Auburn[1] d. Florida State[3] 4-0
Vanderbilt[2] d. Michigan[1]* 4-2
*Ohio State[1] d. Iowa[4] 4-0
*Oklahoma[1] v Stanford[2] 4-1
*Texas[1] advanced to Team Indoor without playing a match
*Texas A&M[1] d. Arizona State[2] 4-0
*NC State[1] d. Florida[3] 4-3

*Kickoff host

Northwestern and Illinois, as hosts, receive byes into the 16-team event.

MEN:
Clemson[4] d. Harvard[2] 4-1
*Virginia[1] d. Michigan[2] 4-0
*Mississippi State[1] d. Auburn[2] 4-2
Texas A&M[3] d. Duke[4] 4-2
*Wake Forest[1] d. Vanderbilt[2] 4-0
Florida[2] d. Columbia[1]* 4-2
*Stanford[1] d. Rice[2] 4-0
*Texas[1] d. South Florida[2] 4-0
*Ohio State[1] d. Purdue[2] 4-0
UC Santa Barbara[2] d. UCLA[1]* 4-1
Arizona State[4] d. Princeton[2] 4-3
Central Florida[2] d. Oklahoma[4] 4-3
LSU[4] d. Pepperdine[3] 4-2
*TCU[1] d. Georgia[2] 4-1

*Kickoff host

SMU and Baylor, as hosts, receive byes into the 16-team event.

The two-site format for Team Indoor Championships now in its second year, requires a split of the 16 teams, and today the ITA released the information on who is assigned where:

WOMEN:
Northwestern site:

Auburn
LSU
Georgia
NC State
Northwestern
Oklahoma State
Tennessee 
Virginia

Illinois site:
Duke
Illinois
North Carolina
Ohio State
Oklahoma
Texas
Texas A&M
Vanderbilt

It appears to me, and I know it's early, that the field at Northwestern is loaded with contenders, with the Illinois field less strong overall.


SMU site:

Arizona State
Clemson
Florida
Mississippi State
Ohio State
SMU
Stanford
Virginia

Baylor site:

Baylor
LSU
Texas A&M
TCU
Texas
UCF
UC Santa Barbara
Wake Forest

I think it's unfortunate that all the men's teams from the state of Texas will be in Baylor, as SMU had such good crowds when Texas and Texas A&M played in Dallas last year on the first two days. 

The semifinals and finals will be again be played at Northwestern and SMU.

The latest coaches poll rankings are out, with the Top 10 shown below. Click on the heading for the full list of 25.

Top 10 Teams ITA D-I January 28, 2026


First place votes in brackets (not applicable for women), previous ranking in parentheses

1. Wake Forest[13] (1)
2. Virginia (2)
3. Stanford (3)
4. TCU (5)
5. Texas (4)
6. Ohio State (6)
7. Mississippi State (7)
8. Texas A&M (11)
9. Central Florida (12)
10. San Diego (8)


1. Georgia (1)
2. Texas A&M (2)
3. North Carolina (3)
4. Auburn (4)
5. LSU (5)
6. Oklahoma (6)
7. Duke (8)
8. Oklahoma State (10)
9. NC State (11)
10. Ohio State (12)

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Two US Juniors Advance to Round of 16 at Australian Open; Wins By Seeds Scarce at Les Petits As; Four USTA Pro Circuit Events Underway in California and Florida

All three Americans who played their Australian Open quarterfinal matches Tuesday lost, with Iva Jovic, Learner Tien and Coco Gauff seeing their runs ended at the first major of the year. On Wednesday(tonight in the US), at least one American is guaranteed to reach the semifinals in women's singles.


Tuesday's quarterfinal results of Americans:
Aryna Sabalenka[1](BLR) d. Iva Jovic[29] 6-3, 6-0
Elina Svitolina[12](UKR) d. Coco Gauff[3] 6-1, 6-2
Alexander Zverev[3](GER) d. Learner Tien[25] 6-3, 6-7(5), 6-1, 7-6(3)

Wednesday's quarterfinal matches featuring Americans: 
Jessica Pegula[6] v Amanda Anisimova[4]
Ben Shelton[8] v Jannik Sinner[2]

The results of Americans at the Australian Open Junior Championships were only slightly better Tuesday, with the last two US players in the singles draws No. 8 seed Thea Frodin and No. 4 seed Keaton Hance.

Neither are playing in singles Wednesday, with the cancellation of wheelchair matches Tuesday due to heat pushing half of the third round of singles matches until Thursday.  Several Americans are playing in second round doubles matches Wednesday; Frodin, Capucine Jauffret and Vihaan Reddy advanced to the doubles quarterfinals with their international partners with wins Tuesday.

Top seeds Ryo Tabata of Japan and Yannick Alexandrescou of France lost in the second round to the Japanese team of Hyu Kawanishi and Kanta Watanabe 7-6(7), 6-2; no seeded teams remain in the top half of the boys doubles draw.

Tuesday's second round Australian Open junior matches featuring Americans:
Keaton Hance[4] d. Mark Ceban(GBR) 6-4, 4-6, 6-2
Nikita Bilozertsev[6](UKR) d. Vihaan Reddy 4-6, 6-1, 6-4
Ntungamili Raguin[Q](BOT) d. Gavin Goode[15] 6-2, 3-6, 6-4

Thea Frodin[8] d. Anastasia Lizunova(RUS) 7-5, 6-4

The first round of singles concluded today at Les Petits As, and after the two days of singles results, only 10 of the 16 girls seeds and just seven of the 16 boys seeds have advanced.

Two of the boys seeds falling were from the United States, with No. 4 seed Camelot Carnello losing to Bolton finalist Frederick Fabricius of Great Britain 6-3, 6-3 and No. 8 seed David Bender suffering a 7-5, 0-6, 6-0 loss to Loris Da Silva of France,

In the girls draw, No. 2 seed Emilia Henningsenof Denmark lost to qualifier Alessandra Urga of Germany 6-3, 1-6, 7-5.  

Unseeded American Nadia Poznick defeated No. 14 seed Dina Jaoid of Morocco 6-0, 6-0.

Both top seeds in singles, Anastasis Mosaikos of Cyprus and  Elizaveta Anikina of Estonia, did advance to the second round, but Mosaikos and parnter Enzo Brito of Sweden, the top seeds, did not survive in doubles, losing to the Australian team of Christopher Manton and Novak Palombo 6-3, 6-2.  The top seeded team in girls doubles withdrew and the No. 2 seeds in both girls and boys doubles lost, so that competition is wide open.

Live streaming and live scoring is available here.

There are four tournaments on the USTA Pro Circuit this week, two at the Barnes Tennis Center in San Diego and two on opposite sides of the state of Florida.

The first ATP Challenger of the year in the United States is the 100 in San Diego, with Sebastian Korda taking a wild card into tournament after his first round loss to Columbia senior Michael Zheng at the Australian Open. Korda is the top seed, with Rinky Hijikata(North Carolina) of Australia the No. 2 seed.

The other wild card went to Colton Smith(Arizona), who is the No. 7 seed.

Qualifying was completed today, with four Americans advancing to the main draw:  Evan Zhu(UCLA), Felix Corwin(Minnesota), Karl Poling(Princeton, UNC) and Stefan Dostanic(USC, Wake Forest).  Dostanic will face Hijikata in the first round.

Only three of the six first round matches on Tuesday's schedule have been completed, with SMU junior and NCAA singles finalist Trevor Svajda defeating Micah Braswell(Texas) 6-2, 6-2, Blaise Bicknell(Florida, Tennessee) defeating Alex Rybakov(TCU) 6-4, 7-5 and Toby Samuel(South Carolina) of Great Britain beating No. 8 seed Tristan Boyer(Stanford) 6-3, 5-7, 6-4.

The women's event, also at Barnes, is a W100, with former UCLA star Jennifer Brady beginning her comeback as a wild card. Brady will play former Georgia All-American Katarina Jokic of Serbia later this evening.


Other players receiving wild cards are North Carolina recruit Alexis Nguyen, who saved three match points in her 3-6, 7-6(11), 6-2 first round win today over Catherine Harrison(UCLA),  and 2023 US Open girls champion Katherine Hui(Stanford), who will play No. 6 seed Mary Stoiana(Texas A&M) in the first round.

Katerina Scott, who was unexpectedly announced as an addition to the University of Tennessee's team last week, will face LSU sophomore Kayla Cross of Canada in the opening round.

Qualifiers include Washington resident and 2025 Bradenton ITF J300 champion Kristina Liutova, who beat Ena Koike of Japan 6-2, 6-3 in the final round of qualifying today in her first W100 competition; Ava Markham(Wisconsin); Jo-Yee Chan (Oregon, San Diego State) and Kylie Collins(Texas, LSU, Oklahoma State).

Louisa Chirico is the top seed, with Elli Mandlik the No. 2 seed.

The other women's event is a W75 in Vero Beach Florida, where Caroline Dolehide and Whitney Osuigwe are the top seeds. The only American to qualify was Dasha Ivanova.

Wild cards were given to Sachia Vickery; Victoria Hu(Princeton), who will play No. 6 seed Bianca Andreescu of Canada; Ellie Schoppe(Furman, Florida State) and Susana Souhrada of El Salvador. Souhrada will face W35 Weston champion Akasha Urhobo in the first round. 

The men's event in Florida is an M15 in Naples, with Tristan McCormick(Notre Dame, Georgia) and Tommaso Compagnucci of Italy the top two seeds. 

Qualifying concluded today with six Americans reaching the main draw: Adam Lynch(Barry), Dakotah Bobo(Southern Miss, LSU), Matthew Segura, 2024 Kalamazoo 16s champion Gus Grumet, Matthew Thomson(Wake Forest) and 16-year-old Jerrid Gaines Jr.

Wild cards were given to 16-year-old Andy Johnson, who won his first round match today against Evan Bynoe 6-1, 5-7, 6-2; Hunter Heck(Illinois) and 33-year-old Darian King of Barbados.

2025 Wimbledon boys finalist Ronit Karki received entry via the ITF's junior reserved program, and he won his first round match 6-3, 6-3 today over Fermin Tenti of Argentina.

After he did not elect to make the trip to Australia, I was expecting to see Michael Antonius in this draw as a wild card; he hasn't played since the Orange Bowl. Jordan Lee was overseas last week, where he reached the final of a J200 in Tunisia, which was obviously impacted by bad weather with all the short scoring used.

Monday, January 26, 2026

Les Petits As Underway with Ten Americans Competing; Kovackova Out in Australian Open Juniors Round Two; Pegula, Anisimova, Shelton Advance to AO Quarterfinals; Stanford Tops Men's Recruiting Class Rankings

photo credit: Richard van Loon, toptennis.photos

While one of the four junior slams is in progress this week in Melbourne, the biggest individual tournament for the 14-and-under age division is also being played this week at Les Petits As in Tarbes France.

The first round of singles is played over Monday and Tuesday, and there has already been a big upset, with boys No. 2 seed Valentijn Roodenburg of the Netherlands beaten by qualifier Saidaslam Farkxodov of Uzbekistan 7-6(2), 6-4.

There are five US girls and five US boys in the draws:
Isha Manchala[8], Tara Guhan[15], Bolton champion Anna Kapanadze[16], Nadia Poznick and Capri Butera are the US girls, with Camelot Carnello[4], David Bender[8], Rex Kulman[15],  Pranav Vignesh and Daniel Gardality the US boys.  Manchala, Kapanadze, Butera and Kulman got wins today; Guhan and Vignesh lost their first round matches; the others will play Tuesday.

Below are the seeds, those who lost today noted. Live streaming and live scoring links can be found here.

Boys:
1. Anastasis Mosaikos(CYP)
2. Valentijn Roodenburg(NED) (out rd 1)
3. Rafael Papoian(RUS)
4. Camelot Carnello(USA)
5. Luca Sageder(AUT)
6. Matteo Sanson(SVK) (out rd 1)
7. Adam Napari(FIN)
8. David Bender(USA)
9. Luis Bernardo Saraiva(POR)
10. Jonas Waelti(SUI)
11. Enzo Brito(SWE)
12. Arsey Barkou(BLR) (out rd 1)
13. Oskar Laskowski(GBR)
14. Soulaimane Jamji(MAR)
15. Rex Kulman(USA)
16. Lyoma Hotelier(JPN)

Girls:
1. Elizaveta Anikina(EST)
2. Emilia Henningsen(DEN)
3. Eva Maria Bulai(ROU)
4. Ayaka Iwasa(JPN)
5. Polina Kashitsyna(RUS)
6. Lilly Falkenberg(SUI)
7. Liv Bretscher(SUI) (out rd 1)
8. Isha Manchala(USA)
9. Arina Fomina(RUS)
10. Aleksandra Karabanova(RUS)
11. Mariia Kocherzhenko(UKR)
12.Natalia Dragomir(ROU)
13. Beata Maresova(CZE)
14. Dina Jaoid(MAR)
15. Tara Guhan(USA) (out rd 1)
16. Anna Kapanadze(USA)

The No. 2 seed in the Australian Open girls draw also lost Monday, with Jana Kovackova of the Czech Republic falling to Rada Zolotareva of Russia. The 17-year-old Zolotareva, who reached the semifinals of the J300 in Traralgon last week, has already reached an ITF women's World Tennis Tour W75 final and is 516 in the WTA rankings, so that was a bit of a tough draw for the 15-year-old Kovackova.

The rest of the second round matches are Tuesday(tonight in the US), with an early start due to another day of debilitating heat forecast. I should be able to update the results of the four Americans on Tuesday's schedule later this evening, given the early start, although a heat delay could prevent the completion of the matches, as it did Sunday.

Monday's second round Australian Open junior results of Americans:

Leon Sloboda(SVK) d. Jack Secord[13] 6-3, 6-4
Flynn Thomas[12](SUI) d. Carel Ngounoue 6-1, 5-7, 6-4

Tuesday's second round Australian Open junior matches featuring Americans:

Keaton Hance[4] d. Mark Ceban(GBR) 6-4, 4-6, 6-2
Nikita Bilozertsev[6](UKR) d. Vihaan Reddy 4-6, 6-1, 6-4 
Ntungamili Raguin[Q](BOT) d. Gavin Goode[15] 6-2, 3-6, 6-4

Thea Frodin[8] d. Anastasia Lizunova(RUS)n 7-5, 6-4

Three more Americans--Jessica Pegula, Amanda Anisimova and Ben Shelton(Florida)--reached the quarterfinals of the Australian Open with wins Monday, prompting this alert from the USTA:

Six Americans -- four women and two men -- are set to compete in the singles quarterfinals of the Australian Open in Melbourne, setting a number of historical marks and superlatives in getting there: 

  • The four U.S. women reaching the quarterfinals -- Coco Gauff, Amanda Anisimova, Jessica Pegula and Iva Jovic -- are the most American women's quarterfinalists at the Australian Open since five in 2001 (Jennifer Capriati, Lindsay Davenport, Monica Seles, Serena Williams, Venus Williams).
  • The 21-year-old Gauff and 18-year-old Jovic are the first pair of Americans to reach a major quarterfinal both before turning 22 since Serena and Venus Williams at Roland Garros in 2002. 
  • 20-year old Learner Tien, who joins three-time AO quarterfinalist Ben Shelton as the two U.S. men's quarterfinalists, is the youngest man to reach the Australian Open quarterfinals since 2015 (Nick Kyrgios) and the youngest American man to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal since 2002 (Andy Roddick, US Open)

Monday's fourth round results of Americans:

Jessica Pegula[6] d. Madison Keys[9] 6-3, 6-4
Amanda Anisimova[4] d. Xinyu Wang(CHN) 7-6(4), 6-4

Lorenzo Musetti[5](ITA) d. Taylor Fritz[9] 6-2, 7-5, 6-4
Ben Shelton[8] d. Casper Ruud[12](NOR) 3-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4

Tuesday's quarterfinal matches featuring Americans:

Iva Jovic[29] v Aryna Sabalenka[1](BLR)
Coco Gauff[3] v Elina Svitolina[12](UKR)

Learner Tien[25] v Alexander Zverev[3](GER)

Ben Rothenberg has an excellent interview with Iva Jovic's father Bojan available at his Substack newsletter Bounces. The Jovics have always been regarded as exemplary tennis parents and this interview provides a look into why they've earned that reputation. (You need a subscription for the full interview).

The winter edition of the Tennis Recruiting Network's 2026 recruiting class rankings was published today, with the Stanford men taking the top spot with their signings of Ronit Karki, Gus Grumet and Arin Pallegar. Texas A&M is No. 2, with the Aggies getting the two first place votes that Stanford did not receive. Nos. 3-10 are Princeton, Michigan, Harvard, Duke, Virginia, Arizona State, Kentucky and Ohio State. There will be another Class of 2026 ranking later this spring, with new recruits and those changing their commitments likely to shuffle the order significantly.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Preston Wins ITF J300 Costa Rica Title; Top Seed Alexandrescou Upset in Australian Open Junior Championships; Jovic, Tien and Gauff Reach AO Quarterfinals; Urhobo Claims W35 Weston Title; Kickoff Weekend Update

Janae Preston was entered in both the Australian Open Junior Championships, where she would have been in qualifying, and the ITF J300 Coffee Bowl in Costa Rica, where she ended up as the No. 4 seed. Deciding to stay a little bit closer to home paid off, with the 15-year-old from Nevada earning her first ITF J300 title with a 6-1, 6-0 win over No. 7 seed Klara Blazkova of the Czech Republic last night. 

Preston, who won six sets by a 6-1 score during the week, won two ITF J100 titles in the first six months of last year, but it was last fall when she really began showing a higher level, reaching the quarterfinals of the ITF J300 in Houston and advancing to two semifinals at W15 tournaments. She will move into the ITF Junior Top 100 for the first time, and with all the new J200s, in addition to the J300s in March, she'll now have plenty of opportunities to secure a play in the junior slams this summer.

The first round of the Australian Open Junior Championships produced one major shock, with Matei Todoran of Romania defeating top seed Yannick Alexandrescou of France 7-6(5), 6-2. Although Alexandrescou now represents France, he was playing under the Romanian flag throughout his ITF junior career until late last year, so the two obviously know each other well. Todoran avenged his 6-1, 6-1 July 2025 loss to Alexandrescou in the semifinals of a J300 in Poland on clay.

Two other boys seeds lost in the opening round: No. 14 seed Tito Chavez of Spain and No. 16 seed Yannik Alvarez of Puerto Rico.

The only Top 8 girls seed to lose in the first round was No. 7 seed Anastasjia Cvetkovic of Serbia; 9-16 seeds falling were No. 9 Sol Ailin Larraya Guidi of Argentina, No. 15 Tahlia Kokkinis of Australia and No. 16 see Sofie Hettlerova of the Czech Republic.

The only US girl to win her first round match was No. 8 seed Thea Frodin. 

Sunday's first round Australian Open junior results of Americans:
Renee Alame(AUS) d. Ciara Harding[Q] 6-3, 6-3
Yushan Shao[11](CHN) d. Capucine Jauffret 6-1, 6-4
Rada Zolotareva(RUS) d. Nancy Lee 6-4, 6-1
Thea Frodin[8] d. Maja Pawelska(POL) 3-6, 6-3, 6-2

Keaton Hance[4] d. Ethan Domingo[WC](AUS) 6-0, 6-2
Carel Ngounoue d. Kaan Isik Kosaner[Q](TUR) 6-1, 6-4
Vihaan Reddy d. Arnav Paparkar(IND) 6-3, 6-4
Oliver Majdanddzic[Q](GER) d. Roshan Santhosh 6-1, 6-2
Emilio Comacho(ECU) d. Ryan Cozad 7-5, 4-6, 6-1
Jack Secord[13] d. Har Abir Sekhon[WC](AUS) 6-2, 6-4
Gavin Goode[15] d. Daniel Jade(FRA) 6-3, 1-6, 6-3
 
Only half of the second round singles matches are on Monday's schedule, with just two Americans in action, although the remainder of the first round of doubles, which number 12 for both the boys and the girls, will be played.

Monday's second round Australian Open junior matches featuring Americans:

Jack Secord[13] v Leon Sloboda(SVK)
Carel Ngounoue v Flynn Thomas[12](SUI)

The young Southern Californians stole the show Sunday at the Australian Open, with 18-year-old Iva Jovic breezing past Yulia Putintseva of Kazakhstan 6-0, 6-1 and 20-year-old Learner Tien dominating Daniil Medvedev of Russia to post a quick 6-4, 6-0, 6-3 victory. Both will play their first major quarterfinal Tuesday, with Jovic facing top seed Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus and Tien taking on No. 3 seed Alexander Zverev of Germany.

Jovic is the youngest American woman to reach the Australian Open quarterfinals since Venus Williams in 1998; Tien is the youngest American man to reach a slam quarterfinal since Andy Roddick in 2002.

Coco Gauff also reached the quarterfinals, beating Karolina Muchova of the Czech Republic 6-3, 1-6, 6-3. 

Tommy Paul lost to Carlos Alcarez of Spain 7-6(6), 6-4, 7-5.

Monday's fourth round matches featuring Americans:

Jessica Pegula[6] v Madison Keys[9]
Amanda Anisimova[4] v Xinyu Wang(CHN)

Taylor Fritz[9] v Lorenzo Musetti[5](ITA)
Ben Shelton[8] v Casper Ruud[12](NOR)

At the W35 in Weston Florida, 19-year-old Akasha Urhobo picked up her second USTA Pro Circuit title, beating Madison Brengle 6-2, 4-6, 6-2 in today's final, her fourth consecutive three-set win. Urhobo captured her first USTA Pro Circuit title back in May of 2024, beating Jovic 6-3, 6-1 in the W75 in Zephyrhills Florida.

Urhobo had lost the five other USTA Pro Circuit finals she had played, including two in the past three months. 

The widespread winter storm has disrupted the ITA Division I Kickoff Weekend, with teams not able to travel to the venues, even when they managed to make it to the host cities.

TBDs are set to be played Monday or Tuesday, logistics permitting, so we won't know the full fields until those have concluded.

MEN:
Clemson[4] d. Harvard[2] 4-1
Virginia[1] d. Michigan[2] 4-0
*Mississippi State[1] d. Auburn[2] 4-2
Texas A&M[3] d. Duke[4] 4-2
*Wake Forest[1] d. Vanderbilt[2] 4-0
Florida[2] d. Columbia[1]* 4-2
*Stanford[1] d. Rice[2] 4-0
*Texas[1] d. South Florida[2] 4-0
*Ohio State[1] d. Purdue[2] 4-0
UC Santa Barbara[2] d. UCLA[1]* 4-1
Arizona State[4] d. Princeton[2] 4-3
Central Florida[2] d. Oklahoma[4] 4-3
LSU[4] d. Pepperdine[3] 4-2

TBD
TCU[1]* v Georgia[2]

*Kickoff host

Hosts losing in round 1:
San Diego
NC State
South Carolina
Arizona
Cal

Automatic bids for co-hosts: Baylor, SMU

WOMEN:
*North Carolina[1] d. UNC-Charlotte[2] 4-0
*Virginia[1] d. Southern California[2] 4-0
*Tennessee[1] d. Clemson[4] 4-3
*Duke[1] d. South Carolina[3] 4-0
Oklahoma State[2] d. Texas Tech[1]* 4-0
*Georgia[1] advanced to Team Indoor without playing a match
*LSU[1] d. UCLA[2] 4-1
*Auburn[1] d. Florida State[3] 4-0
Vanderbilt[2] d. Michigan[1]* 4-2
*Oklahoma[1] d. Stanford[2] 4-1

TBD
*Texas[1] v Cal[2]
*Texas A&M[1] v Arizona State[2]/TCU[3]
*NC State[1] v Florida[3]/Ole Miss[2]
*Ohio State[1] v Iowa[4]

*Kickoff host

Automatic bids for co-hosts: Northwestern, Illinois