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Saturday, August 31, 2024

Top Seeds Jones and Budkov Kjaer Plus 31 Americans in Action Sunday as US Open Junior Championships Begin; Grant and Kovacevic Advance to Mixed Doubles Quarterfinals; Basiletti and Mrva Claim Repentigny ITF J300 Titles

Sunday will be a busy day at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center with 40 first round US Open Junior Championships matches on the schedule, 31 of them featuring Americans.

Top seeds Emerson Jones of Australia and Nicolai Budkov Kjaer of Norway are both in action against American qualifiers, with Jones playing Maya Iyengar and Budkov Kjaer facing Keaton Hance.

The two boys who withdrew and were replaced by lucky losers were Trevor Svajda, who has an injury, and Australian Open
finalist Jan Kumstat of the Czech Republic, the ITF No. 5. Great Britain's Mingge Xu, who retired in Canada with a 5-2 lead in the first set of her semifinal match, is in the draw.

US Open junior seeds:

GIRLS:
1. Emerson Jones(AUS)
2. Tyra Grant(USA)
3. Iva Jovic[WC](USA)
4. Teodora Kostovic(SRB)
5. Jeline Vandromme(BEL)
6. Hannah Klugman(GBR)
7. Wakana Sonobe(JPN)
8. Mingge Xu(GBR)
9. Kristina Penickova(USA)
10. Rositsa Dencheva(BUL)
11. Iva Ivanova(BUL)
12. Antonia Vergara Rivera(CHI)
13. Kaitlyn Rolls(USA)
14. Sonja Zhiyenbayeva(KAZ)
15. Vendula Valdmannova(CZE)
16. Akasha Urhobo(USA)

Urhobo is seeded via her WTA ranking, which is 313.

BOYS:
1. Nicolai Budov Kjaer(NOR)
2. Kaylan Bigun(USA)
3. Rei Sakamotoa(JPN)
4. Mees Rottgering(NED)
5. Luca Preda(ROU)
6. Maxim Mrva(CZE)
7. Hayden Jones(AUS)
8. Theo Papamalamis(FRA)
9. Jagger Leach(USA)
10. Amir Omakhanov(KAZ)
11. Jangjun Kim(KOR)
12. Rafael Jodar(ESP)
13. Cooper Woestendick(USA)
14. Max Schoenhaus(GER)
15. Miguel Tobon(COL)
16. Marko Maksimovic(SRB)

Sunday's first round junior matches featuring Americans:

Maya Iyengar[Q] v Emerson Jones[1](AUS) 
Annika Penickova[WC] v Antonia Vergara Rivera[12](CHI)
Monika Ekstrand[Q] v Rositsa Dencheva[10](BUL) 
Kate Fakih[Q] v Wakana Sonobe[7](JPN) 
Christasha McNeil[Q] v Luna Maria Cinalli(ARG) 
Thea Frodin v Kanon Sawashirov[Q](JPN) 
Ishika Ashar[WC] v Yelyzaveta Kotliar(UKR) 
Kaitlyn Rolls[13] v Olivia Carneiro(BRA) 
Kristina Penickova[9] v Elizara Yaneva(BUL) 
Julieta Pareja[WC] v Teodora Kostovic[4](SRB) 
Tyra Grant[2] v Mayu Crossley(JPN) 
Iva Jovic[3] v Gaia Maduzzi[Q](ITA) 
Akasha Urhobo[16] v Laima Vladson(LTU) 
Alanis Hamilton[WC] v Lucia Urbanova(CZE) 
Valerie Glozman[WC] v Yuliya Perapekhina(BLR)
Aspen Schuman v Julie Pastikova(CZE) 
Capucine Jauffret[Q] v Malak El Allami(MAR) 

Dominick Mosejczuk[WC] v Hayden Jones[7](AUS)
Ian Mayew v Rafael Jodar[12](ESP)
Gus Grumet[WC] v Alessandro Battiston[SE]
Cooper Woestendick[13] v William Rejchtman Vinciguerra(SWE)
Kase Schinnerer[WC] v Reda Bennani(MAR)
Matthew Forbes[WC] v Mika Petkovic[Q](GER)
Rudy Quan[WC] v Viktor Frydrych(GBR)
Matisse Farzam[WC] v Lorenzo Angelini[SE](ITA)
Kaylan Bigun[2] v Andreas Timini(CYP)
Maxwell Exsted v Atakan Karahan(TUR)
Keaton Hance[Q] v Nicolai Budkov Kjaer[1](NOR)
Nikita Filin[WC] v Henry Bernet(SUI)
Noah Johnston v Marko Maksimovic[16](SRB)
Stiles Brockett[LL] v Max Schoenhaus[14](GER)

Bigun and Jovic lost their second round mixed doubles match to No. 4 seeds Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic and Matt Ebden of Australia 6-2, 6-3, but another wild card team, Tyra Grant and Aleks Kovacevic(Illinois) are through to the quarterfinals, with the pair saving a match point in their 4-6, 6-3, 11-9 win over wild cards Alycia Parks and Jackson Withrow(Texas A&M). Parks and Withrow had beaten No. 2 seeds Erin Routliffe(Alabama) and Michael Venus(Texas,LSU) of New Zealand in the first round. Their opponents in the quarterfinals have not yet been determined.

Jessica Pegula and Tommy Paul reached the second week with wins today, with five more Americans in fourth round action on Sunday. Former NC State star Diana Shnaider of Russia, the No. 18 seed, also advanced to the fourth round today with a 6-2, 6-2 win over Sara Errani of Italy and will play Pegula on Monday. Nuno Borges of Portugal, the 2019 NCAA singles finalist at Mississippi State, advanced the the fourth round saving three match points 6-7(5), 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(6), 6-0 win over Jakub Mensik of the Czech Republic.

Saturday's third round results of Americans:
Jessica Pegula[6] d. Jessica Bouzas Maneiro(ESP) 6-3, 6-3
Liudmila Samsonova[16](RUS) d. Ashlyn Krueger 6-1, 6-1
Tommy Paul[14] d. Gabriel Diallo[Q](CAN) 6-7(5), 6-3, 6-1, 7-6(3)

Sunday's fourth round matches featuring Americans:
Emma Navarro[13] v Coco Gauff[3]
Frances Tiafoe[20] v Alexei Popyrin[28](AUS)
Brandon Nakashima v Alexander Zverev[4](GER)
Taylor Fritz[12] v Casper Ruud[8](NOR)


The top seeds made Saturday's finals at the ITF J300 in Repentigny Canada, but they did not take home the trophies. The boys title went to No. 8 seed Maxim Mrva of the Czech Republic, who avenged his Australian Open loss to Mees Rottgering of the Netherlands 3-6, 6-4, 6-1.  

Top seed Hannah Klugman of Great Britain lost to unseeded Noemi Basiletti of Italy 7-6(2), 6-4, giving the 18-year-old Basiletti the sweep of the Canadian titles and her first ITF J300 singles title.

Friday, August 30, 2024

August Aces; Seven Americans Qualify for US Open Junior Championships; Bigun and Jovic Win First Round of Mixed at USO; Tiafoe Beats Sheldon; Top Seeds Reach Finals at ITF J300 Repentigny

My monthly Aces column for the Tennis Recruiting Network is up again before the month is quite over, with the 20th US Open Junior Championships that I've covered coming up Sunday requiring an early look at the top performances this month.  Former college players are, as always, a major focus, and this month current college players prominent, with 14-year-old juniors also in the spotlight.

Seven US players qualified for the US Open Junior Championships today at the Cary Leeds Center in the Bronx, and an eighth got in as a lucky loser.

The five girls from the United States, who will join the 14 other American girls already receiving entry, are all seeded.

No. 2 seed Christasha McNeil defeated No. 10 seed and USC freshman Jana Hossam Salah of Egypt 6-2, 6-4; No. 11 seed Monika Ekstrand beat No. 3 seed Hikari Yamamoto of Japan 6-2, 6-3; UCLA freshman Kate Fakih, seeded No. 6, beat Leena Friedman 6-4, 6-2 in one of the two all-American final round qualifying matches; in the other one, No. 7 seed Maya Iyengar defeated 13-year-old Raya Kotseva 6-4, 1-6, 10-7.

Capucine Jauffret, the No. 16 seed, saved two match points in her 7-6(2), 4-6, 12-10 win over No. 4 seed Nellie Taraba Wallberg of Sweden. I know I mention this often, but I believe the junior slams should all have the same format for qualifying and it should be a full third set, which Australia and Roland Garros do. 

The two US boys who qualified, both unseeded, are 16-year-old wild card Keaton Hance, who beat Rethin Pranav Senthil Kumar of India 7-5, 6-2 and 15-year-old Jack Secord, who beat wild card Jordan Reznik in an all-US contest. Virginia freshman Stiles Brockett, who lost to No. 14 seed Luis Guto Miguel of Brazil 6-4, 4-6, 10-8, got in as a lucky loser, as did Karim Bennani of Morocco. 

I'm not sure which two boys have withdrawn, but I did notice that Wimbledon champion Nicolas Budkov Kjaer of Norway didn't play either hard court warm-up event. That doesn't mean much, as the very top juniors occasionally skip the warmups, but it is rare to have two lucky losers; in the past five years, the boys main draw has had no lucky losers twice and one lucky loser three times.

The draws will be out Saturday; I will be in transit to New York, but will try to post a link to them on Twitter as soon as I can.

Juniors Iva Jovic and Kaylan Bigun received a wild card into US Open mixed doubles and in their first round today, they advanced over Dayana Yastremska of Ukraine and Max Purcell of Australia 6-4, 6-4 in a tiday 58 minutes. They will play their second round match Saturday against two formidable doubles players, No. 4 seeds Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic and Matt Ebden of Australia. 

NCAA champions Robert Cash and JJ Tracy of Ohio State battled for two hours and 19 minutes with No. 16 seeds Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni of Argentina in the second round of men's doubles. The wild cards split tiebreakers with Gonzalez and Molteni before finally getting broken with Cash serving at 4-5 down in the third set. Cash and Tracy had only one break chance in the entire match, which they did not convert. Gonzalez and Molteni had a total of three, converting the last one.

The men's third round match everyone had circled once the draw came out, Ben Shelton(Florida) versus Frances Tiafoe, lived up to expectations Friday afternoon. No. 20 seed Tiafoe avenged his quarterfinal loss last year to No. 13 seed Shelton, staying committed to moving forward and volleying well to earn a 4-6, 7-5, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-3 victory. Shelton had 23 aces, including one of 143 mph on set point in the third set tiebreaker, but Tiafoe had 17 more winners than unforced errors, which is a good indication of his level throughout the match. He will likely face No. 2 seed Novak Djokovic in the fourth round Sunday.

Friday's third round results of Americans:

Coco Gauff[3] d. Elina Svitolina[27](UKR) 3-6, 6-3, 6-3
Emma Navarro[13] d. Marta Kostyuk[19](UKR) 6-4, 4-6, 6-3
Elise Mertens[33](BEL) d. Madison Keys[14] 6-7(5), 7-5, 6-4 
Donna Vekic[24](CRO) d. Peyton Stearns 7-5, 6-4

Frances Tiafoe[20] d. Ben Shelton[13]  4-6, 7-5, 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-3
Brandon Nakashima d. Lorenzo Musetti[18](ITA) 6-2, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(4)
Taylor Fritz[13] d. Franciso Comesana(ARG) 6-3, 6-4, 6-2

Saturday's third round matches featuring Americans:

Jessica Pegula[6] v Jessica Bouzas Maneiro(ESP)
Ashlyn Krueger v Liudmila Samsonova[16](RUS)

Tommy Paul[14] v Gabriel Diallo[Q](CAN)

The singles finals are set for Saturday at the ITF J300 in Repentigny Canada, outside Montreal, with top seeds Mees Rottgering of the Netherlands and Hannah Klugman of Great Britain hoping to head into the US Open Junior Championships with hard court titles.  

Rottgering, the 2024 Wimbledon boys finalist, defeated No. 8 seed Thomas Faurel of France 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 in today's semifinal, and will face No. 2 seed Maxim Mrva of the Czech Republic, who beat No. 4 seed Theo Papamalamis of France 6-7(5), 6-2, 6-1.
Rottgering and Mrva played in the second round of the Australian Open this year, with Rottgering winning 6-1, 6-3. 

Top seed Hannah Klugman of Great Britain has dropped only seven games in her first four matches, beating No. 5 seed Vittoria Paganetti of Italy 6-1, 6-0 in today's semifinal. She will play another Italian in the final, unseeded Noemi Basiletti, who advanced to the championship match when No. 3 seed Mingge Xu of Great Britain retired up 5-2 in the first. 

I don't know what happened, but that doesn't sound good for her prospects at the US Open, where she would be one of the contenders. She is an Ace this month(see the TRN column above) after winning the singles and doubles titles at a W35 in London.

Basiletti took the doubles title, with Paganetti; the No. 3 seeds defeated No. 4 seed Reina Goto of Japan and Lea Nilsson of Sweden 6-0, 6-3. Goto and Nilsson advanced to the final with one victory; they received walkovers in the quarterfinals and semifinals.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

Cozad, Secord Beat Top Seeds at US Open Junior Qualifying, with 16 Americans Through to Final Round; NCAA Champions Cash and Tracy Advance in Men's Doubles; Krueger Posts Two Upsets

The first day of qualifying for the US Open Junior Championships went very well for Americans, with nine girls and seven boys advancing to Friday's final round at the Cary Leeds Center in the Bronx. 

Fifteen-year-olds Ryan Cozad and Jack Secord pulled off the two biggest upsets in the boys draw--and there were many, with nine seeds losing today--taking out the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds.

Wild card Cozad, the Kalamazoo 16s doubles champion, defeated ITF No. 43 and top seed Bryan Hernandez Cortes of Spain 3-6, 6-4 11-9, coming from from 6-3, 4-2 down to take the final four games of the set, and saving a match point in the deciding tiebreaker.

Jack Secord lost in the first round at this week's J300 in Canada, but he had no trouble with No. 2 seed Jan Klimas of the Czech Republic, ranked No. 51 in the ITF junior rankings, earning a 6-4, 6-0 victory.

Other US boys advancing to the second and final round of qualifying are wild cards Jordan Reznik, Krish Arora(Georgia Tech) and Keaton Hance, as well as Ronit Karki and Stiles Brockett. At least one US boys will make the main draw, with Secord facing Reznik.

In contrast to the boys, 14 of the 16 girls seeds advanced to the final round of qualifying, with the two that didn't win beaten by Americans. A total of nine US girls advanced: Mia Slama(NC State)[15], Christasha McNeil[2], Monika Ekstrand, Capucine Jauffret[16], Kate Fakih[6], Leena Friedman, Maya Iyengar[7], Raya Kotseva[WC] and Claire An[8].

Two US girls are guaranteed to make the main draw, with Fakih playing Friedman and Iyengar facing Kotseva.

Live scoring for the junior qualifying is available at usopen.org

At Flushing Meadows, 2024 NCAA doubles champions Robert Cash and JJ Tracy of Ohio State won their opening men's doubles match, defeating alternates Alexander Shevchenko of Kazakhstan and Samuel Weissborn of Austria 6-3, 6-4. Cash and Tracy were initially drawn against Yoshihito Nishioka of Japan and Sumit Nagal of India, but Nishioka retired early in the fifth set of his first round match in singles and withdrew from doubles as well. Cash and Tracy will play No. 16 seed Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni of Argentina in the second round.

Former University of Oklahoma stars Ivana and Carmen Corley, who also received a wild card, moved into the second round of women's doubles with a 6-1, 6-3 win over Ekaterina Alexandrova and Anna Blinkova of Russia. They will play No. 10 seeds Hao-ching Han of Taiwan and Veronica Kudermetova of Russia in the second round.

San Diego champions Iva Jovic and Tyra Grant pushed their veteran opponents Anna Danilina(Florida) of Kazakhstan and Irina Khromacheva of Russia for almost two-and-a-half hours, forcing the 29-year-olds to raise their level to claim a 7-6(6), 5-7, 6-2 victory.

Grant is already through to the second round of mixed doubles with Aleks Kovacevic; wild cards Jovic and Kaylan Bigun are on Friday's schedule for their first round match, against Dayana Yastremska of Ukraine and Max Purcell of Australia.

Another wild card team is through to the second round, with the mixed doubles pairing of Ashlyn Krueger and Thai Kwiatkowski(Virginia) beating two-time Wimbledon champions and No. 5 seeds Desirea Krawczyk(Arizona State) and Neal Skupski(LSU) 6-3, 7-5.

Krueger also advanced in singles, reaching the third round of a slam for the first time with a 6-1, 6-4 win over No. 21 seed Mirra Andreeva of Russia. 

The 20-year-old Texan, who won the 2021 USTA National 18s titles in singles and doubles, had never won a singles match at a slam until this week.

Thursday's second round results of Americans:
Jannik Sinner[1](ITA) d. Alex Michelsen 6-4, 6-0, 6-2
Tomas Machac(CZE) d. Sebastian Korda[16] 6-4, 6-2, 6-4
Tommy Paul[14] d. Max Purcell(AUS) 7-5, 6-0, 1-0 ret.

Jessica Pegula[6] d. Sofia Kenin 7-6(4), 6-3
Sara Errani(ITA) d. Caroline Dolehide 7-5, 7-
Ashlyn Krueger d. Mirra Andreeva[21](RUS) 6-1, 6-4
Anastasia Potapova(RUS) d. Varvara Lepchenko[Q] 6-3, 6-4

Friday's third round matches featuring Americans:

Coco Gauff[3] v Elina Svitolina[27](UKR)
Emma Navarro[13] v Marta Kostyuk[19](UKR)
Madison Keys[14] v Elise Mertens[33](BEL)
Peyton Stearns v Donna Vekic[24](CRO)

Ben Shelton[13] v Frances Tiafoe[20]
Brandon Nakashima v Lorenzo Musetti[18](ITA)
Taylor Fritz[13] v Franciso Comesana(ARG)

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

ITF J300 College Park Recap, Videos; Jovic Falls Just Short Against Alexandrova at US Open; US Open Junior Qualifying Begins Thursday in the Bronx

If you weren't able to follow my daily coverage of the ITF J300 in College Park last week, my recap of the titles for Teodora Kostovic and future University of Virginia Cavalier Rafael Jodar appears today at the Tennis Recruiting Network. Given their dominance last week, they have to be considered among the favorites at the US Open Junior Championships next week, but they both won the Roehampton J300 warmup for Wimbledon last month, and both bowed out in the quarterfinals.


The videos from the boys and girls singles finals are below.



USTA National 18s champion Iva Jovic was one of the major stories of the first day at the US Open, and she was in the spotlight again today in the second round. The 16-year-old from Torrance California battled for three hours and took WTA No. 31 Ekaterina Alexandrov deep into a third set before finally falling 4-6, 6-4, 7-5.

Jovic, who had beaten WTA No. 41 Magda Linette of Poland Monday without too much difficulty, faced a different challenge in Alexandrova, who hits bigger and is more unpredictable than Linette. The 29-year-old from Russia didn't appear ready for Jovic, who, to be fair, she probably knew nothing about, with Jovic jumping out to a 3-0 lead. Alexandrova got the break back, but was broken serving a 3-4, double faulting at 0-30 and 0-40 to give Jovic the chance to serve out the set. She couldn't do it, but Jovic returned well in the next game and broke Alexandrova for the set.

After five breaks in the first set, there was only one in the second, with Jovic broken serving at 2-3. She then took a medical timeout, possibly due to the heat, and her blood pressure was checked, but she continued and forced Alexandrova to serve out the set with two more holds.

After a 10-minute break under the extreme heat rule in effect, Jovic missed a golden opportunity, six of them in fact, failing to take a 2-0 lead in the third set despite Alexandrova going down 0-40 and facing three ad-outs. Jovic was broken at 2-2, but got the break right back, with Alexandrova not winning a point on serve. It must be said that neither served well--Alexandrova was at exactly 50% and Jovic at 49% for first serves--and that played out as the match approached its conclusion. Jovic lost serve again and Alexandrova held for a 5-3, lead, but she was unable to convert three match points serving for it at 5-4. Jovic again struggled on serve at 5-all, missing 5 of 8 first serves to give Alexandrova a second chance to close it out. Alexandrova played well when she didn't have a match point, but got extremely tight at 40-15, making two unforced errors on match points four and five. Jovic earned a game point, with Alexandrova losing four points in a row, but she came up with a forehand winner  to save it. On match point No. 6, Jovic came up with a great return on a rare Alexandrova first serve, but Alexandrova hit a backhand winner to earn a seventh match point, which she converted when Jovic's backhand return of a second serve went just wide.

Jovic looked, on the ESPN+ stream, bitterly disappointed in the loss, no doubt recognizing that she had opportunities to reach the third round against an opponent not playing her best. But she should be encouraged by her ability to earn those opportunities against a seed at a slam, and will no doubt put the experience to good use in the future.

Jovic and partner Tyra Grant, the San Diego 18s champions, are on the women's doubles schedule for Thursday, and Jovic is expected to play the junior championships, which begin Sunday.

The Kalamazoo 18s champions Nikita Filin and Alex Razeghi played their first round men's doubles match today, losing to Nicolas Barrientos of Colombia and Skander Mansouri(Wake Forest) of Tunisia 6-4, 6-3.

Grant and Aleks Kovacevic defeated fellow wild cards Learner Tien and Clervie Ngounoue 6-3, 6-4 in the first round of mixed doubles action today.

Wednesday's second round results of Americans:

Madison Keys[14] d. Maya Joint[Q](AUS) 6-4, 6-0
Coco Gauff[3] d. Tatjana Maria(GER) 6-4, 6-0
Paula Badosa[26](ESP) d. Taylor Townsend 6-3, 7-5
Peyton Stearns d. Daria Kasatkina[12](RUS) 6-1, 7-6(3)
Ekaterina Alexandrova[29](RUS) d, Iva Jovic[WC] 4-6, 6-4, 7-5
Emma Navarro[13] d. Arantxa Rus(NED) 6-1, 6-1

Frances Tiafoe[20] d. Alexander Shevchenko(KAZ) 6-4, 6-1, 1-0 ret.
Taylor Fritz[12] d. Matteo Berrettini(ITA) 6-3, 7-6(1), 6-1
Ben Shelton[13] d. Roberto Bautista Agut(ESP) 6-3, 6-4, 6-4
Jiri Lehecka[32](CZE) d. Mitchell Krueger[Q] 6-7(5), 0-6, 6-4, 6-4, 7-5
Brandon Nakashima d. Arthur Cazaux(FRA) 6-4, 6-4, 6-2

Thursday's second round matches featuring Americans:
Alex Michelsen v Jannik Sinner[1](ITA)
Sebastian Korda[16] v Tomas Machac(CZE)
Tommy Paul[14] v Max Purcell(AUS)

Sofia Kenin v Jessica Pegula[6]
Caroline Dolehide v Sara Errani(ITA)
Ashlyn Krueger v Mirra Andreeva[21](RUS)
Varvara Lepchenko[Q] v Anastasia Potapova(RUS)

Qualifying for the US Open Junior Championships begin Thursday at the Cary Leeds Center in the Bronx.

As is often the case, the wild cards that are initially distributed for the qualifying are not necessary, with late withdrawals moving players in on their own. Stiles Brockett, Maximus Dussault and Jack Secord got into qualifying on their own rankings, so their qualifying wild cards went to Ryan Cozad, Jordan Reznik and Rohan Belday. Ronit Karki also got into qualifying on his ranking, 126 at the time the acceptance list was published.

Nancy Lee didn't need her girls wild card, getting into qualifying on her ranking of 142, so Olivia Center, who qualified last year, was given the wild card. Anna Frey also received a wild card, and she was not announced as a wild card recipient earlier in the week, with one reserved. Trinetra Vijayakumar moved into the qualifying draw on her own ranking.

It appears that the special exempts from the J300 in Canada this week will all be used, with Mia Pohankova of Slovakia, who was the first one out of the main draw of the US Open juniors, and Naomi Basiletti of Italy, No. 9 on the qualifying list, making the quarterfinals in Canada, and so unable to compete in the qualifying. Basiletti defeated No. 2 seed Wakana Sonobe of Japan in today's third round, Pohankova defeated No. 4 seed Kristina Penickova.  There were two walkovers in the doubles in Canada because the players had to leave for qualifying in New York, which is a bad look for both tournaments. Canada should not allot four days to play three rounds and the US Open should not start the qualifying on Thursday.

The boys special exempts should be the two unseeded Italians in the Canada J300 quarterfinals: Lorenzo Angelini and Alessandro Battison. 

There was one walkover in boys doubles, but that doesn't appear to be related to the US Open qualifying, with both players already in the main draw.

Exactly half of the 32-player field in the girls qualifying draw is from the United States, with nine players from the US in boys qualifying. 

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Kalamazoo Champions Shut Out in US Open First Round; Texas A&M's Stoiana and Michigan State's Baris Top ITA Preseason Rankings, Joint No. 1 Among Newcomers

It was a brutal Day Two for wild cards at the US Open with all four Americans who received that means of entry falling in the first round.

2024 Kalamazoo champion Matt Forbes(Michigan State) challenged ATP No. 57 Roman Safiullin of Russia throughout, and never looked out of his league, but was unable to convert a set point serving for the second set at 5-3, and, failing to take that opportunity, eventually was eliminated 6-4, 7-6(2), 6-2. As with all the wild cards, too many unforced errors proved the difference, with Forbes making 66 to Safiullin's 41.

2019 and 2021 Kalamazoo champion Zachary Svajda ran into a player at the top of his game, with No. 30 seed Matteo Arnaldi hitting 37 winners and making only 24 unforced errors in a 6-3, 6-2, 6-1 romp over the 21-year-old from San Diego.

2022 and 2023 Kalamazoo champion Learner Tien, who received his wild card via the USTA US Open Wild Card Challenge, has faced a seed in each of the past three years, and this time it was No. 24 seed Arthur Fils of France, who earned a 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2 victory over the 18-year-old from Irvine. 

Tien got off to a terrible start, going down 4-0, but much of that was due to the form Fils showed, not making an unforced error until the fifth game. Tien fought back, and when he held in the second set from 0-40 down at 2-all, he found the level he'd displayed all summer, keeping Fils on defense in the next four games.

But unforced errors, which Tien usually keeps to a minimum, began to multiply, and although he finished with less than Fils, 40 to 52, he had substantially fewer winners, just 11 to Fils 38. Tien continued to fight, even when down 1-5, 0-40, but he saved seven match points before Fils finally closed it out on his serve.

NCAA women's singles champion Alexa Noel also got off to a poor start against Sara Sorribes Tormo of Spain, trailing 5-0, and although the second set was more competitive, the University of Miami All-American gave up a break in the fourth game of the second set and Sorribes Tormo made that stand up in a 6-1, 6-3 victory.

So far the 16 wild cards have not fared well, with Girls 18s champion Iva Jovic, Naomi Osaka and Tristan Schoolkate, the Tennis Australia reciprocal, (addition: the French reciprocal Alexandre Muller is also through) winning their first round matches. Wild cards Stan Wawrinka and Bianca Andreescu are playing their first round matches tonight. Note: Wawrinka and Andreescu both lost Tuesday night.

No. 11 seed Danielle Collins(Florida, Virginia) lost to Caroline Dolehide 1-6, 7-5, 6-4, with a first round loss marking the end of her slam career. The two-time NCAA singles champion is expected to continue to compete throughout the remainder of the WTA season, but declined to participate in a retirement ceremony after her loss today.  For more on Collins and her impact on the WTA tour, see this article from the usopen.org.

Today's results and tomorrow's second round matches featuring Americans:

Jannik Sinner[1](ITA) d. Mackenzie McDonald 2-6, 6-2, 6-1, 6-2
Alex Michelsen d. Eliot Spizzirri[Q] 6-1, 7-5, 6-3
Arthur Fils[24](FRA) d. Learner Tien[WC] 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2
Tommy Paul[14] d. Lorenzo Sonego(ITA) 6-4, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2
Sebastian Korda[16] d. Corentin Moutet(FRA) 7-6(3), 6-1, 6-0
Alex De Minaur[10](AUS) d. Marcos Giron 6-3, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4
Matteo Arnaldi[30](ITA) d. Zachary Svajda[WC] 6-3, 6-2, 6-1
Roman Safiullin(RUS) d. Matthew Forbes[WC] 6-4, 7-6(0), 6-2

Ashlyn Krueger d. Shuai Zhang(CHN) 0-6, 6-1, 7-5
Caroline Dolehide d. Danielle Collins[11] 1-6, 7-5, 6-4
Sofia Kenin d. Emma Raducanu(GBR) 6-1, 3-6, 6-4
Jessica Pegula[6] d. Shelby Rogers 6-4, 6-3
Sara Sorribes Tormo(ESP) d. Alexa Noel[WC] 6-1, 6-3 
Anna Bondar(HUN) d. Bernarda Pera 6-3, 3-6, 6-3
Anna Kalinskaya[15](RUS) d. Lauren Davis 6-2, 6-2
Karolina Muchova(CZE) d. Katie Volynets 6-3, 7-5
Varvara Lepchenko[Q] d. Brenda Fruhvirtova(CZE) 2-1 ret.

Wednesday's second round matches featuring Americans:

Madison Keys[14] v Maya Joint[Q](AUS)
Coco Gauff[3] v Tatjana Maria(GER)
Taylor Townsend v Paula Badosa[26](ESP)
Peyton Stearns v Daria Kasatkina[12](RUS)
Iva Jovic[WC] v Ekaterina Alexandrova[29](RUS)
Emma Navarro[13] v Arantxa Rus(NED)

Frances Tiafoe[20] v Alexander Shevchenko(KAZ)
Taylor Fritz[12] v Matteo Berrettini(ITA)
Ben Shelton[13] v Roberto Bautista Agut(ESP)
Mitchell Krueger[Q] v Jiri Lehecka[32](CZE)
Brandon Nakashima v Arthur Cazaux(FRA)
 
Kalamazoo 18s doubles champions Nikita Filin and Alex Razeghi play their first round match against Nicolas Barrientos of Colombia and Skander Mansouri(Wake Forest) of Tunisia Wednesday evening. Tyra Grant and Aleks Kovacevic play Learner Tien and Clervie Ngounoue in the first round of mixed doubles Wednesday night.

The ITA released the preseason rankings for Division I today, and, as always, there are no surprises, with those no longer eligible from the May 2024 final rankings removed, and everyone else moving up.  Stanford's Nishesh Basavareddy, who was not expected to return to school this fall, is not in these preseason rankings, nor is TCU's Jack Pinnington Jones or NCAA champion Filip Planinsek of Alabama. All three are expected to return for the dual match season, but that could change, of course, depending on their results on the Pro Circuit this fall.

The only two women's Top 20 players from last year still eligible but not in the preseason rankings are Alexa Noel, who announced she was turning pro and not using her final year of eligibility, and Alexandra Yepifanova of Stanford. NCAA doubles champions Dasha Vidmanova and Ayesegul Mert are not in the doubles preseason rankings.

The newcomer rankings have been expanded to 20 players this year. The Texas women have four of the top 10, while the UCLA men have two of the top 10.


Maya Joint, who will open play on Arthur Ashe Stadium Wednesday against Madison Keys, is, unsurprisingly, the top women's newcomer, currently 108 in the WTA live rankings. 

She faces the same dilemma as North Carolina's Fiona Crawley, who qualified for the main draw last last year: how to retain her collegiate eligibility when she has earned substantial prize money from her performance at the US Open. In Joint's case, after a first round win, it's $140,000; she talks about the issue, and insists she will attend Texas this fall, in this article.

ITA Division I Preseason Top 10

Women:
1. Mary Stoiana, Texas A&M
2. Dasha Vidmanova, Georgia
3. Celia-Belle Mohr, Vanderbilt
4. Connie Ma, Stanford
5. Ange Oby Kajuru, Oklahoma State
6. Reese Brantmeier, North Carolina
7. Rachel Gailis, Florida
8. Savannah Broadus, Pepperdine
9. Nicole Khirin, Texas A&M
10. Sarah Hamner, South Carolina

Men:
1. Ozan Baris, Michigan State
2. Michael Zheng, Columbia
3. Oliver Tarvet, San Diego
4. Cooper Williams, Duke
5. Colton Smith, Arizona
6. Radu Papoe, Cornell
7. Gavin Young, Michigan 
8. Karlis Ozolins, Illinois
9. Jack Anthrop, Ohio State
10. Shunsuke Mitsui, Tennessee

Doubles Top 5

Women:
1. Ange Oby Kajuru and Anastasiya Komar, Oklahoma State
2. Mary Stoiana and Mia Kupres, Texas A&M
3. Melodie Collard and Elaine Chervinsky, Virginia
4. Luciana Perry and Sydni Ratliff, Ohio State
5. Maria Sholokhova and Alina Mukhortova, Wisconsin

Men: 
1. Petar Jovanovic and Benito Sanchez Martinez, Mississippi State
2. Niels Ratiu and Freddy Blaydes, Georgia
3. Togan Tokac and Giulio Perego, Texas A&M
4. Paul Inchauspe and Filippos Astreinidis, Princeton
5. Maxwell Smith and Noa Vukadin, Clemson

Newcomers Top 10

Women:
1. Maya Joint, Texas
2. Valerie Glozman, Stanford
3. Eszter Meri, Texas
4. Cadence Brace, LSU
5. Aya El Aouni, Central Florida
6. Mio Mushika, San Diego
7. Ashton Bowers, Texas
8. Talia Neilson-Gatenby, Florida
9. Ariana Pursoo, Texas
10. Irina Balus, Duke

Men:
1. Antoine Ghibaudo, Kentucky
2. Peter Benjamin Privara, Harvard
3. Rudy Quan, UCLA
4. Ioannis Xilas, Wake Forest
5. Rafael Jodar, Virginia
6. Niccolo Baroni, Mississippi State
7. David Fix, Pepperdine
8. Walid Ahouda, Central Florida
9. Kaylan Bigun, UCLA
10. Jan Sebesta, Florida State

Monday, August 26, 2024

Girls 18s Champion Jovic Defeats Linette on Good First Day for Americans at US Open; US Open Junior Wild Cards, Mixed Doubles Wild Cards Announced


Iva Jovic, who didn't drop a set in her seven victories at the USTA National 18s Championships in San Diego this month, continued her excellent form this evening at the US Open, defeating WTA No. 42 Magda Linette of Poland 6-4, 6-3 to advance to the second round.

Jovic looked extremely confident throughout the match, with the key game of the first set coming with the 16-year-old from Torrance California serving at 3-2. She fell behind 15-40, but won the next four points to keep her lead. I thought she might regret not converting her set point with Linette serving a 3-5, 30-40, but she closed it out on her serve on her second set point with a good first serve.

The second had just one break of serve, with Linette, who at 32 is twice Jovic's age, losing a long backhand to backhand rally on Jovic second break point of the game to fall behind 4-3. Jovic consolidated for 5-3, then went up 15-40 in Linette's service game, but lost those two match points, with a return error and forehand winner from Linette bringing it back to deuce. But Jovic earned another match point and didn't have to hit another ball, with Linette double faulting to end the match.

Jovic is the first National 18s champion to win a round at the US Open since Kayla Day in 2016, but in her press conference after the match, she sounded almost as if she had expected to win, and as the end of the match approached, Jovic managed to avoid getting tentative or showing any nervousness.

"I just had a plan for what I was going to do before we started, and there weren't many needs for crazy adjustments, because it was going well. I was sticking to it, taking one point at a time. I got a wild card into the tournament I didn't know I was going to play, so I'm surprised and not surprised, but obviously I'm happy."

Jovic, who will play the winner of the match between No. 29 Ekaterina Alexandrova of Russia and Viktoriya Tomova of Bulgaria, currently suspended by rain, was one of six American women to advance to the second round with wins today; five US men won their opening matches, including Brandon Nakashima(Virginia), who upset No. 15 seed Holger Rune of Denmark 6-2, 6-1, 6-4. 

Monday's first round matches featuring Americans:

Ben Shelton[13] d. Dominic Thiem[WC](AUT) 6-4, 6-2, 6-2
Taylor Fritz[12] d. Camilo Ugo Carabelli(ARG) 7-5, 6-1, 6-2
Frances Tiafoe[20] d. Aleks Kovacevic 6-4, 6-3, 4-6, 7-5
Lorenzo Musetti[18](ITA) d. Reilly Opelka 7-6(3), 1-6, 6-1 7-5
Arthur Rinderknech(FRA) d. Chris Eubanks[WC] 6-4, 4-6, 3-6, 6-2, 7-6(8)
Mitchell Krueger[Q] d. Hugo Grenier[Q](FRA) 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-5
Brandon Nakashima d. Holger Rune[15](DEN) 6-2, 6-1, 6-4

Coco Gauff[3] d. Varvara Gracheva(FRA) 6-2, 6-0
Clara Burel(FRA) d. Sloane Stephens 0-6, 7-5, 7-5
Qinwen Zheng[7](CHN) d. Amanda Anisimova[WC] 4-6, 6-4, 6-2
Madison Keys[14] d. Katerina Siniakova(CZE) 6-4, 6-1
Emma Navarro[13] d. Anna Blinkova(RUS) 6-1, 6-1
Peyton Stearns d. Lesia Tsurenko(UKR) 6-1, 7-5
Ajla Tomljanovic(AUS) d. Ann Li[Q] 6-4, 6-4
Marta Kostyuk[10](UKR) d. McCartney Kessler[WC] 6-2, 6-3
Iva Jovic[WC] d. Magda Linette(POL) 6-4, 6-3
Taylor Townsend d. Martina Trevisan(ITA) 6-2, 7-5

Tuesday's first round matches featuring Americans:
Mackenzie McDonald v Jannik Sinner[1](ITA)
Eliot Spizzirri[Q] v Alex Michelsen
Learner Tien[WC] v Arthur Fils[24](FRA)
Tommy Paul[14] v Lorenzo Sonego(ITA)
Sebastian Korda[16] v Corentin Moutet(FRA)
Marcos Giron v Alex De Minaur[10](AUS)
Zachary Svajda[WC] v Matteo Arnaldi[30](ITA)
Matthew Forbes[WC] v Roman Safiullin(RUS)

Ashlyn Krueger v Shuai Zhang(CHN)
Danielle Collins[11] v Caroline Dolehide
Sofia Kenin v Emma Raducanu(GBR)
Jessica Pegula[6] v Shelby Rogers
Alexa Noel[WC] v Sara Sorribes Tormo(ESP)
Bernarda Pera v Anna Bondar(HUN)
Lauren Davis v Anna Kalinskaya[15](RUS)
Katie Volynets v Karolina Muchova(CZE)
Varvara Lepchenko[Q] v Brenda Fruhvirtova(CZE)

Tuesday's schedule for all matches is here.

The wild cards for the US Open Junior Championships have been awarded, although there still may be changes with late withdrawals before Sunday's main draw play.

Main draw:
Boys:
Matthew Forbes
Gus Grumet
Rudy Quan
Kase Schinnerer
Nikita Filin
Matisse Farzam
Benjamin Willwerth
Dominick Mosejczuk

Qualifying:
Kosuke Asada (Japan High School champion)
Krish Arora
Stiles Brockett
Maximus Dussault
Jack Secord
Keaton Hance

Girls:
Main draw:
Iva Jovic
Valerie Glozman
Ishika Ashar
Julieta Pareja
Annika Penickova
Anita Tu
Alanis Hamilton
Shannon Lam

Qualifying:
Hinata Chiba (Japan High School champion)
Welles Newman
Margaret Sohns
Raya Kotseva
Nancy Lee

US Open junior qualifying begins Thursday.

The USTA announced the mixed doubles wild cards, with Jovic, Tyra Grant, Clervie Ngounoue, Kaylan Bigun and Learner Tien the juniors receiving them. Thai Kwiatkowski, Virginia's 2017 NCAA singles champion, announced his retirement from professional tennis last week, and will make his final appearance in mixed doubles with Ashlyn Krueger.

Taylor Townsend and Donald Young
Clervie Ngounoue and Learner Tien
Shelby Rogers and Rob Galloway
Alycia Parks and Jackson Withrow
Maria Mateas and Mackenzie McDonald
Ashlyn Krueger and Thai-Son Kwiatkowski
Tyra Grant and Aleks Kovacevic
Iva Jovic and Kaylan Bigun

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Jovic Among 18 Americans in Action Monday at US Open; US Open Doubles Draws; Lammons and Withrow Defend Another ATP Title; Spizzirri Credits College Tennis Atmosphere with Assist in US Open Qualifying Run

USTA National 18s champion Iva Jovic is among 18 Americans on Monday's schedule as the 2024 US Open main draw gets underway at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows New York. The 16-year-old Jovic, currently 387 in the WTA rankings, will face 32-year-old Magda Linette of Poland, who is No. 40, as the third match scheduled for court 15. Coco Gauff begins her title defense on Arthur Ashe second on in the day session, with Ben Shelton opening play on Ashe against 2020 US Open champion Dominic Thiem of Austria.

Monday's first round matches featuring Americans:
Ben Shelton[13] v Dominic Thiem[WC](AUT)
Taylor Fritz[12] v Camilo Ugo Carabelli(ARG)
Aleks Kovacevic v Frances Tiafoe[20]
Reilly Opelka v Lorenzo Musetti[18](ITA)
Chris Eubanks[WC] v Arthur Rinderknech(FRA)
Mitchell Krueger[Q] v Hugo Grenier[Q](FRA)
Brandon Nakashima v Holger Rune[15](DEN)

Coco Gauff[3] v Varvara Gracheva(FRA)
Sloane Stephens v Clara Burel(FRA)
Amanda Anisimova[WC] v Qinwen Zheng[7](CHN)
Madison Keys[14] v Katerina Siniakova(CZE)
Emma Navarro[13] v Anna Blinkova(RUS)
Peyton Stearns v Lesia Tsurenko(UKR)
Ann Li[Q] v Ajla Tomljanovic(AUS)
McCartney Kessler[WC] v Marta Kostyuk[10](UKR)
Iva Jovic[WC] v Magda Linette(POL)
Taylor Townsend v Martina Trevisan(ITA)

The doubles wild cards were announced Friday, and, unlike the singles wild cards, all went to Americans:

Women's
Jessie Aney and Jessica Failla
Hailey Baptiste and Whitney Osuigwe
Carmen Corley and Ivana Corley
Tyra Grant and Iva Jovic
McCartney Kessler and Sabrina Santamaria
Robin Montgomery and Clervie Ngounoue
Anna Rogers and Alana Smith

Men's
Tristan Boyer and Emilio Nava
Robert Cash and JJ Tracy
Nikita Filin and Alex Razeghi
Christian Harrison and Vasil Kirkov
Mitchell Krueger and Reese Stalder
Alex Michelsen and Mackenzie McDonald
Ryan Seggerman and Patrik Trhac

Although doubles matches will not begin until Wednesday, the draws have been released, with Marcel Granollers of Spain and Horatio Zeballos of Argentina the top men's seeds, and Gabby Dabrowski of Canada and Erin Routliffe(Alabama) of New Zealand the top women's seeds.

Ohio State's NCAA champions Robert Cash and JJ Tracy will face Sumit Nagal of India and Yoshihito Nishioka of Japan in the first round.

Kalamazoo 18s champions Alex Razeghi and Nikita Filin will play Nicolas Barrientos of Colombia and Skander Mansouri of Tunisia in the first round.

San Diego 18s champions Jovic and Tyra Grant also drew an unseeded team in Anna Danilina(Florida) of Kazakhstan and Irina Khromacheva of Russia for their first round match.

Speaking of doubles, No. 13 seeds at the US Open, Jackson Withrow(Texas A&M) and Nathaniel Lammons(SMU), defended their title at the Winston-Salem Open yesterday, with the No. 4 seeds beating unseeded Julian Cash(Mississippi St, Oklahoma St) of Great Britain and Robert Galloway(Wofford) 6-4, 6-3 in the final. It's the third title of this summer's hard court season for Withrow and Lammons, who also defended their title in Atlanta and claimed their biggest title at the ATP 500 in Washington DC.

For more on their most recent title, see this article from the ATP website.

Alex Michelsen advanced to his first ATP final not on grass in Winston-Salem, but the 20-year-old from Southern California lost to Lorenzo Sonego of Italy 6-0, 6-3.


Michelsen's opponent in the US Open Tuesday will be qualifier Eliot Spizzirri, the two-time ITA National Player of the Year, who just completed his eligibility at Texas in May. A wild card into qualifying, Spizzirri defeated Gregoire Barrere of France, Joris DeLoore of Belgium and 2023 US Open boys champion Joao Fonseca of Brazil to reach the main draw for the first time in three attempts. 

This article from the US Open website quotes Spizzirri's reference to his college experience as helping him cope with the pro-Fonseca crowd, which. if you saw any of Fonseca's junior matches last year, you would agree is loud, passionate and formidable.

My colleague Michael Lewis(no relation), who was onsite covering the qualifying, also provided a quote from Spizzirri on the time he spend as a young junior at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, with a reference to 2013 Kalamazoo champion Collin Altamirano(Virginia), who played the US Open main draw that year and the qualifying tournament the following year.

Yeah it's crazy, I used to sneak around here all the time, I knew the entrances and exits to all the gyms; I've been going to this tournament since as young as I can remember.

Even my first-round qualies this year playing on 17; probably my most ingrained memory of watching US Open qualies was watching (Collin) Altamirano on that court when I was super young; And just being in awe of that level of tennis, and how badly I wanted to do that.

So for my first round here this year, to get a chance to do that, was already fulfilling a huge dream of mine. To make the main draw is surreal. I'm going to try to enjoy it.

Most special thing is my friends and family being here also.

Saturday, August 24, 2024

Spain's Jodar and Serbia's Kostovic Claim ITF J300 Titles at Prince George's County International Championships College Park; Kessler Wins WTA Title in Cleveland

©Colette Lewis 2024--
College Park MD--


Playing in International Tennis Federation J300 finals is nothing new for Spain's Rafael Jodar and Serbia's Teodora Kostovic, and they used that edge in experience to defeat their physically compromised opponents on a warm and sunny Saturday at the Junior Tennis Champions Center stadium court.


No. 5 seed Jodar is now a perfect four-for-four in ITF J300 finals, beating No. 14 seed Charlie Robertson of Great Britain 6-3, 6-1 to add a hard court J300 title to the grass court title he earned over Robertston last month at Roehampton.

Jodar got the break with Robertson serving at 2-3, and was not threatened on serve, with Robertson failing to get a look at a single break point in the match.

Robertson's speed makes employing the drop shot a tricky proposition, but with Jodar's penetrating ground strokes keeping Robertson back at the baseline, clean winners were the result of the handful of attempts Jodar made.  

After each player got a service hold to open the second set, Robertson was broken at love in the third game, with his service motion deteriorating on every attempt. He took a medical timeout and the trainer worked on his lower back, but the five-minute delay didn't bother Jodar, who held at love for a 3-1 lead.

"It's been through the whole week, but it kept getting worse and worse," the 17-year-old from Scotland said. "Having a three-setter yesterday made it worse, and I didn't feel great out there. My strength is my physicality on court and I couldn't really move. I would have put more balls in the court and mixed it up a bit more, that would have been my strategy, but it was tricky out there."

With his back problems, Robertson resorted to an underhand serve on a couple of occasions, which he said he had done before, but only when he has an injury, not when fully fit.

Those attempts didn't prove successful against Jodar, who continued to take advantage of the lack of pace on Robertson's serve, breaking him for the fourth time in the match to claim the title.



"Charlie is a good player so I knew it was going to be a hard match, but I felt I was playing good from the first point," said Jodar, who did not drop a set in his five victories. "I played really well, to be honest."

Jodar said that he hoped Robertson would be fully recovered for the US Open Junior Championships, which begin a week from tomorrow, while liking his own chances to contend in New York after this title.

"My confidence is very high," said Jodar, who turns 18 next month and is scheduled to enroll at the University of Virginia in January. "This is very good preparation for the US Open, that I could play five matches on hard court, with same conditions as New York, so it's going to be exciting to be there at US Open in my last grand slam. I'm proud of myself for all the work I've been doing the last couple of months, and hope to keep this level at the US Open."


The second-seeded Kostovic was playing in her seventh J300 final, and now has her fifth title with a 7-5, 6-2 victory over No. 12 seed Thea Frodin, who was feeling the affects of four consecutive three-set matches.

Kostovic led from the opening game, when she broke serve, although Frodin raised her game in the late stages of the first set, breaking Kostovic when she was serving for the set at 5-4.

Frodin couldn't take her first lead however, dropping serve to give Kostovic another chance to servei t out, and, with the help of a net cord ace, she held.

"I was trying to just stay calm," said Kostovic, who like, Jodar, won the singles title at the J300 in Roehampton last month. "I know I can play a good level of tennis all the time, but I'm still young and working on that. It's hard to be focused 100 percent, but if I drop my level a little bit, I come back, and that's what I did."

Frodin was again broken to open the second set, and again in the third game, with two doubles faults in each of those games contributing to the eventual 4-0 deficit she faced.

"I can't just blame it on my tiredness," said the 15-year-old from California. "There were some things that didn't go as well as I would have hoped in the finals, but Teodora is a good player, and it's hard when you get farther behind against a good player like her. I will blame my serving on my tiredness, I had a hard time pushing up because my legs were feeling it."

Frodin held for 4-1, despite another double fault, and got a break to make it 4-2, but Kostovic didn't seem fazed by losing the five-deuce game.

"I was ok about that," said Kostovic, who had beaten Frodin in the semifinals at the Indian Wells J300 in March. "If I lost two games, I know I'm going to take another one, just looking forward for the next point. I am very happy with my performance today."

Kostovic broke Frodin in the next game, after Frodin had led 40-0, and she closed out the title on her first match point.


Kostovic, who is traveling with the ITF Grand Slam Player Development Programme Touring Team, now turns her attention to the US Open, hoping to improve on her best finish at a junior slam, which was the quarterfinals at Wimbledon last month.

"I'm looking for the US Open to take that title," said the 17-year-old, who will train at the JTCC in the week prior to the US Open junior championships. "I don't care to celebrate here. I was here to pick up the base on the hard court from the clay court--I need to say that now I have a title on every surface--so now I have a lot of confidence in my tennis on every surface."

Frodin is heading to Orlando to prepare for the US Open with the National coaches who were assisting her in College Park.

"I going to take away all the positives from this tournament because there were a lot," said Frodin, who saved five match points in her third round win over No. 5 seed Sonja Zhiyenbayeva of Kazakhstan. "I'm going to the US Open with the same mindset, the same mentality as I did this tournament, because it got me far."


The girls doubles championship, played at the same time as the boys singles final, went to No. 4 seeds Maya Iyengar of the United States and Sonja Zhiyenbayeva of Kazakhstan, who defeated the unseeded American team of Claire An and Alanis Hamilton 7-6(5), 6-4. 

Iyengar, who reached the doubles final of the USTA National 18s in San Diego two weeks ago with Victoria Osuigwe, and Zhiyenbayeva had played together only once before, at last year's J300 in Canada the week before the US Open Junior Championships. They reached the semifinals there, so when Zhiyenbayeva was looking for a partner for the US hard court swing, she contacted Iyengar, and they clicked immediately this week.

They lost only five games in their first two victories and knocked out top seeds Emerson Jones of Australia and Kostovic 6-0, 6-3 in Friday's semifinals. Although they were happy to get the win, they didn't feel their level was as high as it had been in the three previous victories.

"To be honest I don't think we played our best today," said Iyengar, a 17-year-old from Arizona. "The worst of the week I would say. I think because Alanis is poaching and serving and volleying a lot, it's a little bit different. But we did good in the tiebreaker."

"We don't really get negative," said Zhiyenbayeva, who beat Iyengar in the second round of singles. "We go down for a short period of time, but it's easy to get out of it," Iyengar added.

Even without much history, Iyengar and Zhiyenbayeva have found they mesh well.

"I think we're both pretty aggressive and we're both pretty chill," Iyengar said. "We're really calm, don't care really, just play," said Zhiyenbayeva.

"Together, we're calm," said Iyengar. "She's really calm, I think she's not even trying sometimes, but that helps me."

The pair hope to play together at the US Open but with Iyengar in qualifying there, they may not get in if she doesn't qualify.


The boys doubles champions are building quite a resume, with Alex Razeghi of the United States and Max Schoenhaus of Germany adding the College Park title to the Wimbledon championship they won last month.

Razeghi and Schoenhaus, the No. 3 seeds, defeated No. 5 seeds Oliver Bonding and Robertson of Great Britain 7-6(3), 6-3.

The tiebreaker went to Razeghi and Schoenhaus when Bonding missed a volley to make it 5-3 and Schoenhaus crushed a one-handed backhand return of a Bonding first serve for a winner that gave them three set points. They converted the first, took a 3-1 lead, lost the break, but immediately got it back and closed out their last two service games without losing a point.

The tournament ended for them much better than it started, when they drew Kalamazoo 18s semifinalists Ian Mayew and Kase Schinnerer in the second round, and trailed 6-1 in the second set tiebreaker before taking a 4-6, 7-6(7), 10-5 decision.

"We saved six match points in our first match, so it was a bit rough," said Razeghi, who partnered with Schoenhaus for the first time at Roland Garros and reached the semifinals. "But this is our time on a hard court together. We have good chemistry and there's just something inside of us, we just win."

"First tournament on hard court and it worked really well," said Schoenhaus. "Hopefully we can hold that level."

As for Bonding and Robertson, Schoenhaus said he was aware of the physical limitations of Robertson.

"They actually played pretty good, I heard of Charlie's back in the final, he had a big tournament in singles also," said Schoenhaus. "It's stress for him. I think they played a pretty decent level, but could have played better if Charlie wasn't in the final before."

Razeghi and Schoenhaus hope to continue their winning streak at the US Open junior championships, but before that, Razeghi will play in the main draw of the men's doubles next week, with Nikita Filin. Razeghi and Filin received the wild card for capturing the Kalamazoo 18s title, which puts Razeghi's personal doubles winning streak at 15 since the first of July.

For complete draws, see the JTCC ITF tournament page.

Replays of both singles finals and the boys doubles final can be found at the JTCC YouTube Channel.

Former Florida All-American McCartney Kessler received a wild card into the US Open after winning the W100 in Landesville Pennsylvania this month and reaching the WTA Top 100. That wild card allowed her to accept another one this week into the WTA 250 in Cleveland, rather than play in the US Open qualifying, and she made the most of it, winning the title today with a 1-6, 6-1, 7-5 win over top seed Beatriz Haddad Maia of Brazil. Four of Kessler's five wins came in three sets, three of them from a set down, but she is now up to 63 in the WTA live rankings.

Last fall I spoke with Kessler at the WTA 125 in Midland about her rapid rise since deciding to give pro tennis a try after her collegiate career ended, and compiled this interview with her for the Tennis Recruiting Network.

For more on today's final, see this article from the WTA website.

Friday, August 23, 2024

Jodar and Robertson Meet for ITF J300 Boys Title; Frodin and Kostovic Play for Girls Championship Saturday in College Park

©Colette Lewis 2024--
College Park Maryland--


No. 12 seed Thea Frodin of the United States and and No. 14 seed Charlie Robertson of Great Britain will be looking to avenge earlier losses this year when they face No. 2 seed Teodora Kostovic of Serbia and No. 5 seed Rafael Jodar of Spain in Saturday's finals at the ITF J300 at the Junior Tennis Champions Center.

Both reached the finals with three-set victories on a clear and comfortable Friday; Frodin took out unseeded Ksenia Efremova of France 2-6, 6-3, 6-4 and Robertson defeated No. 11 seed Thomas Faurel of France 6-1, 2-6, 6-0.


Robertson admitted he had a mental lapse that cost him the second set.

"I got off to a good start and then relaxed a bit too much and thought, no way this guy comes back," sais the 17-year-old from Scotland. "I just completely switched off, wasn't very good, but I reset and I'm happy with the way I finished."

Robertson didn't see any change in Faurel's level in the second set, so was confident he'd prevail if he could eliminate his errors.

"When I was serving well, being solid and when I was aggressive, I always hit a winner, he couldn't do much," said Robertson, who has a fan club of young players who train at JTCC. "All he had against me in the second set was I just missed. He didn't do anything, it was just all me. So I just flipped that around, was more patient, and when I had the opportunity I went with bigger margins and it worked."

Robertson garnered his fans with his third round win over top seed Rei Sakamoto, and they have continued to support him in his next two victories.

"When I won that match on Center Court, there were a lot of kids supporting me," Robertson said. "I went up to them, let them know I appreciated it and now they're all here and I'm absolutely loving them, it's so nice."

Robertson has been taken under the wing of another Scottish player, the recently retired Andy Murray.

"I got to spend time with Andy, which is pretty cool, and we've built a relationship," Robertson said. "He's a very generous guy, he's been helping me a lot. During the grass season I was hitting with him, obviously he was still playing, and I just got to be around him, it was cool to see how he works. He's an incredible player, obviously, and an incredible guy, so it's cool to be around him and take things I can fit into my game also."

Robertson will be looking to avenge his loss in the only other J300 final he's played, falling to Jodar 7-6(7), 6-4 two months ago at Roehampton.


Jodar earned his fourth trip to a J300 final, finishing as champion in his first three, with a 7-5, 6-2 victory over No. 4 seed Jagger Leach.

The margins were exceedingly thin in the first set, with Leach failing to convert two break points in the only deuce game of the set, with Jodar serving at 3-3.

With both players serving well and ending points with winners, there was no clear advantage to either, but when Jodar earned his first break point, with Leach serving at 5-6, he converted it with a backhand winner, a shot that is as dangerous as any in junior tennis right now.

Jodar held in a deuce game to open the second set, and again was able to convert his first break point in the second game of the set to take a 2-0 lead. Jodar began to find his rhythm on return and by continuing to keep his big groundstrokes deep, he gave Leach little opportunity to attack.

Leach eventually did break Jodar, but the 17-year-old from Spain led 4-0 by that time and broke Leach for the fourth time in the match to end it.

"I handled the important moments very well and I'm happy with my level today," said the 17-year-old, who is expected to join the Virginia Cavaliers in January.  "In the first set, it was just one chance and I made it. I knew from the first that it was going to be very tough match, because he served really well. I was just trying to get the return in."

Jodar's win over Robertson in the Roehampton final was indoors, after rain forced the move from the grass.

"We had to go indoors, so it's going to be a different match," Jodar said. "The same opponent but different conditions, so we'll see how it goes."


Frodin has dropped the first set in her last three matches, but she's shown her resilience each time, including in her 2-6, 6-3, 6-4 win over unseeded Ksenia Efremova of France. 

The two 15-year-olds were at 4-4 in the third set, with Efremova serving, when the drama began to build. Efremova had three game points to take a 5-4 lead, but Frodin saved two with forehand winners, while Efremova made an unforced error on the forehand on the other. After one long rally, Efremova walked to her chair for no discernable reason, taking a drink before returning to her position, but didn't appear to have been given a time violation by the chair umpire, although one was clearly warranted.

Frodin appeared completely unbothered by the pause, perhaps grateful herself for the chance to reset after the grueling point, but she was also determined not to display any emotions that might fuel Efremova.

"I strongly believe that if I overreact, I just give her more than she's already taking from me," Frodin said. "In the moment it's tough to hold yourself composed, but as much as I want to let out how I'm feeling I know that if I at least pretend I'm not bothered by it, it almost helps me believe it."

After the fourth deuce, Efremova double faulted, then made a backhand error, giving Frodin the chance to serve for the match.

The game started with a double fault, but Frodin got it to 40-30, only to have Efremova deny that match point with a backhand winner and earn a break point with a good return. But Frodin hung tough, hitting forehand winner to save it, and getting a error from Efremova when she had earned another break point. A good first serve gave Frodin a second match point, and this time she converted it with her forehand forcing an error from Efremova.

"I realized at the end that she was waiting for me to miss," said Frodin, who has advanced to her second J300 final with the win. "So if I could keep the ball in play until I had the right shot, I'd be all right. Most of the points she had towards the end was because I was going for too much, or I was missing. So I tried to put the ball in the court in the beginning of the point until I found a ball to really go for it on."

Frodin has been working on her mental game and is proud of how it has held up under pressure.

"She can get in your head, but honestly, kudos to her," Frodin said. "She finds every way to win, and that's tennis and that's what you have to do. She's a super good player, she grinds and fights until the end, so I think you have to be tough, mentally strong to play her. It takes a lot to get to that point."

Frodin will play Kostovic for a second time, having lost to her 4-6, 6-2, 6-1 in the semifinals of the ITF J300 in Indian Wells in March. 

"I like to think I've improved since the last time I played her," Frodin said. "But I'm going to watch a couple of her matches from the past, see how I want to go into it."


Kostovic is going into the final with confidence, with a convincing 6-2, 6-2 victory over No. 3 seed Rositsa Dencheva of Bulgaria, who had beaten her in their two previous meetings.

"The last time, it was semifinal J300 also, in Bulgaria, but I am working very hard on my mentality and my tennis game. Today I was very focused from the first point, and that's the only way to beat players like her, good on the baseline, put every ball back in the court, I feel sometimes I am playing against the wall."

Dencheva got very few first serves in, which gave Kostovic the opportunities she was looking for.

"Her serve is same as two years ago or one year ago," Kostovic said. "But you need to approach that serve, you need to be aggressive, because if you're not aggressive, she'll take the ball and move you around, so you need to take action."

Kostovic didn't know she would be facing Frodin again, but was not concerned about her opponent in the final.

"For me it doesn't matter," said Kostovic. "I'm focused on my game and what I can do on the court, not on the opponent, not on the referees, just on myself. I improve a lot, physically, mentally, but especially mentally and I'm proud of that. A lot of people have come to me and told me that and I'm very happy about that."

The doubles finals are set, with three seeded teams advancing to the championship matches Sunday.

In the girls doubles final, No. 4 seeds Maya Iyengar of the United States and Sonja Zhiyenbayeva of Kazakhstan will face the unseeded team of Alanis Hamilton and Claire An for the title. Iyengar and Zhiyenbayeva defeated top seeds Emerson Jones of Australia and Kostovic 6-0, 6-3, while Hamilton and An took out another unseeded American team, Eva Oxford and Isabelle De Luccia 6-2, 6-2.

Wimbledon boys doubles champions Alex Razeghi of the United States and Max Schoenhaus of Germany will try to extend their winning streak, after the No. 3 seeds beat No. 2 seeds Faurel and Rei Sakamoto of Japan 6-3, 6-2. Since their title in London, Razeghi also has won the USTA 18s Nationals, with Nikita Filin, and will be playing next week in the men's main draw at the US Open.
 
Saturday they will play No. 5 seeds Robertson and Oliver Bonding of Great Britain, who defeated the unseeded Canadian team of Mikael and Nicolas Arseneault 6-7(6), 6-2, 10-7.

Live streaming of the singles finals, which begin at 10 a.m. with the boys final, will be available at the JTCC ITF 300 YouTube channel. The links to live scoring, draws and the order of play can be found at the JTCC ITF tournament page.

Thursday, August 22, 2024

Faurel Saves Three Match Points to Advance to Semifinals at ITF J300 College Park; USA's Frodin and Leach Advance to Final Four; Four Americans Qualify for US Open; 38 Americans in Men's and Women's Singles Draws

©Colette Lewis 2024--

College Park MD--


There's been no dearth of third-set tiebreakers this week at the ITF J300 at the Junior Tennis Champions Center, and that trend continued today, with No. 11 seed Thomas Faurel of France saving three match points in his 6-2, 1-6, 7-6(2) win over No. 3 seed Amir Omarkhanov of Kazakhstan.

Faurel could have let down emotionally after Omarkhanov saved four match points serving at 4-5 in the third set, but the shots that Omarkhanov hit to save the match points--a forehand that forced an error, a service winner, an ace and a backhand volley winner--mitigated any frustration he might have felt.

"It's always easier to forget about it when the other person played well and there isn't really much you could do," said the 18-year-old, who plans to join the Kentucky Wildcats in January.
"The four match points he had he made four great first serves, two of them were aces, I'm pretty sure."

Faurel was then broken, giving Omarkhanov the chance to serve for the set, but his first serve deserted him after getting to 40-15 with a first serve and plus-one forehand winner. Faurel saved those two match points with an overhead winner and a forehand that forced an error, but had to save another after Omarkhanov's forehand forced an error from him. But Omarkhanov shanked a forehand, and missed his next four first serves, which was instrumental in Faurel taking control in the tiebreaker. 

"When he was serving at 6-5, he barely made any first serves, and for the rest of the match," Faurel saidl. "It was a great help for me, because I was able to immediately get off to a good start in the point, attacking his second serve, so that definitely helped."

Having fought off three match points, Faurel was a bit more relaxed heading into the tiebreaker. 

"I definitely felt loose," Faurel said. "Especially when you save match points on your opponent's serve you play the tiebreak like you have nothing to lose. You're just going for it, and today it all worked."

Omarkhanov's serve went from bad to worse in the tiebreaker, with two double faults giving Faurel a 5-1 lead. Down 6-1, Omarkhanov hit a forehand winner to save his fifth match point of the day, but Faurel ended the three-hour match with a good first serve that Omarkhanov couldn't get in play.

He will play No. 14 seed Charlie Robertson of Great Britain, who defeated 2023 College Park finalist Alex Razeghi, the No. 10 seed, 7-5, 6-2.  Robertson defeated Faurel 6-1, 6-1 in the second round of the Orange Bowl last December in their only meeting on the ITF Junior Circuit.

No. 5 seed Rafael Jodar of Spain took out No. 2 seed Hayden Jones 7-5, 6-3, with University of Virginia head coach Andres Pedroso watching his January 2025 recruit from the sidelines. Jodar will face No. 4 seed Jagger Leach, who overcame a slight hiccup in late stages of his quarterfinal with No. 7 seed Miguel Tobon of Colombia 6-1, 7-5.

After saving five match points in her round of 16 win over No. 5 seed Sonja Zhiyenbayeva of Kazakhstan, No. 12 seed Thea Frodin had a less dramatic finish to her match today with No. 4 seed Antonia Vergara Rivera of Chile. Frodin trailed 4-1 early and lost the first set 6-3, but came back to take the next two sets 6-2, 6-1 to advance to her fourth J300 semifinal of the year.  

It will be a battle of 15-year-olds in the top half semifinal, when Frodin takes on unseeded Ksenia Efremova of France. Efremova, who took out top seed Emerson Jones of Australia in the second round, beat unseeded Alanis Hamilton 6-4, 7-5.

In the bottom half, No. 2 seed Teodora Kostovic of Serbia and No. 3 seed Rositsa Dencheva of Bulgaria will renew their rivalry, which dates back to 2022. Kostovic defeated No. 7 seed Yelyzaveta Kotliar of Ukraine 6-4, 6-0 in today's quarterfinals, while Dencheva beat unseeded Shiho Tsujioka of Japan 6-3, 6-2. Dencheva and Kostovic have played four times, all at J300 or higher events, with Kostovic winning the first two meetings and Dencheva the most recent two, including in the semifinals of a J300 in Bulgaria in April. 

The doubles semifinals are also on tap for Friday, with three of the eight remaining teams unseeded.

Jones and Kostovic, the No. 1 seeds, will face No. 4 seeds Maya Iyengar and Zhiyenbayeva in one semifinal; in the other, unseeded Claire An and Alanis Hamilton will play unseeded Isabelle DeLuccia and Eva Oxford.

In the boys semifinals, Wimbledon champions and No. 3 seeds Max Schoenhaus and Razeghi will play No. 2 seeds Rei Sakamoto of Japan and Faurel. The unseeded team of Nicolas and Mikael Arseneault of Canada, who defeated No. 4 seeds and Australian Open champions Cooper Woestendick and Max Exsted, will face No. 5 seeds Oliver Bonding and Robertson, who took out top seeds Leach and Jones 7-6(5), 7-6(6).

Links to live streaming, live scoring, draws and Friday's order of play can be found at the JTCC ITF tournament page.

Four of the forty Americans who began US Open qualifying this week have advanced to the main draw: Mitchell Krueger, Eliot Spizzirri, Ann Li and Varvara Lepchenko. 

Krueger defeated Maximilian Marterer of Germany 6-4, 6-2 to reach his first slam main draw since the US Open in 2020. The 30-year-old Texan will play fellow qualifier Hugo Grenier of France in the first round.

Spizzirri won one of the most exciting matches of the qualifying today, beating 2023 US Open boys champion Joao Fonseca of Brazil 7-6(8), 6-7(5), 6-4 on a packed show court five. The two-time ITA Player of the Year at Texas will make his slam debut against Alex Michelsen.

Ann Li, 24, defeated Lea Boskovic of Croatia 7-5, 6-3 to make her first slam main draw since 2022; she will play Ajla Tomljanovic of Australia in the first round. Varvara Lepchenko, 38, is back in the main draw of a slam for the first time since 2021, beating Despina Papamichail of Greece 6-3, 6-3 in the final round of qualifying today. She will face 17-year-old Brenda Fruhvirtova of the Czech Republic in the first round.

Another qualifier of note is Maya Joint of Australia, who is scheduled to enroll at the University of Texas. The 18-year-old, who grew up in Michigan and switched to representing Australia last year, defeated Hailey Baptiste 6-2, 6-1 to earn her first berth in a slam main draw. Joint, who lost in the final round of qualifying at the Australian Open this year, will play 36-year-old Laura Siegemund of Germany in the first round.

The singles draws for both men and women were released today, with the men's here and the women's here.

The first round matches for all 38 Americans, 21 women and 18 men:

Ashlyn Krueger v Shuai Zhang(CHN)
Danielle Collins[11] v Caroline Dolehide
Sofia Kenin v Emma Raducanu(GBR)
Jessica Pegula[6] v Shelby Rogers
Alexa Noel[WC] v Sara Sorribes Tormo(ESP)
Bernarda Pera v Anna Bondar(HUN)
Lauren Davis v Anna Kalinskaya(RUS)
Katie Volynets v Karolina Muchova(CZE)
Varvara Lepchenko[Q] v Brenda Fruhvirtova(CZE)
Taylor Townsend v Martina Trevisan(ITA)
Sloane Stephens v Clara Burel(FRA)
Emma Navarro[13] v Anna Blinkova(RUS)
McCartney Kessler[WC] v Marta Kostyuk[19](UKR)
Coco Gauff[3] v Varvara Gracheva(FRA)
Amanda Anisimova[WC] v Qinwen Zheng[7](CHN)
Peyton Stearns v Lesia Tsurenko(UKR)
Madison Keys[14] v Katerina Siniakova(CZE)
Ann Li[Q] v Ajla Tomljanovic(AUS)
Iva Jovic[WC] v Magda Linette(POL)

Men:
Mackenzie McDonald v Jannik Sinner[1](ITA)
Eliot Spizzirri[Q] v Alex Michelsen
Learner Tien[WC] v Arthur Fils[24](FRA)
Tommy Paul[14] v Lorenzo Sonego(ITA)
Sebastian Korda[16] v Corentin Moutet(FRA)
Marcos Giron v Alex De Minaur[10](AUS)
Zachary Svajda[WC] v Matteo Arnaldi[30](ITA)
Matthew Forbes[WC] v Roman Safiullin(RUS)
Taylor Fritz[12] v Camilo Ugo Carabelli(ARG)
Brandon Nakashima v Holger Rune[15](DEN)
Reilly Opelka v Lorenzo Musetti[18](ITA)
Christopher Eubanks[WC] v Arthur Rinderknech(FRA)
Mitchell Krueger[Q] v Hugo Grenier[Q](FRA)
Ben Shelton[13] v Dominic Thiem[WC](AUT)
Aleks Kovacevic v Frances Tiafoe

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Robertson Defeats Top Seed Sakamoto, Frodin Saves Five Match Points to Reach ITF J300 College Park Quarterfinals; 15-Year-Old Pareja Makes Final Round of US Open Qualifying; Tien Advances to Quarterfinals at ATP Winston-Salem

©Colette Lewis 2024--
College Park MD--



The hot and humid conditions that competitors in the ITF J300 in College Park usually confront have been absent the past two days, with ideal weather Wednesday for the first meeting between seeds.  A day after top seed and two-time girls slam finalist Emerson Jones exited, the No. 1 boys seed, Australian Open champion Rei Sakamoto of Japan was eliminated, with No. 14 seed Charlie Robertson of Great Britain coming back from 4-0 down in the third set to claim a 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(3) victory.

Robertson managed to stay positive when he was down early in the third set, and he won five games in a row to put all the pressure back on Sakamoto.

"All the games were really tight, I had a couple of chances, break points, so I knew I was close," said the 17-year-old from Scotland, who is No. 30 in the ITF junior rankings. "I stuck in and kept going and the games started going my way and I turned the match around."

Although Sakamoto is much more physically imposing than Robertson, Robertson was the one more interested in prolonging points.

"I felt like at the start there were a few points where I made some cheap mistakes, but I started to become more solid," Robertson said. "I got more physical on court and he didn't like that as much and he started to miss, so that's what changed the match a little bit."

Robertson also changed his strategy when it came to handling Sakamoto's potent serve.

"At the start, I was more up on the court and I was struggling with that," said Robertson, who hadn't played Sakamoto before today. "And then I began to go further back and I made a lot more returns, got me in points and that's where I was doing the damage."

After Sakamoto held to force the tiebreaker, the first three points went to the returner before Robertson held his two serves for a 4-1 lead. Sakamoto got as close as 4-3, but Robertson stayed in front with a deep second serve that Sakamoto couldn't get back in play.  Robertson's unexpected backhand stop volley winner, perfectly executed, gave him three match points and he converted the first, with Sakamoto's backhand going wide.

"I thought I played some brave points and also some very solid points, which I'm pretty happy with," Robertson said of his level in the tiebreaker. "To get it pretty comfy in the tiebreak, I was really happy."

Robertson will next play 2023 College Park finalist and No. 10 seed Alex Razeghi, who played a level of tennis in his 6-4, 6-3 win over Marko Maksimovic that had the eighth-seeded Serbian often gesturing in frustration. The two played in the second round of Roland Garros this year, with Robertson winning 6-2, 7-6(4).

In the other quarterfinal in the top half, No. 3 seed Amir Omarkhanov will face No. 11 seed Thomas Faurel of France. Omarkhanov survived a serious bout of cramps in the final set to take a 6-4, 4-6, 6-2 decision over unseeded Nicolas Arseneault of Canada in a three-hour and 10-minute marathon.  Faurel, a risng freshman at Kentucky, defeated No. 6 seed Cooper Woestendick 6-4, 6-3.

No. 4 seed Jagger Leach, recovered from the elbow injury that kept him from playing Kalamazoo earlier this month, defeated No. 16 seed Daniil Sarksian of Russia 6-3, 7-6(3) and will play No. 7 seed Miguel Tobon of Colombia. Tobon beat Tianhui Zhang of China 6-4, 6-4. 

In the bottom quarter, No. 2 seed Hayden Jones of Australia will play No. 5 seed Rafael Jodar of Spain after Jones defeated unseeded Ludwig Hede of Sweden 7-5, 6-4 and Jodar, who is joining the University of Virginia this coming January, beating No. 9 seed Max Schoenhaus of Germany 6-3, 6-1.


The other round of 16 match that finished in a third set tiebreaker came in the girls draw, and it was even more dramatic. No. 5 seed Sonja Zhiyenbayeva of Kazakhstan was serving at 5-4 40-0 in the third set against No. 12 seed Thea Frodin, but Frodin escaped with a 5-7, 6-3, 7-6(5) victory.

"At 40-0 she was serving, I got it back to deuce and then she had two more ad-ins," said Frodin, a 15-year-old from California, who trains with the USTA in Orlando. "I managed to save them both, I don't know how I did it."

Frodin didn't start the deciding tiebreaker auspiciously, with a double fault, but her backhand began heating up at 2-all, with two clean winners and a forced error from her backhand making it 5-2. Zhiyenbayeva got one of the mini-breaks back with a forehand winner, but Frodin earned three match points with a forehand winner of her own. Zhiyenbayeva held both her serves to save the first two match points, but Frodin's topspin forehand deep in deuce corner sealed the win.

Being so close to a loss, Frodin said she learned a lot from this particular win.

"Matches in the past, where I've been down, I've kind of given up a little bit," Frodin said. "Having that feeling of not wanting to play anymore because I'm quote unquote too far away to come back.  But this match showed that anything can happen, and there's a lot of positives to take away from the match. I'm proud of myself because I fought until the end. And I think I need to get used to doing that more."

Frodin's opponent in the quarterfinals is No. 4 seed Antonia Vergara Rivera of Chile, who also had to come from a set down, beating USC rising freshman Jana Hossam Salah of Egypt 2-6, 6-3, 6-1. 

The other American girl in the quarterfinals is unseeded Alanis Hamilton, who ended the run of qualifier Brooke Wallman 6-1, 6-4. Hamilton will play unseeded Ksenia Efremova of France, who defeated No. 16 seed Claire An 6-4, 6-3. 

The third unseeded player is in the bottom half, with Shiho Tsujioka of Japan advancing to a meeting with No. 3 seed Rositsa Dencheva of Bulgaria. Tsujioka defeated unseeded Trinetra Vijayakumar 6-3, 6-2 and Dencheva beat No. 14 seed Nellie Taraba Wallberg of Sweden 6-4, 2-6, 6-1.

The only quarterfinal that is as projected by the seeds is No. 2 seed Teodora Kostovic of Serbia against No. 7 seed Yelyzaveta Kotliar of Ukraine. Kostovic defeated No. 15 seed Shannon Lam 6-4, 6-3 and Kotliar took out qualifier Kristina Liutova of Russia 6-2, 6-2.

The seeded doubles teams were in action for the first time in today's second round, with four girls and one boys seeds losing. 

Isabelle DeLuccia and Eva Oxford, the last team accepted into the main draw, defeated No. 2 seeds Dencheva and Vergara Rivera 6-3, 6-2, and An and Hamilton beat No. 3 seeds Kotliar and Monika Stankiewicz of Poland 3-6, 6-0, 10-6.

Links to Thursday's draws, order of play, live scoring and live streaming are available at the JTCC ITF tournament page.

Among the ten Americans to advance to Thursday's final round of qualifying at the US Open are two teenage wild cards.  Fifteen-year-old Julieta Pareja, who has yet to crack the ITF Junior Top 100, defeated WTA 164 Lucrezia Stefanini of Italy 7-6(4), 1-6, 6-4 to reach the final round of women's qualifying, where she'll play Kimberly Birrell of Australia. 

Nineteen-year-old Nishesh Basavareddy(Stanford), who was playing in the US Open junior championships at this time last year, defeated Alex Bolt of Australia 7-6(4), 7-6(2) to advance to a meeting with Hamad Medjedovic of Serbia for a place in the main draw. The men's qualifying draw is here.

Other Americans to advance to the final round of qualifying are recent Texas graduate Eliot Spizzirri, Mitchell Krueger, Maxime Cressy(UCLA), Usue Arconada, Ann Li, Varvara Lepchenko, Hailey Baptise and Elli Mandlik. Baptiste will play rising University of Texas freshman Maya Joint of Australia and Spizzirri's opponent is 2023 US Open boys champion Joao Fonseca of Brazil.

Thursday's order of play is here.

Two-time Kalamazoo champions went 1-1 in the round of 16 today at the ATP 250 Winston-Salem. Zachary Svjada, a lucky loser, was beaten by No. 15 seed Pavel Kotov of Russia 3-6, 6-3, 6-4; qualifier Learner Tien(USC) defeated Thiago Seyboth Wild of Brazil 6-4, 6-3. Tien, who has now broken into the ATP Top 200 in the live rankings, plays the winner of tonight's late match between wild card Pablo Carreno Busta of Spain and Aleks Vukic(Illinois) of Australia.

For more on the Americans' wins today, including that of No. 11 seed Alex Michelsen, who, like Tien, trains at the Tier 1 Performance Tennis Academy in Southern California, see this article from the ATP website