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Sunday, March 8, 2026

Zheng, Brantmeier Receive $100K Hurd Awards, Svajda and Lutkemeyer $40K as Finalists; Qualifying Complete, Johnson, Clarke Top Seeds at ITF J300 Tucson

photo credit: Universal Tennis Foundation

This year's Hurd Awards were nearly a foregone conclusion after Reese Brantmeier of North Carolina and Michael Zheng of Columbia won the NCAA singles titles in November in Lake Nona. Both Americans, both seniors, both interested in pursuing careers in professional tennis, it would have been shocking if they had not received the $100,000 grants to assist them in that pursuit.

Recently the Universal Tennis Foundation and Paula Hurd added a grant for two finalists, with this year's recipients of the $40,000 grant SMU junior Trevor Svajda, who is expected to join the pro circuit after this season, and UCLA senior Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer.

All four winners are quoted in this release from UTR; the Tennis Channel segment below features former Hurd recipient Chris Eubanks explaining how the grant eased his transition into pro tennis, with UTR's Mark Leschly and Paula Hurd adding their comments on the accomplishments of all four winners. 

The main draw of the ITF J300 in Tucson begins Monday at the Tucson Racquet Club, although the seeded players will not take the court until Tuesday in the 48-player draws.

Qualifying concluded today with six boys and six girls earning their spots in the main draw, which means another match Monday. The girls qualifiers are Sylvana Jalbert, Ava Quincy Brewer, Armira Kockinis, Briley Rhoden, Anjani Vickneswaran and Sophie Suh, all of the United States. The boys qualifiers are Sebastian Godoy, Loic Massotte of Canada, Kristian Sharma, John Murphy, Keshav Muthuvel and Jack Dermenjyan.

The boys seeds:
1. Andrew Johnson
2. Gavin Goode
3. Tanishk Konduri
4. Xavier Massotte, CAN
5. Ryan Cozad
6. Vihaan Reddy
7. Safir Azam
8. Agassi Rusher
9. Marcel Latak
10. Roshan Santhosh
11. Zavier Augustin
12. Cooper Kose, AUS
13. Mauricio Schtulmann Gasca, MEX
14. Jerrid Gaines Jr.
15. William Kjellberg, SWE
16. Mason Taube

The girls seeds:
1. Melije Clarke
2. Hollie Smart, GBR
3. Olivia Traynor
4. Lani Chang
5. Sarah Ye
6. Carrie-Anne Hoo
7. Riyo Yoshida, JPN
8. Capucine Jauffret
9. Thara Gowda
10. Adla Lopez
11. Karlin Schock
12. Isabelle Deluccia
13. Hannah Ayrault
14. Anya Arora
15. Kennedy Drenser-Hagmann
16. Brooke Wallman

My on-site coverage in Tucson begins Monday, the first day of the three-week trip that moves to San Diego for the J300 North American Regional Championships next week and Indian Wells for the Easter Bowl the week after that.

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Cozad, Yoshida Win ITF J200 Las Vegas Titles; Goode Takes ITF J300 Tucson Wild Card, Liutova a Late Withdrawal; Auburn Women Beat LSU, Texas Men Fall to LSU; Zheng Keeps AO Earnings


Ryan Cozad won his first ITF Junior Circuit singles title in more than year today at the J200 in Las Vegas, with the top seed defeating doubles partner Ford McCollum, the No. 10 seed, 6-0, 6-1. The University of Virginia recruit, who had claimed his ninth ITF Junior Circuit doubles title Friday, partnering with McCollum, dropped just one set in his six singles victories. Cozad now has three career singles title on the ITF Junior Circuit.

No. 5 seed Riyo Yoshida of Japan won the girls singles title, beating No. 2 seed Hollie Smart of Great Britain 6-3, 5-7, 6-2 in today's final. It's Yoshida's second ITF J200 title, and her seventh overall.

All four finalists are expected to compete in next week's ITF J300 in Tucson, but there was a late withdrawal, with Kristina Liutova pulling out today. That leaves Melije Clarke as the only current ITF Top 50 girl in the draw.

The girls draw in Tucson lost a top 50 player in Liutova, but the boys gained one with the notice that Gavin Goode has accepted a wild card into the main draw. The ITF Junior No. 23 was not entered in Tucson, although he did enter the San Diego J300 the following week.

The other main draw wild cards went to Justin Riley Anson, Dhakshish Aryan Basavaraju, Daniela Del Mastro, Julia Seversen and Tanvi Pandey.

The qualifying began today in Tucson, but there were very few matches, with the boys unable to fill a 24-player draw, with the five players with byes needing to win only one match to qualify for the main draw.

The girls did have enough qualifying entries for the standard 48 draw, but 21 players received byes into the second round. The second round winners will play two qualifying matches Sunday with those six winners playing another match in the main draw Monday.

At the J300 in Paraguay, No. 5 seed Damir Zhalgasbay of Kazakhstan won the boys title, beating No. 2 seed Yannik Alvarez of Puerto Rico 6-4, 6-4 for his first ITF J300 singles title.

Top seed Sol Ailin Larraya Guidi of Argentina won the girls singles title, her first at the J300 level, beating unseeded Camila Rodero of Chile 2-6, 6-4, 6-4.

Qualifying is underway for the ITF J300 in Porto Alegre Brazil, with Londyn McCord, the No. 1 seed, the only American in qualifying. 

Thara Gowda lost in the semifinals of the W15 in Canada, with top seed Ariana Arseneault(Georgia, Auburn) of Canada beating the 17-year-old qualifier from Michigan 6-3, 6-2. Arseneault will face No. 4 seed Dasha Ivanova in Sunday's final.

Last night in Austin, second-ranked Texas lost to No. 6 LSU 4-3 in SEC play, adding to the chaos atop the men's rankings, after No. 1 Ohio State fell to Baylor on Thursday night. LSU's Olaf Pieczkowski, a 21-year-old from Poland new to the Tigers roster, came from 5-2 down in the third set to beat Sebastian Gorzny 3-6, 6-3, 7-5 at line 1, clinching the fourth point for LSU. LSU won the doubles point and got wins at 2, 4 and 1 to pull off the upset. Texas is right back out there tonight, hosting No. 7 TCU.

The fourth-ranked LSU women hosted fifth-ranked Auburn today in Baton Rouge, with Auburn claiming a 4-2 victory. Auburn won the doubles point, but lost four first sets in singles. LSU quickly tied the match with a win at line 6, but victories for Auburn and lines 4 and 5, the two matches where they had won the first sets, put them back in the lead. And in the three remaining matches, Auburn had forced third sets, losing at No. 2, but getting a win at line 3 from Angella Okutoyi to clinch it, with line 1 unfinished.

Auburn is now 21-1, with their sole loss coming in the semifinals of the Team Indoor, to champion Georgia. 

Front Office Sports (thanks to Courtney Nguyen for highlighting the article in her Daily Bagel newsletter) has followed up on the issues of NCAA compliance regarding Michael Zheng's Australian Open earnings, with Zheng able to accept the money without jeopardizing his eligibility this spring because the money can be used for expenses throughout the calendar year, not the academic year in which it was earned. Whether the Reese Brantmeier settlement, yet to be announced, will affect this rule is unknown right now, but Zheng can fund the start of his pro career without any worries about the NCAA rules. 

The Universal Tennis Foundation's Hurd Award for American collegians was scheduled to be selected on Friday, with the announcement of the men's and women's winners and finalists expected Sunday, when Tennis Channel airs a special segment on  Zheng will have another source of funds for his pro career expenses when he receives that $100,000, which he does not have to use during this year. 

Friday, March 6, 2026

February Aces; Doubles Champions Meet in Singles Final at ITF J200 Las Vegas; Alvarez Reaches J300 Paraguay Final; Gowda Advances to W15 Semifinal in Canada; Easter Bowl Finds New Presenting Sponsor; Top-Ranked Ohio State Men, Georgia Women Fall

My monthly column for the Tennis Recruiting Network is up today, highlighting the top performances from juniors, collegians and former collegians. An unlikely double from the 2022 NCAA singles champion, lots of memorable moments for Wake Forest players, past and present, and first pro titles here in the US for two 16-year-olds. 

Qualifying for the ITF J300 in Tucson begins Saturday, and the main draw wild cards, revealed today, include ITF junior No. 23 Gavin Goode. Goode has not played a junior event since the Australian Open.

The finals are set for the ITF J200 in Las Vegas, with doubles champions Ryan Cozad and Ford McCollum facing off in the singles final. Top seed Cozad defeated No. 11 seed Felix Roussell 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(5), while No. 10 seed McCollum beat unseeded Justin Riley Anson 6-3, 7-5. Cozad and McCollum, the top seeds in doubles, defeated Andrej Markovic and Kahven Singh 6-2, 6-2 in the all-USA final.

The girls final will feature No. 2 seed Hollie Smart of Great Britain and No. 5 seed Riyo Yoshia of Japan. Yoshida beat unseeded Armira Kockinis 6-1, 6-4 and Smart defeated unseeded Carlota Moreno 6-2, 6-4 to reach the final.  Moreno will travel to Tucson with a trophy however, with she and Sophia Bedacsek, seeded eighth, beating No. 5 seeds Capucine Jauffret and Canada's Charlize Celebrini 6-3, 6-3 in the girls doubles final.

At the ITF J300 in Paraguay, Puerto Rico's Yannik Alvarez won the doubles title and is through to the singles final, his first at the J300 level. Alvarez, the No. 2 seed, defeated unseeded Alvaro Ariel Frutos Alonso of Paraguay 6-3, 6-1 and will face No. 5 seed Damir Zhalgasbay of Kazakhstan in the final. Zhalgasbay, who had beaten top seed Jack Secord in the quarterfinals 3-6, 7-5, 6-0, took out No. 3 seed Emilio Comacho of Ecuador 6-0, 6-4 in today's semifinal.

Alvarez and John Bothma of South Africa won the doubles title, their first as a team, but the 11th on the ITF Junior Circuit for Alvarez. The No. 3 seeds defeated unseeded Ignacio De Armas of Venezuela and Felipe Vazquez of Uruguay 6-3, 6-4 in today's final.

The girls singles final will feature top seed Sol Ailin Larraya Guidi of Argentina and unseeded Camila Rodero of Chile. In the girls doubles final, No. 2 seeds Maia Ilinca Burcescu of Romania and Alyssa James of Jamaica beat the unseeded team of Ophelia Korpanec Davies and Pavla Sviglerova of Czechia 6-3, 6-3.

Thara Gowda is warming up for the Tucson J300 with a stellar week at the W15 in Trois-Rivieres Canada. After qualifying for her first ITF women's World Tennis Tour main draw, she is through to the semifinals after beating Canada's Nadia Lagaev 6-4, 2-6, 6-0. Gowda will face top seed Ariana Arseneault(Georgia, Auburn) of Canada in Saturday's semifinals. In the bottom half semifinal, No. 4 seed Dasha Ivanova will play No. 7 seed Ana Grubor of Canada.

The Easter Bowl, which begins March 21 in Indian Wells, has announced that adidas will serve as a presenting sponsor this year. FILA took over for adidas in 2022 and was the title sponsor for the past four years, but they bowed out when the company left the US market. Both companies put together a fantastic player party every year; I'll be interested to see if that will continue this year. A pre-tournament release from Steve Pratt, the longtime Easter Bowl press liaison, is below.

Future of American Junior Tennis Will Once Again Be On
Display During 58th Annual Easter Bowl USTA Spring Nationals

March 21-29, 2026, At Indian Wells Tennis Garden

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (March 6, 2026) – The future of American tennis will once again be on display at the 58th Annual Easter Bowl USTA Spring Nationals Presented by adidas and taking place March 21-29 at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, home to the BNP Paribas Open Masters 1000 event.

One of the nation’s largest and most prestigious junior tennis tournaments, the Easter Bowl is a USTA Level 1 Spring National Championship in the 18s, 16s, 14s and 12s for both boys and girls with gold, silver and bronze balls handed out for top finishers in all eight singles and doubles divisions.

Current world-ranked No. 27, Irvine’s Learner Tien, played the prestigious Easter Bowl seven times as a junior, dating back to his debut in 2015. In 2019, Tien advanced to the Boys’ 14s singles semifinals and in 2021, he made it to the Boys’ 16s final as a 15-year-old. In his final Easter Bowl match as a 16-year-old playing in the 18s in 2022, Tien competed in the quarterfinals and fell to good friend and training partner Alex Michelsen, who went on to win the title.

Nearly every American men’s and women’s Grand Slam champion since the first tournament began in 1968 has competed in the Easter Bowl, a true pipeline to the professional ranks, including past winners and International Tennis Hall of Famers John McEnroe, Tracy Austin, Pam Shriver and Jennifer Capriati. Recent past Easter Bowl champions include current pro stars, Fritz, Jenson Brooksby, Frances Tiafoe, Marcos Giron, Brandon Nakashima, Sofia Kenin, Taylor Townsend, Tommy Paul, Alex Michelsen, Emma Navarro and Iva Jovic, to name a few. Recent Australian Open winner Madison Keys and two-time 2025 Grand Slam finalist Amanda Anismova are also counted among Easter Bowl alumni.

Easter Bowl matches will once again be live-streamed on www.EasterBowl.com with more information to come. To keep up with all the Easter Bowl news, visit the website at www.easterbowl.com.

The iconic junior tournament started by Seena Hamilton in 1968 is considered the Super Bowl of junior tennis. Longtime Easter Bowl Chairman Emeritus Lornie Kuhle took over the event 14 years ago and was responsible for moving it to the Tennis Garden. There are few other junior tennis tournaments in the United States that possess the same rich history as the Easter Bowl. The tournament started in New York City and has been played in Florida, Arizona and California.

The college tennis weekend started out with a bang last night in Waco, with the tenth-ranked Baylor men taking out top-ranked Ohio State 4-2. The Buckeyes took the doubles point, but Baylor got points at lines 3, 1, 4 and 6 to hand the Buckeyes their second loss of the season. For more on the match and the box score, see this article from baylorbears.com.

And 24 hours later, women's No. 1 Georgia lost a conference match on the road, falling to No. 35 Vanderbilt 4-2. Vanderbilt won the doubles point, then got straight-sets wins at lines 1, 3 and 6, with Georgia getting points at 4 and 5, with only line 2 going three sets. The iOnCourt box score is here.


Thursday, March 5, 2026

Gowda Reaches Quarterfinals at W15 in Canada; Three Unseeded Semifinalists at ITF J200 Las Vegas; Antonius, Pareja Withdraw From San Diego J300; Qualifiers Day, Townsend Advance at BNP Paribas Open

Although there are no USTA Pro Circuit tournaments these first two weeks in March, Canada is hosting an M15 and a W15 this week, both of which have drawn many Americans. The men's tournament in Sherbrooke features two Canadian juniors, but mostly former collegians have advanced; in Trois-Rivieres three teens have reached the quarterfinals.

Thara Gowda, a 17-year-old from Michigan, is playing in just her second ITF women's World Tennis Tour tournament. Gowda, just outside the ITF Junior Circuit Top 100, qualified for her first pro circuit main draw and today defeated No. 5 seed Jada Robinson to reach the quarterfinals. 

Gowda, who is entered in both the Tucson and San Diego J300s,  will play unseeded 18-year-old Nadia Lagaev of Canada Friday. Lagaev, a Georgia recruit, is not entered in Tucson, but has entered San Diego.

The third teen is 17-year-old Anna Tabunshchyk of Canada, who hasn't played a junior event since 2024. Seventeen-year-old Kaya Moe qualified and won her first round match, but lost to top seed Ariana Arseneault(Georgia, Auburn) of Canada today.

The semifinals are set at the ITF J200 in Las Vegas, with three of the eight competitors unseeded, two of them in the girls draw.

Armira Kockinis defeated No. 14 seed Caroline Shao 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, avenging her loss to Shao at the J200 in Corpus Christi last fall. Kockinis will play No. 5 seed Riyo Yoshida of Japan, who beat Charlize Celebrini 7-5, 6-3.

Carlota Moreno, a semifinalist two weeks ago at the W15 in Florida defeated unseeded Yilin Chen 6-4, 6-4 and will play No. 2 seed Hollie Smart of Great Britain. Smart defeated Tanvi Pandey 6-2, 6-2 to advance.

Top seed Ryan Cozad is through to Friday's semifinals with a 6-2, 6-3 win over No. 12 seed Kamil Stolarczyk. He will play No. 11 seed Felix Roussel of Canada, who beat Mason Vaughan 7-6(6), 6-2. 

In the bottom half, No. 10 seed Ford McCollum will play unseeded Justin Riley Anson, with McCollum ending the winning streak of Dhakshish Aryan Basavaraju with a 6-3, 6-1 quarterfinal victory. Aryan Basavaraju had won 13 straight matches on the ITF Junior Circuit in the past month. Anson defeated No. 13 seed Daniel Malacek 7-6(3), 6-3 in today's quarterfinal.

The doubles finals are set for Friday in Las Vegas, with top seeds Cozad and McCollum facing the unseeded team of Andrej Markovic and Kahven Singh for the boys title; No. 5 seeds Celebrini and Capucine Jauffret will play No. 8 seeds Moreno an Sophia Budacsek for the girls doubles championship.

March is an extremely busy month for junior events, with the two J300s here in the United States and two J300s and a J500 in South America. It's difficult to keep track of who is playing where, but with Tuesday's withdrawal deadline now past, there is some clarity.  ITF No. 11 Michael Antonius, who was entered in San Diego J300 and in the J500 Banana Bowl in Brazil, has withdrawn from both. With his two ITF J300 titles already this year, he should be set for the junior slams this summer. 

Julieta Pareja, who is from nearby Carlsbad, withdrew from San Diego, so she will not be defending her 300 points from the California swing this month, after winning the ITF J300 in Indian Wells last year.

Janae Preston, who has won three consecutive J300s, was entered in both San Diego and Brazil; she withdrew from San Diego, but is still entered in the Banana Bowl. 

The seeded players take the court for the first time Friday at the BNP Paribas Open, with Wednesday's and Thursday's first round still underway to determine their opponents. Two of the American qualifiers, Kayla Day and Taylor Townsend, advanced with straight-sets wins today.  Day, who breezed through qualifying, had no trouble again today, beating Francesca Jones of Great Britain 6-3, 6-1. She will face No. 2 seed Iga Swiatek in the second round. Townsend defeated Marie Bouzkova of Czechia 6-2, 6-1 to set up a meeting with No. 28 seed Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine.

Other unseeded Americans advancing to the second round are Ashlyn Krueger, Marcos Giron(UCLA), Reilly Opelka, Jenson Brooksby, wild card Zachary Svajda, Aleks Kovacevic(Illinois) and Alex Michelsen.

Wild card Lilli Tagger of Austria, the reigning girls Roland Garros champion, won her first round match 6-2, 6-4 over Varvara Gracheva of France. She will play No. 32 seed Maria Sakkari of Greece in the second round.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Shao Beats Top Seed Lee; Malacek Defeats No. 2 Seed Massotte at Las Vegas J200; Secord Advances to Quarterfinals at J300 in Paraguay; Brewer Cup Champions; CMS Men and Women Top D-III Rankings; Barry and West Alabama No. 1 in Latest D-II Rankings


Fourteen-year-old Caroline Shao didn't play either of the Florida tournaments in Bradenton and Ft. Lauderdale, but returned to the ITF Junior Circuit in January at the J300 in Costa Rica. Today she posted her best result of the year, with the No. 14 seed beating top seed Nancy Lee 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-2 to advance to the quarterfinals of the ITF J200 in Las Vegas.  Shao will play unseeded 2025 Easter Bowl 16s champion Armira Kockinis next.

Shao, No. 5 seed Riyo Yoshida of Japan and No. 2 seed Hollie Smart of Great Britain are the only seeded girls remaining.

No. 13 seed Daniel Malacek, the Orange Bowl 16s finalist, defeated No. 2 seed Xavier Massotte of Canada 6-4, 6-4 to reach the quarterfinals, where he will face unseeded Justin Riley Anson. Anson defeated No. 6 seed Jerrid Gaines Jr. 6-3, 3-6, 6-3. 

Boys top seed Ryan Cozad defeated Orange Bowl 16s champion Matias Reyniak, the No. 15 seed 6-4, 6-3 and will play No. 12 seed Kamil Stolarczyk in the quarterfinals. 

The only non-American in the boys quarterfinals is No. 11 seed Felix Roussel of Canada, who will play unseeded Mason Vaughan in the quarterfinals.

At the J300 in Paraguay, top seed Jack Secord is the only American who advanced to the quarterfinals, with all five US girls, including No. 2 seed Welles Newman, falling in the second round. 

The Brewer Cup, the USTA Level I National Spring Team Championships, ended Tuesday in Mobile and Tucson. Below are the teams that won the events, with two players from the 14s, 16s and 18s age groups combining to form a team in Mobile, while the 12s teams in Tucson consist only of players in that age group. I am not certain I have the correct champions for the 12s, with the USTA's Playtennis site difficult to navigate for a tournament like this, so please correct me if I've read it wrong.

Boys
Vikings
Coach Matt Boughton
B18 James Quattro
B18 John Gentek
B16 Joshua Dolinsky
B16 Aryan Ponugoti
B14 Nathan Lee
B14 Bryan Parker

Girls
Stingrays
Coach Donald Widener
G18 Gabriella Davydov
G18 Jensen Diianni
G16 Alexa Mendoza
G16 Adelyn Gross
G14 Emma Li
G14 Harshitha Thirugnanam

Boys
Roadrunners
Keanu Agbulos
Jesse Goldman
Leonardo Bigan
Allen Hou
Doruk Comakci
Bence Leber

Girls
Rattlesnakes
Alara Buyukuncu
Eloise Forrest
Ghillian Harper
Nicole Zhang
Annie Jiang
Mia Lurigio

Now that the ITA Division III Team Indoor Championships are over, a new set of rankings has been published, the first thre weeks. Both the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps men and women won the Team Indoor Championships and both are No. 1 in the rankings. 

Click on the headings to see all 40 ranked teams.

ITA Division III team rankings, March 4, 2026

1. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps
2. Chicago
3. Case Western
4. Denison
5. Tufts
6. Johns Hopkins
7. Bowdoin
8. Emory
9. Swarthmore
10. Middlebury

1. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps
2. Washington-St. Louis
3. Chicago
4. Wesleyan
5. Emory
6. Middlebury
7. Pomona-Pitzer
8. MIT
9. Babson
10. Bowdoin

Although both Barry teams won the Division II National Team Indoor Championships, only the men are No. 1 in the new rankings. Although the undefeated Barry women were No. 1 last week and didn't lose, they fell to No. 3, with West Alabama now No. 1.

Click on the headings to see all 50 ranked teams.

ITA Division II team rankings, March 4, 2026

1. Barry
2. West Florida
3. Lubbock Christian
4. UT Tyler
5. Flagler
6. Wayne State
7. North Georgia
8. Washburn
9. UI-Indy
10. Wingate

1. West Alabama
2. West Florida
3. Barry
4. North Georgia
5. Midwestern State
6. Washburn
7. Catawba
8. Mississippi College
9. Embry-Riddle
10. Augustana

The Division II singles and doubles rankings were also published today, with Natasha Sengphrachanh of Grand Valley State No. 1 in women's singles and Yan Kodjoed of Barry No. 1 in men's singles.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Day, Townsend, Vidmanova and McDonald Qualify for BNP Paribas Open; Herea, Dietrich Take Over Top Spots in ITA D-I Singles Rankings; No. 3 and 4 Seeds in Both Draws Lose at J200 Las Vegas; WTA Tournament Returns to Memphis This Summer

After three days of play, qualifying for the BNP Paribas Open is complete, with three Americans making it through to the main draw.

Kayla Day, who received a wild card into qualifying only when Elvina Kalieva did not need hers when she got in on her own ranking, defeated two seeds to advance. The 26-year-old left-hander beat No. 17 seed Aliaksandra Sasnovich of Belarus 6-2, 7-5 in the first round and No. 9 seed Darja Semenistraja of Latvia 6-2, 6-1 in today's final round of qualifying. She will play Francesca Jones of Great Britain, whom she beat in the second round of the Wimbledon Junior Championships back in 2016.

Taylor Townsend won the battle of the players who competed in finals on Sunday, with the ATX Open finalist and doubles champion beating Arcadia W35 winner Akasha Urhobo 6-0, 7-6(5) this afternoon. 

2024 NCAA singles champion Dasha Vidmanova(Georgia), will make her Masters 1000 debut, with the 23-year-old Czech defeating Priscilla Hon of Australia 7-5, 7-6(4) to qualify. Vidmanova will face Cristina Bucsa of Spain, who won the WTA 500 last week in Mexico, in the first round.

Mackenzie McDonald(UCLA) and wild card Trevor Svajda(SMU) were the only two US men to advance to the final round of qualifying and they played each other tonight, with McDonald earning a 6-4, 6-2 victory. Svajda had beaten No. 12 seed and ATP No. 135 Luca Nardi of Italy 4-6, 7-6(2), 6-3 in the first round of qualifying Monday night. 

An even dozen Americans are seeded in Indian Wells:

7. Taylor Fritz
8. Ben Shelton
21. Frances Tiafoe
23. Tommy Paul
25. Learner Tien
28. Brandon Nakashima

4. Coco Gauff
5. Jessica Pegula
6. Amanda Anisimova
15. Madison Keys
18. Iva Jovic
20. Emma Navarro

The men's singles draw is here; the women's singles draw is here. The order of play for Wednesday is here.


The ITA Division I release today includes both team and individual rankings; the No. 1 teams remain the same, with the Georgia women and Ohio State men continuing to hold the top spot since the computer rankings took over three weeks ago. But with the previous singles No. 1s both losing on Sunday--North Carolina's Reese Brantmeier fell to Amelie Van Impe of SMU 6-1, 6-2 and SMU's Trevor Svajda was beaten by Dylan Dietrich of Virginia 3-6, 6-1, 6-3--they dropped to No. 2. Dietrich moved to No. 1, while Texas's Carmen Herea took over the top spot from Brantmeier.

When the NCAA singles and doubles championships were in the spring, the rankings were important for entry into those events, but now the rankings are just to determine All-American status (a top 20 season-ending ranking) and the ATP and to a lesser extent, the ITF Accelerator programs. Of course they are also part of a player's legacy in their program, which is also significant.

ITA Division I Women's rankings, March 3, 2026
(previous week's ranking in parentheses, link to full lists in headings)

1. Georgia (1)
2. Ohio State (2)
3. North Carolina (3)
4. LSU (9)
5. Auburn (13)
6. UCLA (5)
7. Tennessee (14)
8. Texas A&M (4)
9. NC State (27)
10. Cal (7)

1. Carmen Herea, Texas
2. Reese Brantmeier, North Carolina
3. Luciana Perry, Ohio State
4. Teah Chavez, Ohio State
5. Lucciana Perez, Texas A&M
6. Aysegul Mert, Georgia
7. Ange Oby Kajuru, North Carolina
8. Savannah Dada-Mascoll, Appalachian State
9. Valerie Glozman, Stanford
10. Anastasiia Grechkina, Pepperdine

1. Roisin Gilheany and Gloriana Nahum, Oklahoma
2. Gabriella Broadfoot and Victoria Osuigwe, NC State
3. Melodie Collard and Vivian Yang, Virginia
4. Reese Brantmeier and Alanis Hamilton, North Carolina
5. Sophia Webster and Celia-Belle Mohr, Vanderbilt

ITA Division I Men's rankings, March 3, 2026

1. Ohio State (1)
2. Texas (4)
3. Virginia (2)
4. Wake Forest (3)
5. Mississippi (5)
6. LSU (7)
7. TCU (6)
8. Georgia (13)
9. UCF (10)
10. Baylor (8)

1. Dylan Dietrich, Virginia
2. Trevor Svajda, SMU
3. Jay Friend, Arizona
4. Sebastian Gorzny, Texas
5. Paul Inchauspe, Princeton
6. Aidan Kim, Ohio State
7. Michael Zheng, Columbia
8. Petar Jovanovic, Mississippi State
9. Duncan Chan, TCU
10. Max Dahlin, Michigan

1. Brandon Carpica and Nikita Filin, Ohio State
2. Manfredi Graziani and Aaron Sandler, Penn
3. Mans Dahlberg and Dylan Dietrich, Virginia
4. DK Suresh and Andrew Delgado, Wake Forest
5. Benito Sanchez Martinez and Petar Jovanovic, Mississippi State


While the top two seeds in the boys and girls draw have advanced to the round of 16 at the ITF J200 in Las Vegas, the No. 3 and No. 4 seeds have been eliminated.  No. 3 seed Roshan Santhosh lost to Dhakshish Aryan Basavaraju 6-4, 6-4; Aryan Basavaraju won back-to-back J60s last month in Guatemala. No. 4 seed Cooper Kose of Australia lost in the first round yesterday to Gadin Arun 6-4, 7-6(3).  Advay Singh defeated No. 5 seed Mauricio Schtulmann Gasca of Mexico 6-1, 7-6(4).

Girls No. 3 seed Olivia Traynor lost to Carlota Moreno, who made the semifinals of a W15 last month, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 today, while Charlize Celebrini of Canada defeated No. 4 seed Capucine Jauffret 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Celebrini is the younger sister of the NHL San Jose Sharks star Macklin Celebrini, a member of the Canadian Olympic hockey team.

Girls top seed Nancy Lee defeated Ava Quincy Brewer 1-6, 6-3, 6-0 to advance to a meeting with No. 14 seed Caroline Shao. Boys top seed Ryan Cozad beat Ilhan Basar Senel of Turkey 7-6(3), 6-4 and will face 16s Orange Bowl champion Matias Reyniak, the No. 15 seed, in the round of 16.

The WTA announced Monday that its 250 tournament, which had been played in Cleveland in late August, would be moving to Memphis for 2026 and will take place in late July. The Leftwich Tennis Center, which opened in 2023, will host the tournament; the previous WTA event in Memphis was indoors; this will be outside, and I can tell you from when I attended the USTA Girls 18s National Clay Courts there in July, it will be uncomfortably  warm.

For more on this new event, see this article.