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Saturday, April 18, 2026

Easter Bowl 18s Finals Videos; 15-year-old Combs Reaches W15 Final; Urhobo Earns More Points in Roland Garros Wild Card Race; Kennedy Drops Three-Setter in Tallahassee Challenger Semis; TCU Men Claim Big 12 Conference Title

Below are the videos of the 18s finals at last month's Easter Bowl, which wraps up my YouTube content from my March trip out West. All those videos can be seen at the tenniskalamazoo YouTube Channel. The most popular of all those videos, with nearly 5000 views, is the boys final at the ITF J300 in San Diego, and I can understand why, with the quality of that match way above average for a junior final. I have one more task to complete from that trip, a Tennis Recruiting Network photo gallery from the Easter Bowl.





Two of the American teenagers in action today on the USTA Pro Circuit are through to Sunday's finals: 15-year-old Emery Combs and 19-year-old Akasha Urhobo.

Wild card Combs, playing in just her second pro event, defeated 18-year-old University of Florida recruit Capucine Jauffret, a qualifier 6-1, 4-6, 6-4 in today's semifinals at the W15 in Orlando. She will play another qualifier in the final, 24-year-old Margaux Maquet of Belgium, who squandered a 5-0 lead in the third set, but went on to beat 14-year-old Sofiia Bielinska of Ukraine 6-2, 3-6, 7-5. 

In the doubles final, unseeded 23-year-olds Kailey Evans(Texas Tech, San Diego) and Ellie Coleman(Duke) defeated unseeded Anastasia Bertacchi of Italy and Carolina Bohrer Martins of Brazil 6-3, 7-5. The pair did not drop a set all week. It was the second Pro Circuit title for Coleman and the third for Evans.

At the W35 in Zephyrhills Florida, No. 3 seed Urhobo advanced to the final when unseeded Lea Ma(Georgia) retired after dropping the first set 6-2. Urhobo, currently leading the USTA's annual Roland Garros wild card race in this the third of the five week window for accumulating points, has earned points in all three weeks. She will face No. 5 seed Angela Fita Boluda of Spain, who beat compatriot Alicia Herrero Linana(Baylor) 6-4, 4-6, 6-4.

Former Pepperdine All-American Savannah Broadus won her second straight W35 doubles title on Florida's green clay, this week with former Virginia standout Hibah Shaikh. The unseeded pair defeated unseeded Daria Egorova and Anastasia Tikhonova of Russia 6-3, 5-7, 10-5 in the final. It's the 10th title for the 23-year-old Broadus, the third for Shaikh, and their second as a team.

At the M15 in Orlando, Michael Antonius, the No. 8 seed, lost to qualifier Justin Roberts(USF, Arizona State) of the Bahamas 6-4, 6-1. Roberts will face top seed Corentin Denolly of France, who ended the run of qualifier Adam Lynch(Barry) with a 6-1, 6-4 win today. Antonius has received a main draw wild card into the ATP Challenger 75 in Savannah Georgia next week.

2024 Kalamazoo 16s doubles champions Ryan Cozad and Yannik Alvarez won their first Pro Circuit doubles title today, with the 17-year-old wild cards beating No. 2 seeds Benjamin Thomas George(Western Michigan) of Canada and Christopher Li(UNC, Tennessee, Ohio State) of Peru 6-2, 6-4 in today's final. They defeated the 4, 1 and 2 seeds this week, dropping only one set.

In the semifinals of the ATP Challenger 75 in Tallahassee, 17-year-old Jack Kennedy lost to Joao Reis Da Silva of Brazil 6-2, 2-6, 6-4 after serving at 4-3 40-0 in the third set. Reis Da Silva will play No. 5 seed Clement Tabur of France in the final, after Tabur beat Michael Mmoh 6-4, 6-2. Kennedy is also in the main draw of the Savannah Challenger via the ITF/ATP Accelerator program.

Unseeded Stefan Dostanic(USC, Wake Forest) and Alex Rybakov(TCU) won their first Challenger doubles title, beating top seeds David Stevenson(Memphis) of Great Britain and Cleeve Harper(Texas) of Canada 6-4, 6-2 in today's final.

The finals are set for the SEC and ACC Conference championships Sunday, with a lot of 1, 2 and 3 seeds in the hunt, as well as No. 9 seeded LSU women. The Tigers defeated top-ranked, but fourth-seeded Georgia 4-1 this evening in Norman Oklahoma, getting the doubles point and wins from Cadence Brace at line 1, Ella McDonald at line 3 and Addison Lanton at line 4.

LSU will face No. 3 seed Auburn, who beat No. 2 seed Texas A&M 4-1 in the early semifinal. Auburn defeated LSU 4-2 in Baton Rouge in conference play early last month.

The men's final in the SEC will feature No. 1 Texas and No. 2 Mississippi State. Top-ranked Texas needed come-from-behind three-set wins from Abel Forger at line 5 and Sebastian Gorzny at line 1 to beat No. 5 seed Texas A&M 4-2, after the Longhorns had taken the doubles point and Jonah Braswell posted a straight-sets win at line 6.  Mississippi State, playing without their No. 2 Petar Jovanovic, defeated No. 3 seed LSU 4-2, getting straight-sets wins from Mario Martinez Serrano at 3, Raphael Vaksmann at 4 and Bryan Hernandez Cortes at 5 to add to their doubles point.

Texas, who won the regular season conference title outright, will go for the sweep tomorrow in College Station. They defeated Mississippi State 4-3 in Starkville in February, shortly after winning their first Team Indoor title.

Wake Forest and Virginia were co-champions of the regular season in the ACC, but only one can win the conference title when they meet for the second time this season. Top seed Wake Forest, who beat Virginia 4-2 last month in Winston-Salem, avenged the loss that cost them the outright conference title, beating No. 4 seed Stanford today 4-0 in Cary North Carolina. Wake took the doubles points and got straight-sets wins from Charlie Robertson at line 4, Joaquin Guilleme at line 5 and Kacper Szymkowiak at line 6 to blank last year's tournament champions. 

No. 2 seed Virginia dropped the doubles point to No. 3 seed Notre Dame, but got straight-sets wins from Dylan Dietrich at line 1, Andres Santamarta at line 3, Jangjun Kim at line 4 and Mans Dahlberg at line 6 to advance.

The top-seeded Virginia women defeated Duke 4-2 to give themselves an opportunity to sweep the conference titles. The Cavaliers took the doubles point and got straight-sets wins from Annabelle Xu at line 2, Katie Rolls at line 3 and Isabelle Lacy at line 4. 

Virginia will play No. 3 seed NC State, who beat No. 2 seed North Carolina 4-2, with four of the six singles matches going to three sets. NC State took the doubles point, and got the only two straight-sets wins from Gabby Broadfoot at line 3 and Lavinia Tanasie at line 4. The Wolfpack's fourth point came at line 1, with Mia Slama beating Reese Brantmeier 4-6, 7-6(7), 7-5.

Virginia and NC State played last Sunday, in Charlottesville, with Virginia winning that match 4-2 to clinch their first outright regular season conference title.

The Big 12 finals were today in Lake Nona, with No. 2 seed TCU breezing past top seed Arizona 4-0. The doubles point was close, with TCU taking line 3 7-5 after dropping line 1, but taking line 2 6-0 in 21 minutes. 

TCU, who had been shut out by Arizona last month, grabbed all six first sets in singles, with Duncan Chan at line 1, Oliver Bonding at line 4 and Roger Pascual at line 6 closing out their matches in straight sets to deliver another conference title to the Horned Frogs.

For more on the final, and the box score, see this article from gofrogs.com.

The top-seeded UCF team is taking on No. 3 seed TCU in the women's final tonight in Lake Nona. Live scoring of that match is here.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Easter Bowl 16s Finals Videos; Kennedy Reaches Tallahassee Challenger Semifinals; Antonius Moves on at M15 Orlando; Combs, Jauffret Advance to W15 Orlando Semifinal Meeting; Ma vs Urhobo in W35 Zephyrhills; All US Teams Advance in ITF Team Qualifying

The videos of the finals of the 16s division are available below, with the videos of the 12s and 14s finals available at the tenniskalamazoo YouTube Channel.




Jack Kennedy, who won the M15 title in Boca Raton last week, has extended his USTA Pro Circuit winning streak to eight matches by getting his second career ATP Top 200 win today in the quarterfinals of the ATP Challenger 75 in Tallahassee. The 17-year-old from New York defeated No. 4 seed and ATP 177 Daniil Glinka of Estonia 6-4, 6-4 this evening. Glinka had beaten Darwin Blanch 6-3, 6-4 in the second round last night. 

Kennedy had a bit of luck in the first set, getting a net-cord winner serving at 5-4, 40-30 after squandering five set points serving for it at 5-2, but he held on to an early break in the second set and closed it out, on his first match point, with his only ace of the match.

He will face unseeded Joao Lucas Reis Da Silva of Brazil in Saturday's semifinals, Reis Da Silva beat Pedro Boscardin Dias of Brazil 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 earlier today.

Wild card Michael Mmoh is through to the semifinals with a 6-3, 7-6(5) win over qualifier Hynek Barton of Czechia. He will face the winner of tonight's match between No. 5 seed Clement Tabur of France and Tyler Zink(Georgia, Oklahoma State).

Sixteen-year-old Michael Antonius is through to the semifinals of the M15 in Orlando, after the No. 8 seed defeated Dragos Cazacu of Romania 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 in just under three hours today at the USTA National Campus. Antonius, who is 22-3 this year, with a 10-0 record in the two J300s he played and a 12-3 record in the four M25 and M15 tournaments. He will face Justin Roberts(USF, Arizona State) of the Bahamas, who beat fellow qualifier Nick Stoot, an LSU recruit, 6-1, 4-6, 6-1. 

In the top half, Barry senior Adam Lynch, a qualifier, defeated Yannik Alvarez of Puerto Rico 6-0, 6-4 to reach his first Pro Circuit semifinal. The 22-year-old, who was a three-star on Tennis Recruiting Network during his junior career, will face top seed Corentin Denolly of France, who beat qualifier Toby Martin of Great Britain 6-4, 6-1.

Alvarez and Ryan Cozad, the 2024 Kalamazoo 16s doubles champions, are through to Saturday's final after defeating No. 1 seeds Wally Thayne(Utah, Brigham Young) and Jamie Vance 6-2, 3-6, 10-6. They will play No. 2 seeds Benjamin Thomas George(Western Michigan) of Canada and Christopher Li(UNC, Tennessee, Ohio State) of Peru for the title.

Three teenagers have advanced to the semifinals of the W15 in Orlando, with one of them quaranteed to reach Sunday's final.

Fifteen-year-old wild card Emery Combs defeated 16-year-old junior reserved entrant Sarah Ye 7-5, 6-1 in today's quarterfinals and will play 18-year-old qualifier Capucine Jauffret in the first pro semifinal for both. Jauffret, a University of Florida recruit, defeated qualifier Didi Bredberg Canizares of Spain 7-6(2), 2-6, 6-2.

Fourteen-year-old Sofiia Bielinska of Ukraine, playing in just her second Pro Circuit event, is through to the semifinals after beating unseeded Ava Markham(Wisconsin) 6-3, 6-2. She will play 24-year-old qualifier Margaux Maquet of Belgium, who beat Kailey Evans(Texas Tech, San Diego) 3-6, 6-4, 6-1. 

At the W35 in Zephyrhills Florida, No. 3 seed Akasha Urhobo and unseeded Lea Ma(Georgia) have advanced to a semifinal meeting after No. 3 seed Urhobo defeated unseeded Shilin Xu of China 6-3, 7-5 and Ma beat Gina Feistel(SMU) of Poland 6-0, 1-6, 6-4. 

In the bottom half semifinal, unseeded Alicia Herrero Linana(Baylor) of Spain will play No. 5 seed Angela Fita Boluda, also of Spain. Herrero Linana defeated No. 6 seed Eva Vedder of the Netherlands 7-5, 6-4, while Fita Boluda ended the run of 18-year-old Russian qualifier Daria Egorova 6-4, 6-2.

The North and Central America and Caribbean qualifying for the ITF's Junior Davis Cup, Junior Billie Jean King Cup and World Junior Tennis team events concluded today in Montreal, with the United States finishing first in all four divisions. Canada finished second in all four groups, with those two nations qualifying for the finals this summer for the 14-and-under teams and this fall for the 16-and-under teams. The players competing this week are not necessarily those who will be on the teams going to the finals.

Individual results from the three-day competition can be found here.

Davis Cup Juniors
vs. Canada, Dominican Republic, Mexico
Izyan Ahmad (15, Wayne, N.J.)
Gadin Arun (15, Paradise Valley, Ariz.)
Teodor Davidov (15, Bradenton, Fla.)
Captain: Sylvain Guichard, USTA Lead National Coach

 

Billie Jean King Cup by Gainbridge Juniors
vs. Canada, Dominican Republic, Mexico
Jordyn Hazelitt (15, Henderson, Nev.)
Welles Newman (16, Boca Raton, Fla.)
Janae Preston (15, Henderson, Nev.)
Captain: Thierry Champion, USTA National Coach

 

ITF World Junior Tennis – Boys
vs. Canada, Costa Rica, Mexico
Nathan Lee (13, Tustin, Calif.)
Rex Kulman (14, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.)
Max Smith (13, Parkland, Fla.)
Captain: Jon Glover, USTA National Coach

 

ITF World Junior Tennis – Girls
vs. Canada, Dominican Republic, Mexico
Isha Manchala (13, Hilton Head Island, S.C.)
Anna Kapanadze (13, Staten Island, N.Y.)
Nadia Poznick (13, Ann Arbor, Mich.)
Captain: Celeste Frey, USTA National Coach

 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Easter Bowl 14s Finals Videos; Kennedy Reaches First Challenger Quarterfinal in Tallahassee; In Orlando, Teens Oust Seeds at W15, Alvarez, Antonius and Stoot Advance to M15 Quarterfinals

The videos of the finals of the 14s division at last month's Easter Bowl are below; the 12s videos, which went up yesterday, can be found at my tenniskalamazoo YouTube channel.


Seventeen-year-old Jack Kennedy has advanced to his first ATP Challenger quarterfinal, with the ITF Junior No. 5 defeating Oliver Crawford(Florida) of Great Britain 7-6(4), 4-6, 7-5 this afternoon in Tallahassee. Kennedy survived 10 double faults and Crawford's 83 percent of first serves primarily by securing the final four points of the match.

Both players were holding serve easily in the final set, with only one deuce game played and neither of them facing a break point in the first 11 games of the third. Kennedy, trailing Crawford 0-30 with Crawford serving at 5-6, hit a backhand winner, forced an error with a big backhand and then earned the only break point he saw with an overhead winner, setting up a match point. Kennedy then got a forehand error from Crawford early in the rally, with the tiebreaker that seemed unavoidable suddenly not needed.

Kennedy, who won the M15 last week in Boca Raton, will face the winner of tonight's second round match between Darwin Blanch and No. 4 seed Daniil Glinka of Estonia. Kennedy and Blanch met in the Kalamazoo 18s semifinals last year, with Blanch posting 7-6(5), 6-1 victory. 

Glinka and No. 5 seed Clement Tabur of France are the only seeds remaining, with Michael Mmoh and Tyler Zink(Georgia, Oklahoma State), and possibly Blanch, joining Kennedy as unseeded Americans in the quarterfinals.

Four teenagers have advanced to the quarterfinals at the W15 in Orlando, taking out the No. 3, No. 4, No. 6 and No. 7 seeds in today's second round.

Fifteen-year-old Emery Combs defeated No. 3 seed Carla Markus of Argentina 6-4, 2-6, 6-1 and will play 16-year-old Sarah Ye, who beat No. 7 seed Jessica Hinojosa Gomez of Mexico 6-4, 7-6(4).  Eighteen-year-old qualifier Capucine Jauffret reached her second W15 quarterfinal, beating No. 6 seed Justina Maria GGonzalez Daniele of Argentina 6-3, 7-5 and will face qualifier Didi Bredberg Canizares of Spain, who defeated unseeded Maria Jose Portillo Ramirez of Mexico 7-5, 6-1. 

Fourteen-year-old Sofiia Bielinska of Ukraine, playing in just her second Pro Circuit event, with last week's tournament in Bonita Springs her first, beat No. 4 seed Luiza Fullana of Brazil 5-7, 7-6(5), 6-4. She will play Ava Markham(Wisconsin) next. The only quarterfinal without a teenager is at the top, with Kailey Evans(Texas Tech, San Diego) facing qualifier Margaux Maquet of Belgium.

At the M15 in Orlando, three teenagers have advanced to the quarterfinals: 16-year-old Michael Antonius, 17-year-old Yannik Alvarez of Puerto Rico and 18-year-old qualifier Nick Stoot.

Antonius, the No. 8 seed, defeated qualifier Davide Tortora of Italy 6-3, 5-7, 6-2 and will play 22-year-old Dragos Cazacu(Tennessee), who beat No. 4 seed Will Grant(Florida) 2-6, 6-2, 6-0. Stoot defeated No. 4 seed Blu Baker of Great Britain 6-3, 6-4 to advance to his second USTA Pro Circuit M15 quarterfinal. He will play 29-year-old qualifier Justin Roberts(USF, Arizona State) of the Bahamas, who beat No. 2 seed Reda Bennani of Morocco 6-3, 3-6, 6-3 in the first round.

In the top half, Alvarez, who reached the semifinals at his first Pro Circuit tournament last week in Boca Raton, defeated Boca Raton finalist Andreja Petrovic(North Dakota, Florida State, Duke) of Norway 6-3, 6-2 and will face one of four qualifiers in the quarterfinals, Barry senior Adam Lynch. Lynch defeated No. 3 seed Ignacio Monzon of Argentina 6-4, 7-5. Toby Martin of Great Britain, the fourth qualifier to advance, beat Benjamin Willwert 6-3, 7-6(4) and will play top seed Corentin Denolly.

Just two Americans have advanced to the quarterfinals of the W35 in Zephyrhills: unseeded Lea Ma(Georgia) and No. 3 seed Akasha Urhobo.

No. 2 seed Fiona Crawley(North Carolina) lost to 18-year-old Russian qualifier Daria Egorova 7-5, 6-2, and top seed Maria Carle(Georgia) of Argentina lost to Gina Feistel(SMU) of Poland 6-3, 2-6, 6-3. 

Ma, who beat qualifier Amelia Honer(UC-Santa Barbara) 6-2, 4-6, 6-0, will play Feistel in the quarterfinals; Urhobo, who beat 17-year-old qualifier Thea Frodin 6-4, 6-3, faces unseeded Shilin Xu of China.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Easter Bowl 12s Finals Videos; Change in D-I Eligibility Rules Allows Unlimited Prize Money Prior to Enrollment; Combs and Ye Earn First Pro Circuit Wins at Orlando W15; SI Interview with Michael Antonius

After finishing the Tucson ITF J300 and San Diego J300 finals the last few days, I've processed the first two videos from last month's USTA Level 1 Easter Bowl, with the 12s finals available below. To view the other videos from my recent trip out west, see the tenniskalamazoo YouTube Channel




The NCAA announced today that its D-I Cabinet has adopted changes to pre-enrollment eligibility rules that will affect all sports, including tennis.

Tennis had carved out a special exemption allowing $10,000 in prize money per year prior to enrollment, without regard to expenses, but that will no longer be necessary with all sports now allowing unlimited prize money prior to enrollment.

However, the issue of student-athletes accepting prize money after enrolling has not changed, so any collegiate player who makes substantial prize money prior to January of their senior year will continue to face the prospect of declining it to retain eligibility. That was the case for Fiona Crawley of North Carolina, who qualified for the US Open in 2023 after her junior season, but could not accept the prize money if she wanted to return to Chapel Hill for her senior season, and more recently, Oliver Tarvet, who could not accept his second round Wimbledon prize money if he wished to return to San Diego for his senior year, which he did. 

The lawsuit that Reese Brantmeier filed against the NCAA is being settled, but this announcement references that settlement as pertaining only to prospects, and it will not include any carve-out for enrolled student-athletes. It appears that an initiative from the USTA, LTA or some other governing entity, allowing any prize money to be put in a trust for post-graduation use, is still the only solution to the dilemma enrolled student-athletes will continue to face.

Another key topic of discussion is an age eligibility rule, but no decision has been made on that, according to this NCAA announcement on the eligibility of prospects.

Today at the W15 in Lake Nona, 15-year-old wild card Emery Combs and 16-year-old Sarah Ye, an ITF Junior Reserved entry, earned their first wins on the USTA Pro Circuit. 

Combs defeated 19-year-old Valentina Mediorreal Arias of Colombia 6-1, 6-3 in just her second USTA Pro Circuit match; Ye beat former Michigan All-American Jaedan Brown, a qualifier, 7-5, 6-3. Eighteen-year-old qualifier Capucine Jauffret also won her first round match, beating Carolina Bohrer Martins of Brazil 6-4, 6-3. Combs will play No. 3 seed Carla Markus of Argentina next; Ye's opponent in the second round is No. 7 seed Jessica Hinojosa Gomez of Mexico.

It's unusual for any pro tennis journalist to interview a junior, but Sports Illustrated's Jon Wertheim spoke to 16-year-old Michael Antonius about his win last month at the M25 in Bakersfield California, his coaching (correction on the spelling of the last name of USTA National Coach Troy HAHN) at the USTA, his game style, his college plans, and what making Pro Circuit history means to him. As long as I've known Michael, I did not know he spoke Norwegian.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Georgia Women, Texas Men Retain No. 1 Rankings; Kennedy Claims First ATP Top 200 Win at Tallahassee Challenger; Seven US Women Advance to Main Draw at W35 Zephyrhills; Alvarez, Antonius Advance at M15 Orlando

Two more sets of rankings are due before the NCAA tournament, but the regular season is over for three of the four Power 4 conferences, so ranking movement for those SEC, ACC and B12 teams will be based on this weekend's conference tournaments. The Georgia women, who are the No. 4 seed in the SEC tournament, stay at No. 1 in this week's ITA Division I team rankings, while the Texas men, who are the No. 1 seed in the SEC tournament, retained their No. 1 national ranking.

The ACC men's conference tournament bracket is here; the ACC women's conference tournament bracket is here; the Big 12 men's tournament bracket is here; the Big 12 women's tournament bracket is here.  The ACC tournaments are in Cary NC and the B12 tournaments are at the USTA campus in Lake Nona. The SEC women are in Norman and the SEC men play at College Station. The Big 10 has another weekend of regular season play coming up this weekend.

Division I Rankings Top 16, April 14, 2026
(last week's ranking in parentheses)
Click on the heading for the complete lists.

Men:

1. Texas (1)
2. Ohio State (2)
3. TCU (4)
4. Virginia (3)
5. LSU (5)
6. Mississippi State (6)
7. Wake Forest (7)
8. Oklahoma (9)
9. Arizona (10)
10. Texas A&M (8)
11. Baylor (11)
12. Georgia (13)
13. South Carolina (12)
14. UCF (15)
15. Illinois (14)
16. San Diego (16)

1. Dylan Dietrich, Virginia
2. Trevor Svajda, SMU
3. Sebastian Gorzny, Texas
4. Jay Friend, Arizona
5. Michael Zheng, Columbia
6. Max Dahlin, Michigan
7. Benito Sanchez Martinez, Mississippi State
8. Devin Badenhorst, Baylor
9. Petar Jovanovic, Mississippi State
10. Theo Papamalamis, Texas A&M

1. Cosme Rolland de Ravel and Duncan Chan, TCU
2. DK Suresh and Andrew Delgado, Wake Forest
3. Brandon Carpico and Nikita Filin, Ohio State
4. Bruno Nhavene and Luis Alvarez, Oklahoma
5. Theo Papamalamis and Togan Tokac, Texas A&M

Women:

1. Georgia {1)
2. Texas A&M (2)
3. Auburn (4)
4. Oklahoma (7)
5. Ohio State (3)
6. North Carolina (5)
7. Virginia (8)
8. Texas (6)
9. Pepperdine (9)
10. Southern Cal (10)
11. Arizona State (11)
12. Florida (17)
13. NC State (14)
14. Vanderbilt (13)
15. LSU (12)
16. Tennessee (19)

1. Lucciana Perez, Texas A&M
2. Reese Brantmeier, North Carolina
3. Carmen Herea, Texas
4. Luciana Perry, Ohio State
5. Teah Chavez, Ohio State
6. Anastasia Abbagnato, Texas
7. Evialina Laskevich, Oklahoma
8. Aysegul Mert, Georgia
9. Bridget Stammel, Vanderbilt
10. Katrina Scott, Tennessee

1. Roisin Gilheany and Gloriana Nahum, Oklahoma
2. Ava Esposito and DJ Bennett, Auburn
3. Deniz Dilek and Aysegul Mert, Georgia
4. Gabriella Broadfoot and Victoria Osuigwe, NC State
5. Reese Brantmeier and Alanis Hamilton, North Carolina

The four USTA Pro Circuit events this week are similar to last week's, with all four in Florida: 2 15s, 1 35 and an ATP Challenger. Unlike last week, when the Boca Raton tournaments were at different levels, this week's joint events in Lake Nona are both 15s, with a W35 in Zephyrhills and the Challenger 75 in Tallahassee.


Just one more match remains tonight to complete the first round in Tallahassee. Seventeen-year-old Jack Kennedy continued his winning streak, earning his best win on the Pro Circuit with a 3-6, 6-4, 4-0, ret. victory over No. 7 seed and ATP No. 194 Lukas Neumayer of Austria. Kennedy, who won the M15 in Boca Raton last week, received entry via the ITF/ATP Accelerator Program. He will play Oliver Crawford(Florida) of Great Britain in the second round. 

Kalamazoo 18s champion Darwin Blanch advanced to the second round with a 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 win over Daniel Galan of Colombia. He will play No. 4 seed Daniil Glinka of Estonia, who defeated Sarasota Challenger finalist Stefan Dostanic(USC, Wake Forest) 6-2, 7-6(3) today. 

Liam Draxl(Kentucky) of Canada is the top seed in Tallahassee; wild card Michael Mmoh defeated No. 2 seed Federico Agustin Gomez(Louisville) of Argentina 6-2, 6-1 and will face fellow wild card Cannon Kingsley(Ohio State) in the second round. Kingsley beat Dmitry Popko of Kazakhstan 6-3, 3-6, 7-5. The third wild card went Kaylun Bigun(UCLA), who lost to Draxl 3-6, 6-2, 6-1 yesterday. 

Seven of the eight qualifiers for the W35 in Zephyrhills are American: Melije Clarke[10], Bella Payne[5], Jamilah Snells(Louisville)[8], Thea Frodin[6], Kylie Collins(Texas, LSU, Oklahoma State)[3], Amelia Honer (UC-Santa Barbara)[2] and
Dasha Ivanova[1]. The only international qualifier is 18-year-old Daria Egorova[4] of Russia.

Maria Carle(Georgia) of Argentina is the top seed, with Fiona Crawley(UNC) the No. 2 seed. Crawley defeated Victoria Hu(Princeton) 6-3, 4-6, 6-1 in a first round match today.

Wild cards were given to 15-year-old Hannah Ayrault, Akasha Urhobo, the No. 3 seed, 18-year-old Alyssa James of Jamaica, and 17-year-old Kennedy Drenser-Hagmann. Drenser-Hagmann lost in the first round today to No. 5 seed Angela Fita Boluda of Spain 6-1, 6-4. The other wild cards will play their first round matches Wednesday. 

At the W15 in Orlando, just three of the qualifiers are American: 18-year-old Capucine Jauffret, Ellie Coleman(Duke) and Jaedan Brown(Michigan). 

Wild cards were awarded to Olivia De Los Reyes, Emery Combs, Allison Wang and Orange Bowl 16s champion Priscilla Sirichantho.  De Los Reyes and Sirichantho played their first round matches today, with No. 6 seed Justina Maria Gonzalez Daniele of Argentina beating De Los Reyes 6-3, 6-2 and 14-year-old ITF Junior Reserved entrant Sofia Bielinska of Ukraine defeating Sirichantho 2-6, 6-0, 6-1. 

Lani Chang and Sarah Ye are the other junior reserved entrants.

Twenty-three-year-old Kailey Evans(Texas Tech, San Diego) defeated top seed Gergana Topalova of Bulgaria 6-3, 7-6(6) in the first round today. 

At the M15 in Orlando, just two Americans reached the main draw via qualifying: 18-year-old Nick Stoot and Barry senior Adam Lynch. 

Wild cards were given to Vihaan Reddy, Jerrid Gaines Jr., Ryan Cozad and Ronit Karki. Junior reserved spots went to Yannik Alvarez of Puerto Rico, Michael Antonius and Benjamin Willwerth.

Alvarez, who lost to Kennedy in the semifinals last week in Boca Raton, beat Gaines 6-2, 6-3 and Antonius, the No. 8 seed, beat Cozad 7-5, 7-6(2) in first round matches today. Karki lost to Dragos Cazacu(Tennessee) of Romania 6-2, 6-4. 

Corentin Denolly of France is the top seed, with 19-year-old Reda Bennani of Morocco the No. 2 seed. 

Monday, April 13, 2026

ITF J300 San Diego Finals Videos, Gallery; McCord Claims Another J100, One of Five ITF Junior Circuit Singles Titles for Americans Last Week; Urhobo, Dostanic Lead Roland Garros Wild Card Race After Week Two

Barnes Tennis Center is one of my favorite junior tennis venues, and for the past two years, the finals of the ITF J300 there in March have been back-to-back, rather than simultaneous, with the latter being the norm at many junior events. The stadium court at Barnes allows videos to be taken from behind the court, which makes it much easier for me and gives viewers a better feel for the points. The boys final was played at a high level throughout and although both finals were two sets, you'll see many good points in each match.



My photo gallery from the San Diego ITF J300 is now up at the Tennis Recruiting Network, with all 51 photos taken by Paul Ballard for Zootennis.com.

Spring is a busy time for the ITF Junior Circuit, and last week five Americans won singles titles, with Londyn McCord winning her second J100 title in the past three weeks in South America. As the top seed in the J100 in Luque Paraguay, the 16-year-old blue chip from Atlanta won three three-setters, including in the final, where she beat No. 5 seed Hanne Estrada Cortes of Mexico 7-5, 4-6, 6-2 for her fifth ITF title, all this year and all on clay. McCord, who leads the ITF Junior Circuit with 31 wins this year, is up to 127 in the ITF Junior rankings.

At the J60 in Trinidad and Tobago, 17-year-old Nicolas Pedraza won his first ITF Junior Circuit singles title and his eighth doubles title. The top-seeded Pedraza, returning to competition after a two-month injury layoff, defeated No. 2 seed Nicolas Moravec of Czechia 6-3, 7-5 in the final. In the doubles final, Pedraza and Yared Alfred of the US Virgin Islands, seeded No. 3, defeated top seeds Moravec and Kale Dalla Costa of Trinidad and Tobago 6-3, 6-4.

Grace Dollar reached the girls singles final and won the doubles title, with Taylor Burke of Australia. The unseeded pair defeated No. 2 seeds Romina Dominguez Garcia of Mexico and Anvika Saraswathi of Canada 6-3, 6-4 in the final.

The boys singles final at the J60 in the Dominican Republic was an all-USA contest, with 17-year-old Vincent Weaver, the No. 4 seed, beating top seed and Easter Bowl 16s champion Anay Kulkarni 6-2, 6-0. It's the third ITF Junior Circuit singles title for Weaver, with all coming in the Dominican Republic. 

Kaya Baker and partner Valentina Garcia Rojas of Colombia won the girls doubles title, with the top seeds beating No. 4 seeds Abril Goded Luna and Zoe Levresse Zavala of Mexico 6-4, 2-6, 10-8 in the final. No. 7 seed Adriana Khomyakova lost in the girls singles final.

At the J30 in Ghana, Poudima Anne-Marie Bre-Naam Gnarou swept the titles, her first on the ITF Junior Circuit. The 17-year-old, seeded No. 2, beat unseeded Destiny Asantewaa Tuffour of Germany 6-4, 6-1 in the singles final. Unseeded in doubles with Rebecca Gurghean of Italy, Gnarou claimed the final with a 6-2, 6-0 win over No. 2 seeds Goodnews Eyinjuoluwa Aina of Nigeria and Liv Windschall of Germany 6-2, 6-0.

Closer to home, the United States' new ITF Junior Circuit on clay began last week with a J30 in Raleigh North Carolina, which featured the new round robin/quarterfinal knockout format. Sixteen-year-old Johnny Wolf of Raleigh won his first ITF Junior Circuit title, beating Daniil Berezin 6-4, 6-3 in the final.

Top seeds Kayden Colombo and Griffin Goode won the boys doubles title, beating unseeded Noah Bayon and Maddox Iliescu 7-5, 7-5 in the final. 

Alina Vysochenko of Ukraine won the girls singles title, beating 14-year-old Caroline Cox of Cary NC, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6(5) in the final.  Top seeds Vysochenko and Sarah Delgado won the doubles title, beating unseeded Pauline Bui and Russia's Taisiya Sorokina 7-5, 6-3 in the final. 

At the J200 in Canada, Americans swept the doubles titles, but lost both singles finals to Canadians.

No. 6 seed Felix Roussel defeated No. 8 seed Mason Taube 4-6, 6-4, 6-1 in the boys singles final and top seed Nadia Lagaev beat No. 6 seed Thara Gowda 6-1, 6-3 in the girls singles final.

No. 2 seeds Isabelle DeLuccia and Adla Lopez won the girls doubles, beating unseeded Gowda and Elicia Lin of Canada 6-1, 7-5; top seeds Jack Secord and Ford McCollum beat No. 4 seeds Izyan Ahmad and Erik Schinnerer 6-3, 7-5 in the boys doubles final. 

Week Two in the USA's ITF clay court swing is in Kennesaw Georgia, a J60 also using the new round robin/quarterfinal knockout format.

The latest standings in the USTA's annual Roland Garros Wild Card Challenge were released today:

Standings Update -- Roland Garros Wild Card Challenge

 

Akasha Urhobo and Stefan Dostanic Lead After Week 2

 

ORLANDO, Fla., April 13, 2026 – Former college all-American Stefan Dostanic took the men's lead and Akasha Urhobo maintained the women's lead after Week 2 of the Roland Garros Wild Card Challenge. 

 

The 24-year-old Dostanic, who last year led Wake Forest to the NCAA team title and earned a wild card into the US Open by winning the American Collegiate Wild Card Playoff, reached the final of the USTA Pro Circuit ATP Challenger 75 in Sarasota, Fla. Emilio Nava, last year's RG Wild Card Challenge winner, earned 40 points from qualifying at the ATP Masters 1000 in Monte Carlo and sits in second while currently ranked No. 112. 

 

The 19-year-old Urhobo leads the women's side of the Challenge for the second consecutive week. Former world No. 84 Kayla Day, 26, now only trails by five points after winning the USTA Pro Circuit W35 in Boca Raton, Fla. 

 

The top of the standings after Week 2 of 5: 

 

Women's Standings

(Player's current ranking in parentheses)

 

1. Akasha Urhobo (235) -- 65

2. Kayla Day (158) -- 60

3. Varvara Lepchenko (149) -- 54

 

Men's Standings

(Player's current ranking in parentheses)

 

1. Stefan Dostanic (270) -- 44

2. Emilio Nava (112) -- 40

3. Nishesh Basavareddy (174) -- 37