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Monday, July 6, 2026

Clarke Topples No. 2 Seed and Australian Open Champion Efremova, Preston's Grass Surge Continues at Wimbledon Junior Championships; Fritz Advances to Quarterfinals, Fery's Dream Run Not Over Yet

©Colette Lewis 2026--
Wimbledon--

Melije Clarke's first competitive matches on grass were last week at the J300 in Roehampton, but few juniors have benefitted from the wisdom of coaches with pedigree that hers have. With the help of Wimbledon women's singles semifinalist Lori McNeil and women's singles finalist Zina Garrison, the 16-year-old from Houston put all their guidance on display Monday in a 6-4, 6-1 second round Wimbledon Junior Championships victory over No. 2 seed and Australian Open girls champion Ksenia Efremova of France.

Clarke's Wimbledon debut Sunday certainly built her confidence, dropping just two games in her win over Veronika Sekerkova of Czechia, who had reached a J200 final on clay in her home country and therefore couldn't play Roehampton, due to a date overlap.

But Clarke knew she was likely to face a more prepared competitor in the second round, with Efremova reaching the semifinals last week in Roehampton.

"I knew Ksenia was the type of person to get a lot of balls back," said Clarke, who had McNeil as a coach at Roehampton before her mentor left for vacation, leaving Clarke's mother Obi as the main voice in her player's box. "I feel like I was really dominant in my first match, but I had to lengthen out the points a bit with her. I had to come into the match confident, because I know she has a lot of confidence, being super highly ranked. I had to stand my ground a little bit and I think I executed that pretty well."

After Clarke got the only break in the first set with Efremova serving at 4-5, 30-40, she kept the momentum going, taking a 3-0 lead in the second set, but the 2025 J300 Pan American Closed champion knew closing it out would not be simple.

"I tried to focus on one point at a time and not think, oh my gosh, I'm up a set and 3-0 and I may win the match," Clarke said. "I've had a lot of matches when I thought it was over and I ended up losing, so I was trying to stay calm, focus on little things, take it step by step."

Blasting winners from close to the baseline and keeping Efremova off balance led to a second break and a 5-1 lead, but the final game was a tense one, with Efremova saving two match points and Clarke fighting off two break points.

Rather than go big on serve break point down, Clarke, at her mother's suggestion, added some variety instead.

"She was telling me to mix it up a lot," Clarke said. "When I went spin-y and then one flat, she probably didn't know what to expect." 

The match point was a lengthy rally with depth and pace from both players before Clarke sent a sizzling forehand winner down the line to claim her spot in the third round against No. 14 seed Anna Pushkareva of Russia, who she defeated in a third-set tiebreaker in th first round of Roehampton last week.

"I knew I could do it, in a non-cocky way," Clarke said. "But I was just relieved, because the game was so long and I didn't want to receive again. I wasn't breaking her enough, so I said I really want to hold my serve now. I let go of all my emotions building up throughout the match."

When Clarke first walked onto the grounds of the All England Lawn Tennis Club Saturday, she took some time to soak in the atmosphere.

"Wimbledon has always been my favorite slam," said Clarke, who played both of her singles matches on Court 8. "It's actually more beautiful in person than on TV. Sometimes on Court 8, which has such a nice a view, I think 'I'm here, it's so nice,' and I'm trying to enjoy every moment."


Roehampton champion Janae Preston stretched her grass court winning steak to eight matches with a 6-1, 7-5 win over qualifier Olivia Traynor, also from the United States.

Preston and Traynor had split matches in back-to-back weeks last year at J100s in Guatemala.

"I was happy to get this win," said the 15-year-old from Nevada. "It was a tough match, especially the second set, was a battle. But I thought I competed really well and managed to pull through."

Preston is obviously comfortable on grass now after six wins at Roehampton, but her opponents might not want to hear that she likes the Wimbledon courts even better.

"The atmosphere is obviously greater," said Preston, who has won four J300s now and is up to a career-high of 14 in the World Tennis junior rankings. "And I feel like the courts are a little bit slower here, so that was a bit of adjustment. But it's obviously great for me, to have more time to hit through the ball, so it works out for me."

As for her first impressions of Wimbledon, Preston said the scope of the tournament doesn't come through on TV.

"It's a lot bigger than I thought," said Preston, who plays No. 10 seed Charo Esquiva Banuls of Spain in the third round Wednesday after Esquiva Banuls beat qualifier Carrie-Anne Hoo 6-2, 6-3. "I thought it would be smaller. But yes, this place is beautiful, the flowers, it's so nice: the grounds, the people, everyone is so nice. I was obviously a little bit nervous my first round, excited to play, but I'm happy to get both wins."

Nine of the 16 girls seeds have been eliminated in the first round, with No. 12 seed Mika Stojsavljevic of Great Britain falling to Anna Pircher of Austria 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 and Thea Frodin beating No. 13 seed Felitsata Dorofeeva-Rybas of Russia 7-6(2), 7-5. 

No. 4 seed Victoria Barros of Brazil was also eliminated today, with Maia Burcescu coming back from 6-3, 4-1 down to earn a 3-6, 7-5, 7-6(4) victory, but almost let the match slip away.
 said the 16-year-old from Romania. 

"I was up in the third set 5-3," said Burcescu, who did not have a match point serving for it at 5-4, and was two points from a loss at 5-6 deuce. "But I guess I was the underdog in the match, so I just tried to take my chance, play my best tennis and just enjoy my time on court here at Wimbledon."

Burcescu will face her doubles partner, No. 15 seed Polina Skliar of Ukraine, who defeated Alyssa James of Jamaica 6-3, 6-2. The two bear a striking resemblance to each other, with the same hairstyle, visor, adidas while Wimbledon apparel and body type, with Burcescu claiming her own mother can't tell them apart.

"We were in the transportation, sitting next to each other and my mom looks at us and said, 'I cannot tell the difference,'" Burcescu said. "It's pretty funny, people actually do think we're sisters."

Top seed Xinran Sun of China struggled in the first set against Denisa Zoldakova of Czechia before the 15-year-old Roland Garros finalist pulled away for a 7-5, 6-1 win.

Most of the afternoon and evening was devoted to the first round of boys doubles, with all 16 matches completed. 

Ryan Cozad and Gavin Goode pulled off the biggest upset, defeating Roland Garros and Roehampton champions Vincent Reisach and Jamie Mackenzie of Germany 6-7(6), 7-6(5), 13-11, saving two match points in the deciding tiebreaker. No. 3 seeds Thilo Behrmann of Austria and Flynn Thomas of Switzerland lost to Oluwaseun Ogunsakin of Nigeria and Ntungamili Raguin of Botswana 6-3, 7-6(1) and Jack Secord and Damir Zhalgasbay of Kazakhstan defeated No. 5 seed Yannik Alvarez of Puerto Rico and Leonardo Storck Franca of Brazil 7-6(8), 7-6(6).


Only five girls doubles matches were scheduled for today, with all three seeded teams in action winning their matches.

The boys second round of singles is scheduled for Tuesday, with the remainder of the first round of girls doubles.

Monday's second round junior results of Americans:
Thea Frodin d. Felitsata Dorofeeva-Rybas[13](RUS) 7-6(2), 7-5
Janae Preston d. Olivia Traynor[Q] 6-1, 7-5
Melije Clarke d. Ksenia Efremova[2](FRA) 6-4, 6-1
Charo Esquiva Banuls[10](ESP) d. Carrie-Anne Hoo[Q] 6-2, 6-3

Tuesday's second round singles matches featuring Americans:
Andy Johnson[12] v Vincent Reisach(GER)
Keaton Hance[3] v Arnav Paparkar(IND)
Jack Secord v Luis Guto Miguel[1](BRA)
Tanish Konduri v Svit Suljic[SE](SLO)
Jordan Lee[Q] v Tito Chavez(ESP)

The talk of London this morning was Great Britain's 3-2 win over Mexico in the World Cup; the talk of London this evening was Arthur Fery, the 23-year-old former Stanford All-American, who defeated fellow wild card Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria 7-5, 3-6, 4-6, 6-4, 7-6(7) to reach the quarterfinals. Fery, who grew up a short walk from Wimbledon, never once looked rattled or tentative playing in front of an obviously partisan crowd and Roger Federer on Centre Court. 

For more on Fery's remarkable run to the quarterfinals, see this article from the Wimbledon website.

No. 6 seed Taylor Fritz reached his third consecutive Wimbledon quarterfinal with a 7-6(1), 6-4, 6-4 win over No. 10 seed Alexander Bublik of Kazakhstan and will play either No. 2 seed Alexander Zverev of Germany or Jiri Lehecka of Czechia. Their match was suspended by the 11 pm Wimbledon curfew, with Zverev leading 6-4, 7-5, 3-3.

Madison Keys[26] lost to Linda Noskova of Czechia 6-4, 7-6(2) in her bid to reach the quarterfinals.

In the women's quarterfinals Tuesday, No. 4 seed Jessica Pegula will play No. 7 seed Coco Gauff.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

American Qualifers Defeat No. 5 Seeds in Wimbledon Junior Championships, Home Crowd Powers British Wild Card to Victory Over Roehampton Champion Antonius, Stojsavljevic Makes Successful Return to Juniors; Pegula and Gauff Set to Meet in Quarterfinals

©Colette Lewis 2026--
Wimbledon--


Two American qualifiers sent the No. 5 seeds packing Sunday on a warm and sunny Sunday at the All England Lawn Tennis Club, with one needing less than an hour to complete the task and the other going winning a third set 10-point tiebreaker to reach the second round of the Wimbledon Junior Championships.


Jordan Lee, the youngest player in the boys draw, was eager to return to the Wimbledon courts after reaching the 14-and-under final two years ago, but suffering through a long layoff due to injury in 2025. 

"I felt good on the court, very happy to be back," said the 16-year-old from Florida, who defeated No. 5 seed Yannik Alexandrescou of France 6-0, 6-2 in 56 minutes. "Last year at this time I was injured, didn't really know how long before I could play tennis, so I'm very happy. I trust my level, I know that my game is there, so I'm happy to move forward."

Lee, who lost to World Tennis junior No. 1 Luis Guto Miguel of Brazil 6-4, 6-4 in the third round of Roehampton, won both of his Wimbledon qualifying matches in straight sets which gave him enough time on the grass courts to feel comfortable.

"I lost to Guto in the round of 16, felt pretty confident there," Lee said. "I lost a tough match, but I was looking forward to this week. I love to be aggressive and I think my game suits any surface. I look to come forward, and here that's the main thing."


Playing a seed as a qualifier comes with the advantage playing freely, at least for Olivia Traynor, who defeated No. 5 seed Nana Leme Da Silva of Brazil 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(6).

"The fact that I didn't have any pressure really helped me," said the 18-year-old from New York, who trains with Pat and Ryan Harrison in Bradenton Florida. "She's No. 5 in the world, and I'm coming in as a qualifier, so it's expected for her to come in and hit some good shots. The way she plays is just super big, really goes for every ball. Sometimes it was just too good from her, but I knew she wasn't going to keep that level, especially in the tiebreaker, that if I stayed patient she would get a bit erratic."

After failing to serve out the match at 5-3 in the third, Traynor kept her composure, and in the tiebreaker, the quality of Traynor's serve was the difference. Leme Da Silva didn't make a first serve until she was down 9-5, double faulting twice, while Traynor hit two of her three aces in the match to go up 8-4 and on her second match point.

"That was definitely an advantage for me," said the University of Michigan rising freshman. "I also started reading her second serves, and it allowed me to become offensive on her serving points. I thought my serve was good the whole tiebreaker and that helped me, because the points were really short, the whole match was only like an hour and a half. And that last ace felt great."

Traynor will face fellow American Janae Preston in the second round, after Preston came through a tight match with Polina Berezina of Russia 6-4, 7-6(4). Preston, who won the Roehampton J300 on Friday, saved two set points serving at 4-5 in the second set and benefitted from a couple of unforced errors from Berezina in the tiebreaker.


While Preston was able to continue her winning streak on English grass courts, No. 6 seed Michael Antonius was not, as he fell to wild card Rhys Lawlor of Great Britain 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 in front of a huge crowd packing Court No. 4 to support him.

"The home crowd definitely helps the confidence going out there in the first round playing a really good player," said the 17-year-old from Hertfordshire, who has committed to TCU for 2027. "Knowing what I can do in front of my home crowd, having all that pressure, I felt I dealt with it really well."

Lawlor had lost to Antonius after serving for the match in the final of a J300 in Colombia in January, so he knew what he facing when he served for the match at 5-3 in third.

"I knew I had to stay in the present as much as possible," said Lawlor, who didn't convert his first match point, but hit an ace on his second. "Earlier this year I was serving at 30-15 against him for the match. I knew I had to knock it down and really take my time, but I was really excited for it; it was a good challenge."

Lawlor said he knew his best was necessary, and he brought with aggressive forehands and well executed volleys throughout the third set.

"I knew I had to play my perfect game really," Lawlor said. "I knew he was playing well, and earlier this year I was just short, but I felt on grass I had a really good chance to put my game forward."

Lawlor said TCU was his school of choice from the beginning, given its reputation for attracting a host of outstanding British players, including graduates Cam Norrie, Jake Fearnley and Lui Maxted and rising sophomore Oliver Bonding.

"Definitely speaking to some of those guys was really helpful," said 6-foot-two right-hander, who would look right at home as a tight end on Horned Frogs football team. "I knew that was the place I wanted to go ever since I heard about college tennis. It's a great university, and David(Roditi), Devin(Bowen), they work really well together. So as soon as it came up, I went for it."


While Lawlor no doubt raised his profile among British tennis fans today, no introduction was necessary for 2024 US Open girls champion Mika Stojsavlevic, who has played the Wimbledon main draw the past two years. She played her last junior match at the 2025 US Open, but not 18 until December, Stojsavljevic is limited in the number of WTA and World Tennis women's events she can play. So entering the junior tournament here made sense, despite a WTA ranking in the top 300.

Stojsavljevic looked much more comfortable in front of the capacity crowd on Court 18 than 16-year-old American Welles Newman, who lost the first ten games before coming back in the second set in Stojsavljevic's 6-0, 6-4 victory.

"I think playing at Wimbledon is always an incredible thing, firstly," said Stojsavljevic, who is seeded No. 12 this week due to her WTA ranking. "Secondly, as you know, I have the tournament limit because of my age. I only have I think, eight tournaments for the rest of the year, so another reason why I'm playing this is just to get some matches."

As to whether she considers herself the favorite to win this tournament, Stojsavlijevic deflected the question.

"I haven't really thought about it," said Stojsavlijevic, who lost to No. 11 seed Belinda Bencic of Switzerland 6-2, 6-1 in the first round of the women's draw. "There's been so much going on in the last two weeks, I haven't been thinking about juniors at all. But as I said, I just want to play matches."

Junior boys will not play singles Monday, with the girls second round of singles and the entire first round of doubles for the boys on the schedule. Five first round girls doubles matches are on Monday's schedule as well.

Sunday's Wimbledon first round junior results of Americans:

Mika Stojsavljevic[12](GBR) d. Welles Newman 6-0, 6-4
Carrie-Ann Hoo[Q] d. Megan Knight[WC](GBR) 6-4, 6-0
Jana Kovackova[3](CZE) d. Lani Chang 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 
Olivia Traynor[Q] d. Nana Leme Da Silva[5](BRA) 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(6)
Melije Clarke d. Veronika Sekerkova(CZE) 6-0, 6-2
Janae Preston d. Polina Berezina(RUS) 6-4, 7-6(4)
Jordyn Hazelitt d. Sofie Hettlerova(CZE) 6-3, 6-3
Adelina Lacinova(LAT) d. Emery Combs[Q] 6-2, 6-4
Mariella Thamm[9](GER) d. Hannah Ayrault[LL](USA) 6-2, 6-0

Mark Ceban(GBR) d. Gavin Goode 7-5, 4-6, 7-5
Rhys Lawlor(WC)(GBR) d. Michael Antonius[6] 6-2, 3-6, 6-3
Jordan Lee[Q] d. Yannik Alexandrescou[5](FRA) 6-0, 6-2
Svit Suljic[SE](SLO) d. Safir Azam[Q] 6-3, 6-2
Ziga Sesko[4](SLO)  d. Vihaan Reddy[Q] 6-4, 6-4
Jack Secord d. Matteo Gribaldo(ITA) 7-5, 6-2

Monday's second round junior singles matches featuring Americans:

Thea Frodin v Felitsata Dorofeeva-Rybas[13](RUS)
Janae Preston v Olivia Traynor[Q]
Melije Clarke v Ksenia Efremova[2](FRA)
Carrie-Anne Hoo[Q] v Charo Esquiva Banuls[10](ESP)

Two Americans will meet in the quarterfinals of the Wimbledon women's singles Tuesday after Jessica Pegula came from a set down to beat 18-year-old Iva Jovic and Coco Gauff finished her comeback against Belinda Bencic just minutes short of the 11 p.m. curfew Sunday.

Sunday's Wimbledon fourth round results of Americans:

Jessica Pegula[4] d. Iva Jovic[16] 4-6, 6-3, 6-1
Coco Gauff[7] d. Belinda Bencic[11] 4-6, 6-3, 6-4

Monday's Wimbledon fourth round matches featuring Americans:

Ashlyn Krueger[Q] v Marta Kostyuk[12](UKR)
Madison Keys[26] v Linda Nosokova[9](CZE)

Taylor Fritz[6] v Alexander Bublik[10](KAZ)

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Frodin, Hance and Konduri Win Three-Setters, Johnson Claims First Wimbledon Victory on Opening Day of 2026 Junior Championships; Fritz, Keys and Krueger Reach Second Week; USTA National Clay Court Seeds, Links to Draws

©Colette Lewis 2026--
Wimbledon--

No. 3 seed Keaton Hance had failed to serve out the match at 5-3 in the third set against Simone Massellani of Italy, but his experience on the biggest stages, and his determination to continue when under the weather, proved the difference in his 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(7) victory.

"I have this thing called abdominal migraines, which has symptons of nausea and stomach ache, dizziness and it's hard to tell when it's coming," said the 18-year-old from Southern California, who did not take a medical timeout. "There's not really anything they can do, and it's happened to me before in matches. It's a tough time for that to happen, but I'm glad with how I dealt with it, feeling dizzy, seeing more than one ball, but after the second set, I tried to stay calm and not focus on it too much."

When Masellani hit several lines with Hance serving for the match at 5-3, Hance, who had beaten the 18-year-old in the third round at this year's Australian Open en route to the final, knew he had to refocus. And his patience paid off when he got the only mini break of the third set tiebreaker leading 7-6 and closed it out with a volley winner.

"I was super frustrated, but I just wanted to move on as quick as I could," said Hance, who is playing his seventh junior slam, while Masellani played his first in Australia this year. "I didn't want to dwell on it; you've played the whole match, so you don't want to throw it away because you didn't hold. In matches like that, when you're not feeling your best and it's super close, I think experience is one of the most importance things."

Thea Frodin is also a veteran of Junior Wimbledon, playing in her third and having reached the girls doubles final last year. But she had yet to win a singles match, and was feeling jittery in her 6-7(2), 6-3, 6-2 win over Ui Su Jeong of Korea. 

"I was pretty nervous coming into the match," said the 17-year-old from Southern California. "The last few junior tournaments haven't gone my way and I had that in the back of my mind. But the biggest thing I have to focus on is just fighting and competing. It's easy for me to rush, make wrong decisions, so I needed to bring myself back to the basics and that was the biggest thing that helped me turn it around. I had to make more balls, make her play, and instead of me making errors, she gave me more errors and that eventually built my confidence."

While Hance and Frodin had previous Wimbledon matches to draw on, No. 12 seed Andy Johnson was making his debut at the grass of the All England Lawn Tennis Club and needed a few games to get his bearings in his 6-4, 6-4 win over Matei Todoran of Romania.

"In the first set I was just feeling him out," said the 16-year-old from Southern California, who had not faced Todoran previously. "First Wimbledon, first round, maybe he came out with a little bit of nerves, maybe I calmed down with my unforced errors."

Johnson, who made only seven unforced errors in the match, with six of those coming in the first set, escaped with some defensive wizardry serving for the opening set at 5-4, 15-30. But that point proved pivotal, as he won the next two to finish the set, and his confidence just grew from there.

"I hit a forehand cross, he hit a forehand line I barely got, took it late with a slice but he missed it," Johnson said. "I think you could definitely see momentum shifting there, him maybe getting a little upset because he had a few opportunities on the point. But he still played good tennis after that. In the second set, I just played really solid, calmed down a little bit, was thinking more clearly. In the second set, my mind was really clear on what I was going to do, this will work, this will work and I just stuck to it, got an early break in the second."

Tanishk Konduri was also making his Wimbledon debut, and he is unlikely to ever forget it, with the 17-year-old from Northern California saving four match points in his 6-7(2), 6-2, 7-6(10) win over No. 10 seed Yannik Alvarez of Puerto Rico. Konduri, playing in just his third match on grass after losing in the second round at Roehampton last week, trailed 9-6 and 10-9 in the final set tiebreaker, but won six of the last seven points to close it out.

Top seeds Xinran Sun of China and Luis Guto Miguel of Brazil won their opening round matches today, with Sun beating Yu-Chen Lin of Taiwan 6-1, 6-1 in spite of having no play on grass prior to competing her. Miguel defeated British wild card Vincent Fletcher of Great Britain 6-3, 6-2.

The boys singles draw is here; the girls singles draw is here.

The doubles draws have been posted, with Brazilians Victoria Barros and Nana Leme Da Silva the top seeds in the girls draw, and Miguel and Ziga Sesko of Slovenia the top seeds in the boys draw. Johnson and Michael Antonius are the No. 2 seeds.

The girls doubles draw is here; the boys doubles draw is here. Doubles play will begin Monday.

Sunday's schedule is packed, with 14 American juniors on the schedule, after only six played today.

Saturday's Wimbledon first round junior results of Americans: 

Tanishk Konduri d. Yannik Alvarez[10](PUR) 6-7(2), 6-2, 7-6(10)
Keaton Hance[3] d. Simone Massellani 6-3, 3-6, 7-6(7)
Andy Johnson[12] d. Matei Todoran(ROU) 6-4, 6-4
Dan Brand(ISR) d. Ryan Cozad 6-3, 6-2 

Thea Frodin d. Ui Su Jeong(KOR) 6-7(2), 6-3, 6-2
Maia Burcescu(ROU) d. Anita Tu 4-6, 7-6(3), 6-2

Sunday's Wimbledon first round junior matches featuring Americans:
Welles Newman v Mika Stojsavljevic[12](GBR)
Carrie-Ann Hoo[Q] v Megan Knight[WC](GBR)
Lani Chang v Jana Kovackova[3](CZE)
Olivia Traynor[Q] v Nana Leme Da Silva[5](BRA)
Melije Clarke v Veronika Sekerkova(CZE)
Janae Preston v Polina Berezina(RUS)
Jordyn Hazelitt v Sofie Hettlerova(CZE)
Emery Combs[Q] v Adelina Lacinova(LAT)
Gavin Goode v Mark Ceban(GBR)
Michael Antonius v Rhys Lawlor(WC)(GBR)
Jordan Lee[Q] v Yannik Alexandrescou[5](FRA)
Safir Azam[Q] v Svit Suljic[SE](SLO)
Vihaan Reddy[Q] v Ziga Sesko[4](SLO)
Jack Secord v Matteo Gribaldo(ITA)

The last American man standing in singles at Wimbledon is Taylor Fritz, after Zachary Svajda, Marcos Giron and No. 17 seed Frances Tiafoe lost their third round matches Saturday. But qualifier Ashlyn Krueger and Madison Keys are through to the round of 16, with the five American women in the round of 16 the most at Wimbledon since 2002.

Saturday's Wimbledon third round results of Americans:

Madison Keys[26] d. Amanda Anisimova[6] 3-6, 6-2, 6-3
Marta Kostyuk[12](UKR) d. Emma Navarro[23] 6-2, 4-6, 6-1
Ashlyn Krueger[Q] d. Daria Snigur(UKR) 6-3, 6-2

Alexander Zverev[2](GER) d. Marcos Giron 6-3, 7-6(4), 6-4
Alexander Bublik[10](KAZ) d. Frances Tiafoe[17] 4-6, 7-6(5), 7-6(11), 4-6, 6-3 
Taylor Fritz[6] d. Lorenzo Sonego(ITA) 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6(5)
Alex de Minaur[5](AUS) d. Zachary Svajda 6-2, 5-7, 6-2, 6-4

Sunday's Wimbledon fourth round matches featuring Americans:

Jessica Pegula[4] v Iva Jovic[16]
Coco Gauff[7] v Belinda Bencic[11]

After a very disappointing first week for British players, wild card Arthur Fery, the former Stanford All-American, has buoyed spirits, making the second week with a 2-6, 7-5, 2-6, 7-6(3), 7-6(5) win over Zizou Bergs of Belgium. Fery will face fellow wild card Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria in the fourth round Monday.

The USTA National Clay Court Championships begin this weekend at seven locations across the country. I obviously will not be able to provide much coverage, but the Top 16 seeds in each division are are below, with the links to the draws in the headings.

1. Zen Uehling
2. William Freshwater
3. Peter Jorniak
4. Omar Rhazali
5. Hunter Nelson
6. Siddharth Bharadwaj
7. William McEwan
8. Eli Kaminski
9. Kahven Singh
10. Anish Poojari
11. Tristan Stratton
12. Jacob Hewitt
13. Joseph Lee
14. Jack Reis
15. Arjun Prabhakar
16. Ryan Bedwick

1. Ivan Rybak
2. Advay Singh
3. Ethan Turunen
4. Lennart Hammargren
5. Mikaeel Alibaig
6. Rafael Pawar
7. Akshay Mirmira
8. Zachary Szymanski
9. Joshua Dolinsky
10. Maddox Iliescu
11. Antanas Daugis
12. Burbaaz Narang
13. Aayush Vartak
14. Michael Cervenkov
15. Sebastian Zavala
16. Connor Feehan

1. Nathan Lee
2. Pranav Vignesh
3. Rex Kulman
4. Evaan Mohan
5. Matthew Finn
6. Krish Advani
7. Jason Ye
8. Cavan Donnelly
9. Sebastian Cheaney
10. Tony Xu
11. Wyatt Markham
12. Reyansh Pant
13. Selwyn Olufemi-Owoeye
14. Daniel Gardality
15. Blount Williams
16. Liam Dent

1. Miguel Valencia
2. Milan Nair
3. William Zhou
4. William Zhang
5. Zephyr Zwicker
6. Jesse Goldman
7. Samuel Harley
8. Lleyton Bruneau
9. Zachary Burunov
10. Aiden Zhang
11. Dylan Kivov
12. Leonardo Bigan
13. Aleksander Denisov
14. John Benedict
15. Allen Hou
16. Louie Lu

1. Calla McGill
2. Carolina Castro
3. Lauren Nolan
4. Addison Lindsay
5. Molly Widlansky
6. Alaina Lisanti
7. Maria Navarro
8. Estela Loureiro
9. Meher Rao
10. Autumn Xu
11. Kaiden Greer
12. Samaya Smith
13. Addy Rogin
14. Shristi Selvan
15. Kaylee Hill
16. Reese Frank

1. Nikol Davletshina
2. Olivia Lin
3. Natalie Frisbie
4. Corinne Winningham
5. Helena Seiken
6. Braylen Michelsen
7. Chukwunoneeru Smarty
8. Rachel Immordino
9. Ella Lin
10. Michelle Lee
11. Juliana Diianni
12. Alexa Mendoza
13. Evelynn Kwak
14. Adelyn Gross
15. Charlotte Ballarin
16. Jasmine Taylor

1. Ava Chua
2. Reese Ellingson
3. Kyndall Noel
4. Gavrielle Villegas
5. Lucy Dupere
6. Jessie Janiak
7. Emma Li
8. Christina Li
9. Daniella Yogumyan
10. Mary Podkhyneychenko
11. Zhongyi Zhou
12. Anna Sandru
13. Sarah Goodwin
14. Cydney Crocker
15. Noa Boar
16. Mila Mikoczi Spivey

1. Lindy Zhou
2. Valentina Singh Carvaljal
3. Evita Barjolo
4. Ayenxavia Calugay
5. Aya Iwata
6. Catherine Chan
7. Anna Rico
8. Audrey Yang
9. Lerong Yao
10. Jordyn Cheung
11. Laila McGregor-Green
12. Lolita Paley
13. Grace Goode
14. Hana Nilsson
15. Ryan Wilson
16. Nandika Singamala

Friday, July 3, 2026

Antonius and Preston Win J300 Roehampton Titles; Six Americans Qualify for Wimbledon Junior Championships; Top Seeds Miguel and Sun Open Junior Play Saturday; Pegula, Gauff and Jovic Advance to Fourth Round

©Colette Lewis 2026--
Roehampton, England--



Janae Preston and Michael Antonius have a friendly rivalry going, after the two young Americans claimed the World Tennis J300 singes titles today at Roehampton, on a surface they approached with uncertainty.

No. 15 seed Preston, who defeated unseeded Yu Jun Lin 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 in today's final, now leads Antonius four J300s to three this year, although Antonius teased that he was a Roland Garros boys finalist last month, after all.

Antonius, who beat both 2026 boys slam champions this week in Roehampton, was facing a less intimidating pedigree in qualifier Svit Suljic of Slovenia. Yet Suljic fought to the bitter end, despite already having earned his special exemption into the Wimbledon Juniors main draw by reaching the final, before falling to Antonius 6-4, 7-6(5).

Antonius didn't detect any letdown from Suljic, despite the eight singles matches he had played in the past eight days.

"He trains is Spain, I train in Florida, so in terms of conditioning, I thought it was pretty similar," said the 16-year-old from New York, seeded sixth. "I think that's why he did such a good job fighting in the second set; he didn't give up until the very last point. He played good tennis, and for me, I'm glad it was a good match, because that gives me more confidence for my tennis next week."

Antonius did play the Wimbledon 14-and-under event in 2024, but that was the extent of his grass experience until this week, save for his appearance at the Giorgio Armani exhibition in Hurlingham last week.

"I didn't know what to expect, honestly," Antonius said. "My serve has improved a lot since then and my transition game has gotten a lot better. I told my coach and parents that I thought I would be good on grass, I just wasn't sure how the other kids would be. I didn't know what to expect, but so far, I'm looking, and feeling, confident."

Antonius also knows he could see many other in-form opponents at Wimbledon. 

"A lot of my matches this week could have gone either way," said the 6-foot-4 Antonius, who denied this week's title has increased the pressure on him. "I'm just trying to look at the positives; this is all a just a new experience to get me ready for the future."

Preston had to withstand the barrage of winners from the flat-hitting Lin, using her speed and patience to eventually wear down the 16-year-old from China, despite being uncharacteristically in defensive positions in many rallies.

"She came really strong and we had a great battle in the second set," said the 15-year-old from Nevada, who broke Lin serving at 5-6. "But I think she got a little bit tired in the third, so I was able to take advantage of that and win easier in the third."

Preston had even less exposure to grass than Antonius, and she has yet to set foot on the grounds of the All England Lawn Tennis Club.

"I was not expecting to be good on grass; I thought I would suck on grass," Preston said. "But my movement, and I had a really good strategy on grass, and my serve, really helped me as well. And it was really fun too."

As is the case with all Roehampton finalists over the years, Preston will not play Saturday, so she has one more day to savor the anticipation of her Wimbledon debut.

"I'm super excited, there's obviously so much history there," said Preston, who added her name to the list of Roehampton winners that includes major champions Petra Kvitova, Caroline Wozniacki, Jelena Ostapenko and Coco Gauff. "I'm excited to embrace it; it's going to be really exciting."
Every junior tournament J300 or above should have a display like this one honoring its past champions

The Roland Garros junior doubles champions added Roehampton titles to their resumes today, with the No. 4 seeds in both the boys and girls draws posting dominating wins.

Jana Kovackova and Katerina Zajickova of Czechia defeated wild cards Daniella Britton and Edie Griffiths of Great Britain 6-0, 6-2 and the German team of Jamie Mackenzie and Vincent Reisach beat No. 8 seeds Jack Secord and Kazakhstan's Damir Zhalgasbay 6-2, 6-2.

The final participants in the Wimbledon Junior Championships were decided today at Roehampton, which is nearly unrecognizable from the last time I was there in 2017. The new stadium courts and all the buildings for player services and amenities has transformed what was primarily a grass field with lines to a proper venue for a tennis tournament. The Lexus wheelchair championships were also concluding today, so the trophy ceremonies and speeches were numerous; only the courts for the Wimbledon Junior qualifying maintained any resemblance to nine years ago.

All three of the US boys who were in the final round of qualifying advanced to their Wimbledon debuts, with top seed Vihaan Reddy defeating Takahiro Kawaguchi of Japan 6-7(2), 7-6(5), 10-7, No. 5 seed Safir Azam defeating Kunanan Pantaratorn of Thailand 7-6(4), 6-3 and No. 7 seed Jordan Lee beating Maxi Carrascosa Diaz of Spain 6-1, 6-4.

Three of the eight US girls in the final round of qualifying advanced to the main draw of Junior Wimbledon, with Emery Combs defeating Sarah Ye in the all-US contest 6-1, 0-6, 10-6, Carrie-Anne Hoo beating Pietra Rivoli of Brazil 6-2, 6-3 and No. 8 seed Olivia Traynor beating Iulia Maria Buculei of Romania 4-6, 6-1, 10-6.  Five of the eight girls final round qualifying matches ended with a 10-point match tiebreaker in lieu of a third set, which I have always disliked. Australia and Roland Garros play a full third set in the final round of qualifying; the stakes are simply too high to have a chance to play at the All England Club decided in such arbitrary fashion.

Top seeds Luis Guto Miguel of Spain and Xinran Sun of China are in action Saturday, as the Junior Championships begin with 12  girls singles and 12 boys singles matches. The boys draw is here; the girls draw is here.

Twenty Americans--ten girls and ten boys--are in the Wimbledon Junior draws, but none of the girls are seeded. I don't recall a previous junior slam without a seeded American in a draw, but I can't rule it out. Mika Stojsavljevic of Great Britain is the No. 12 seed based on her WTA Ranking of 276, and Thijs Boogaard of the Netherlands is the No. 11 seed based on his ATP ranking of 525.

The Wimbledon Junior Championships Seeds:

GIRLS:
1. Xinran Sun(CHN)
2. Ksenia Efremova(FRA)
3. Jana Kovackova(CZE)
4. Victoria Barros(BRA)
5. Nana Leme Da Silva(BRA)
6. Anastasija Cvetkovic(SRB)
7. Mariia Makarova(RUS)
8. Sol Ailin Larraya Guidi(ARG)
9. Mariella Thamm(GER)
10. Charo Esquiva Banuls(ESP)
11. Paola Pinera Celorio(ESP)
12. Mika Stojsavljevic(GBR)
13. Felitsata Dorofeeva-Rybas(RUS)
14. Anna Pushkareva(RUS)
15. Polina Skliar(UKR)
16. Maaya Rajeshwaran Revathi(IND)

BOYS:
1. Luis Guto Miguel(BRA)
2. Jamie Mackenzie(GER)
3. Keaton Hance(USA)
4. Ziga Sesko(SLO)
5. Yannick Alexandrescou(FRA)
6. Michael Antonius(USA)
7. Thilo Behrmann(AUT)
8. Zangar Nurlanuly(KAZ)
9. Dimitar Kisimov(BUL)
10. Yannik Alvarez(PUR)
11. Thijs Boogaard(NED)
12. Andy Johnson(USA)
13. Nicolas Baena(PER)
14. Mathys Domenc(FRA)
15. Kuan-Shou Cheng(TPE)
16. Dante Pagani(ARG)

Saturday's Wimbledon first round junior matches featuring Americans: 

Tanishk Konduri v Yannik Alvarez[10](PUR)
Keaton Hance[3] v Simone Massellani
Andy Johnson[12] v Matei Todoran(ROU)
Ryan Cozad v Dan Brand(ISR)

Thea Frodin v Ui Su Jeong(KOR)
Anita Tu v Maia Burcescu(ROU)

The US got shut out today in men's singles, but three American women are through to the round of 16 at Wimbledon: Jessica Pegula, Coco Gauff and Iva Jovic. 

Friday's Wimbledon third round results of Americans:

Felix Auger-Aliassime[3](CAN) d. Michael Zheng[Q] 7-6(1), 6-2, 6-1
Jannik Sinner[1](ITA) d. Jenson Brooksby 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 
Hubert Hurkacz(POL) d. Tommy Paul[21] 4-6, 7-6(5), 7-5, 6-2

Jessica Pegula[4] d. Jessica Bouzas Maneiro(ESP) 6-1, 6-3
Coco Gauff[7] d. Claire Liu[Q] 6-3, 6-7(5), 6-2
Iva Jovic[16] d. Ekaterina Alexandrova[18](RUS) 6-3, 3-6, 6-4

Saturday's Wimbledon third round matches featuring Americans:

Amanda Anisimova[6] v Madison Keys[26]
Emma Navarro[23] v Marta Kostyuk[12](UKR)
Ashlyn Krueger[Q] v Daria Snigur(UKR)

Marcos Giron v Alexander Zverev[2](GER)
Frances Tiafoe[17] v Alexander Bublik[10](KAZ)
Taylor Fritz[6] v Lorenzo Sonego(ITA)
Zachary Svajda d. Alex de Minaur[5](AUS) 

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Antonius, Preston and Secord Make J300 Roehampton Finals; 11 US Juniors Reach Final Round of Wimbledon Qualifying; Eight Americans Advance to Wimbledon Third Round; Wimbledon 14U Competitors Revealed

Michael Antonius and Janae Preston, both of whom won multiple J300 titles early this year, are through to another J300 final in Roehampton.

Antonius, the No. 6 seed, picked up a second win over Australian Open boys champion Ziga Sesko of Slovenia, with the 16-year-old from Buffalo New York posting a 6-3, 6-2 decision today in the semifinals. Antonius had beaten Sesko 6-2, 6-1 in the quarterfinals of the Roland Garros Junior Championships last month.

Antonius, who won two J300s in South America in January and February, will play qualifier Svit Suljic of Slovenia, who defeated Yannik Alvarez of Puerto Rico 7-5, 2-6, 7-5.

No. 15 seed Preston, who won three titles in Central and South America this winter (two hard and one clay) defeated No. 16 seed Welles Newman 6-1, 6-4. The 15-year-old from Henderson Nevada will face unseeded Yu Jun Lin of China, who surprised top seed and Australian Open champion Ksenia Efremova of France 7-6(4), 6-4.

In boys doubles, Jack Secord advanced to the final when he and Damir Zhalgasbay of Kazakhstan, the No. 8 seeds, defeated No. 5 seeds Alvarez and Leonardo Storck Franca of Brazil 6-3, 6-2. They will play No. 4 seeds and Roland Garros champions Jamie Mackenzie and Vincent Reisach of Germany, who beat the unseeded team of Jordan Lee and Great Britain's Rhys Lawlor 6-1, 6-2.

The girls doubles final will also feature the Roland Garros champions: No. 4 seeds Jana Kovackova and Katerina Zajickova of Czechia. They will face the unseeded British wild card team of Daniella Britton and Edie Griffiths.

The Wimbledon Junior Championships qualifying will conclude Friday, with three US boys and eight US girls playing for a spot in the main draw. At least one American is guaranteed to make the main draw, with Emery Combs facing Sarah Ye. 

Yael Saffar will face top seed Ilary Pistola of Italy; Nancy Lee will play No. 2 seed Fleur De Bresser of the Netherlands; Maggie Sohns will play Iva Marinkovic of Sweden; Carrie-Anne Hoo will face Pietra Rivoli of Brazil; Hannah Ayrault faces Riyo Yoshida of Japan and Olivia Traynor plays Iulia Maria Buculei of Romania.

The three US boys competing in the final round are Vihaan Reddy, who will play Takahiro Kawaguchi of Japan; Safir Azam, who faces Kunanan Pantaratorn of Thailand, and Lee, who plays Maxi Carrascosa Diaz of Spain.

Ireland O'Brien, Marcel Latak and Agassi Rusher, who got in to qualifying as an alternate, lost their opening qualifying matches today.

The main draws have been posted, with Xinran Sun of China, who did not play Roehampton, and Luis Guto Miguel of Brazil the No. 1 seeds. I'll have more on the main draw Friday.

The US men and women went 8-4 today in their second round matches, with Ashlyn Krueger posting the most emphatic victory, beating fellow qualifier Mariam Bolkvadze of Georgia 6-1, 6-0 in under an hour. Just four years after falling in the boys final on Court One, qualifier Michael Zheng(Columbia) will play on Centre Court Friday against No. 3 seed Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada. 

Thursday's Wimbledon second round results of Americans:

Jan-Lennard Struff(GER) d. Brandon Nakashima[28] v 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-7(5), 7-6(8), 7-6(7)
Taylor Fritz[6] d. Patrick Kypson 6-2, 6-2, 7-5
Frances Tiafoe[17] d. Jan Choinski(GBR) 4-6, 6-2, 7-5, 6-2
Marcos Giron d. Quentin Halys(FRA) 7-6(5), 6-3, 6-4
Zachary Svajda d. Kamil Majchrzak(POL) 2-6, 6-2, 6-7(5), 6-4, 

Elena Rybakina[2](KAZ) d. Caty McNally 6-1, 6-2
Madison Keys[26] d. Katie Swan[WC](GBR) 6-1, 6-4
Amanda Anisimova[6] d. Sofia Kenin 6-2, 4-6, 7-6(3)
Ashlyn Krueger[Q] d. Mariam Bolkvadze(GEO) 6-1, 6-0
Emma Navarro[23] d. Oksana Selekhmeteva(ESP) 3-6, 6-4, 6-1

Friday's Wimbledon third round matches featuring Americans:

Michael Zheng[Q] v Felix Auger-Aliassime[3](CAN)
Jenson Brooksby v Jannik Sinner[1](ITA)
Tommy Paul[21] v Hubert Hurkacz(POL)

Jessica Pegula[4] v Jessica Bouzas Maneiro(ESP)
Claire Liu[Q] v Coco Gauff[7]
Iva Jovic[16] v Ekaterina Alexandrova[18](RUS)

Wimbledon has released the names of the 16 boys and 16 girls who have been invited to compete in this year's 14-and-under event. The tournament, now in its fifth year, will begin next Thursday with round robin play.

Eva Maria Bulai(ROU) 
Gabriela Carvalho Bettoni(BRA)
Eduarda Gomes (BRA) 
Emilia Henningsen(DEN)
Claire Hirschi(AUS)
Ke-Chieh Hsu(TPE)
Ayaka Iwasa(JPN)
Anna Kapanadze(USA)
Nishta Kesavan(GBR)
Srishti Kiran(IND)
Mariia Kocherzhenko(UKR)
Isha Manchala(USA)
Beata Maresova(CZE)
Lyubov Pronenko
Isabella Rebel(GBR)
Jiayi Wang(CHN) 

Martin Adamca(SVK)
David Bender(USA)
Saidaslam Farkhodov(UZB)
Ethan Jake Frans(INA)
Mathias Gonzalez Osorio(COL)
Caleb Griffith(GBR)
Noah Honesberger(SUI)
Lyoma Hotelier(JPN)
Oskar Laskowski(GBR)
Yanru Li(CHN)
Puneeth Manohar(IND)
Dante Monte(BRA)
Anastasis Mosaikos(CYP)
Novak Palombo(AUS)
Liam Sharkey(GBR)
Jonas Waelti(SUI)

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

June Aces; Antonius Avenges Roland Garros Final Loss to Reach Semis, Preston and Newman Meet for Spot in Final at J300 Roehampton; 13 US Juniors Begin Wimbledon Qualifying Thursday; Seven Americans Advance to Wimbledon Third Round

My monthly column for Tennis Recruiting Network on the top performances by juniors, collegians and former collegians is up today, with 19 players featured, which doesn't begin to cover all the titles claimed in June. Even with the normal exclusion now of 15K titles, there were a half dozen titles at the next level--M25 and W35--that I didn't have room for, and that's not likely to change the rest of this summer, with collegians out competing all over the world.

Three Americans have advanced to the semifinals of the J300 in Roehampton, with 16-year-olds Michael Antonius and Welles Newman and 15-year-old Janae Preston posting wins on the grass today, along with Puerto Rico's Yannik Alvarez.

No. 6 seed Antonius defeated top seed and World Tennis junior No. 1 Luis Guto Miguel of Brazil 6-3, 1-6, 6-2, avenging his 6-3, 6-4 loss in the Roland Garros boys final last month. Antonius will face No. 4 seed Ziga Sesko of Slovenia, whom he beat 6-2, 6-2 in the Roland Garros quarterfinals, but I suspect this one will be closer, as the Australian Open champion prefers faster surfaces. Sesko defeated No. 10 seed Andy Johnson 6-3, 6-3 today.

No. 2 seed Jamie Mackenzie of Germany also lost today, with qualifier Svit Suljic making it two Slovenians in the semifinals with his 6-3, 7-5 win over the incoming TCU freshman. Suljic will face No. 9 seed Alvarez, who got a walkover from No. 3 seed Keaton Hance.

Preston and Newman have guaranteed an American finalist on Friday, as they advanced to face each other Thursday. 

Preston, the No. 15 seed, defeated unseeded Yihan Qu of China 6-2, 4-6, 6-1; No. 16 seed Newman beat No. 5 seed Anastasija Cvetkovic of Serbia 7-6(1), 6-3. Preston and Newman have not played on the World Tennis Junior Circuit.

Top seed Ksenia Efremova advanced to the semifinals with a 6-0, 6-4 win over Mariia Makarova of Russia and will face unseeded 16-year-old Yu Jun Lin of China, who beat Denisa Zoldakova of Czechia 1-6, 6-4, 6-2.

Two Americans are through to the semifinals in the boys doubles. Jack Secord and his partner from Kazakhstan, Damir Zhalgasba, seeded No. 8, defeated No. 3 seeds Antonius and Johnson 6-4, 7-6(3). Secord will face his Roland Garros doubles partner Alvarez in the semifinals, with Alvarez and Leonardo Storck Franca of Brazil the No. 5 seeds.

Unseeded Rhys Lawlor of Great Britain and Jordan Lee will play Roland Garros champions Mackenzie and Vincent Reisach, after the fourth-seeded Germans repeated their Roland Garros doubles final victory over No. 7 seeds Mathys Domenc and Daniel Jade of France 6-0, 6-4.

Lee will be playing in the doubles semifinals and the Wimbledon Junior qualifying tomorrow at Roehampton, with his first round qualifying match at 10:30 a.m. and the time for the doubles to be announced. 

Lee is one of four US boys in the qualifying draw, with Vihaan Reddy, who won the J200 last week on clay in Czechia, the No. 1 seed based on that result. Lee is the No. 7 seed, Safir Azam is the No. 5 seed and Marcel Latak is unseeded.

Nine US girls are in the Wimbledon Junior qualifying, with Anita Tu, who was first out at the freeze deadline, moving into the main draw. The American girls are: Yael Saffar, Nancy Lee[9], Emery Combs, Sarah Ye[11], Maggie Sohns[10], Carrie-Anne Hoo[15], Ireland O'Brien, Hannah Ayrault[7] and Olivia Traynor[8]. The top seed in the Wimbledon girls qualifying is Ilary Pistola of Italy.

I don't recall if live scoring is available for the junior qualifying, but the Roehampton J300 live scoring link is here.

Seven Americans have advanced to the third round of Wimbledon, including qualifier Claire Liu, who won the Wimbledon girls title in 2017: https://tenniskalamazoo.blogspot.com/2017/07/liu-defeats-li-to-claim-wimbledon.html

The 26-year-old South Californian defeated Zeynep Sonmez of Turkey 7-5, 6-3 to reach the third round of Wimbledon for the first time. Liu is not the only American qualifier to reach the third round; Michael Zheng(Columbia) defeated Nico Mejia of Colombia 6-7(4), 7-6(8), 6-1, 6-4 to reach the third round of a major for the first time. Liu is not the only former Wimbledon junior champion to qualify and advance to the third round for the first time, with Shintaro Mochizuki of Japan, the 2019 boys champion, beating last week's Mallorca finalist Ethan Quinn(Georgia) 6-2, 7-6(6), 7-5.

Brandon Nakishima's second round match was again suspended due to darkness, as was his first round match, so he will be playing for a fourth consecutive day Thursday.

Wednesday's Wimbledon second round results of Americans:

Aryna Sabalenka[1](BLR) d. McCartney Kessler 6-1, 7-6(9)
Coco Gauff[7] d. Solana Sierra(ARG) 6-3, 3-6, 7-6(7)
Jessica Pegula[4] d. Sara Sorribes Tormo(ESP) 7-6(6), 6-1
Iva Jovic[16] d. Tatjana Maria(GER) 6-1, 6-2
Mananchaya Sawangkaew[Q](THA) d. Alycia Parks 7-5, 6-0
Claire Liu[Q] d. Zeynep Sonmez(TUR) 7-5, 6-3

Tommy Paul[21] d. Soonwoo Kwon[Q](KOR) 6-3, 7-6(4), 6-2
Marton Fucsovics(HUN) d. Learner Tien[16] 6-7(6), 6-4, 7-6(4), 6-3
Brandon Nakashima[28] v Jan-Lennard Struff(GER) 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-7(5), 7-6(8) suspended, darkness
Jenson Brooksby d. Ignacio Buse[31](PER) 6-2, 6-2, 6-3
Shintaro Mochizuki[Q](JPN) d. Ethan Quinn 6-2, 7-6(6), 7-5
Arthur Rinderknech[25](FRA) d. Martin Damm 6-4, 7-6(1), 6-3
Michael Zheng[Q] d. Nicolas Mejia[Q](COL) 6-7(4), 7-6(8), 6-1, 6-4

Thursday's Wimbledon second round matches featuring Americans:

to finish:
Brandon Nakashima[28] v Jan-Lennard Struff(GER) 6-4, 6-7(6), 6-7(5), 7-6(8) 

Taylor Fritz[6] v Patrick Kypson
Frances Tiafoe[17] v Jan Choinski(GBR)
Marcos Giron v Quentin Halys(FRA)
Zachary Svajda v Kamil Majchrzak(POL)

Caty McNally v Elena Rybakina[2](KAZ)
Madison Keys[26] v Katie Swan[WC](GBR)
Amanda Anisimova[6] v Sofia Kenin
Ashlyn Krueger[Q] v Mariam Bolkvadze(GEO)
Emma Navarro[23] v Oksana Selekhmeteva(ESP)

The heat continues to disrupt play in Cary North Carolina; you can find results from the Challenger 75 matches here and the W100 matches here.

The San Diego SoCal Pro Series results can be found here for the men and here for the women.