American Collegiate Invitational Fields Announced; Tiafoe, Donaldson Reach Round of 16 at Cincinnati Masters
The USTA announced the participants of the fourth annual American Collegiate Invitational to be held September 7-9, during the second week of US Open, at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.
Eight American men and eight American women, who are either in college or have recently completed their eligibility, are invited to participate in the single elimination tournament according to their collegiate or professional rankings.
The criteria for selection:
- The top two players in the ATP/WTA rankings as of August 7th
- Top five American players in the year-end ITA rankings, including at least two graduating seniors
- USTA wild cards
JC Aragone, Virginia (ATP)
William Blumberg, North Carolina
Christopher Eubanks, Georgia Tech(ATP)
Tom Fawcett, Stanford
Thai Kwiatkowski, Virginia
Alfredo Perez, Florida
Michael Redlicki, Arkansas
Alex Rybakov, TCU (wild card)
Brandon Holt is ranked above Rybakov in the final ITA list, so I assume he declined the invitation.
The women:
Sydney Campbell, Vanderbilt
Hayley Carter, North Carolina
Sara Daavettila, North Carolina
Francesca Di Lorenzo, Ohio State (WTA)
Alexa Graham, North Carolina (wild card)
Brienne Minor, Michigan
Ingrid Neel, Florida (WTA)
Ena Shibahara, UCLA
Campbell and Carter are the two graduating seniors in the group and neither are expected to play the Pro Circuit, so this may be their last competitive tennis match for some time.
Blair Shankle of Baylor would have been eligible based on her ITA ranking, but she must have decided against playing. Pepperdine's Ashley Lahey also would have been eligible by ranking, but I'm guessing she has opted to play the US Open juniors instead, although she will need a wild card.
This year's tournament will again feature the serve clock, which was introduced last year at the event. Coaching will be allowed for the first time this year. For a look at the other innovations being tested at the ACI (and the US Open Junior Championships), see my post from Monday.
The winners receive qualifying wild cards into the US Open next year, but neither of the 2016 ACI champions needed them. Kwiatkowski won the NCAAs and so received a main draw wild card. Danielle Collins earned her way into qualifying on her own ranking, but fell short of the 120 ranking that is required to get a wild card into the main draw for the ACI champions.
Wednesday was a big day for young American men at the ATP Masters in Cincinnati, with both 19-year-old Frances Tiafoe and 20-year-old Jared Donaldson advancing to the round of 16.
Tiafoe, the 2015 Kalamazoo champion, earned his first ATP Top 10 victory, beating No. 4 seed Alexander Zverev of Germany 4-6, 6-3, 6-4. He will play No. 14 seed John Isner next. Donaldson took out lucky loser Ramkumar Ramanathan of India 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 and will face Nikoloz Basilashvili of Georgia in Thursday's round of 16. No. 15 seed Sam Querrey, the only other American man still in singles, plays later tonight. For more on Tiafoe's win, see the ATP website.
2 comments:
It was a great win for Tiafoe but, really, it was obvious that Zverev was struggling. He was so tired he could barely move. I wonder whose idea it was for him to play so many tournaments back to back. It's a good thing he did lose. At least he'll get some rest before the Open. As for Tiafoe, this win will give him confidence. I mean, a win against a top ten player is good no matter how sloppy the match was. So, good for him.
Impressive play this summer by Aragone to become the 2d highest ATP ranked current/recent American collegian. Especially for a relatively unheralded Guy
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