Valerie Glozman from Stanford ended to win her first -year year in June by winning the USTA’s US Open Collegiate Playoff. The 18-year-old from Washington started her second year this month with the First Division I Major Singles title for a Stanford woman since Nicole Gibbs won the Ncaas in 2013, and defeated Texas’s Carmen Harea 6-2, 6-3 in today’s final Ita Ladies All-American Championships in Cary North Carolina.
Glozman, the No. 4 Seed, dropped her only set of the tournament in the third round, when she left Cal 5-0 behind Mao Mushika before returning for a 3-6, 7-5, 6-3 victory to secure her place in the NCAA-Individual tournament of November in Lake Nona. Then Glozman drove up and only lost 12 games in her last three games.
In today’s final, Glozman had control of the third competition, when she broke no. 9 Seed Harea, a 19-year-old second-year student from Romania. Glozman had two set points with Harea that served on 1-5, 30-40, but received an unsporting behavioral penalty when her call on the baseline was destroyed by the PlayRplay Electronic Line Call system. That gave Harea the point and the rated penalty gave her the game, which caused a lot of consternation from Stanford head coach Frankie Brennan, who spoke with the chair referee and the referee during the subsequent switch.
Glozman, now confronted with a game penalty if another call from her was destroyed, was able to regroup and hold in the next game to take the first set, and when she got a double error from Harea at a decisive point in the first match of the second set, she seemed to have the game under control.
But without Ad, chances will probably come up and Glozman had to win a decisive point in her 2-1 service game to stay in front. Her variety, which keeps opponents out of balance, not sure if her slice or a torn with two hands will come, was too much for HEREA, who tried different strategies to practice Glozman with little success. Harea managed to save two match points with Glozman that served on 5-2, the second with a backhand corner winner short of the service line that gave Glozman a taste of her own medicine. But Glozman went up 0-40 in the next game and closed the title at her fourth match point.
Glozman is the first all-American champion for ladies for Stanford since Hilary Barte won the title in 2010 in the Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles.

Jay Friend spent his first three years at the University of Arizona in the shadow of Colton Smith, but he is now the only Wildcat, male or female, who won a large championship of Division I, after Aidan Kim of Ohio State 6-2, 6-4 reported in today’s final Ita Men All-American Championships in Tulsa Oklahoma.
The third placed friend, who won gold medals for Japan in mixed Doubles and Herensingles at the World University Games in Germany this summer, dominated on Serve in the first set and only lost four points on Serve.
Just like the ladies’ final, the second set started badly for the player, with no. 2 Seed Kim, a junior from Michigan, broken after 40-0 in the opening match.
Friend was in charge by winning a decisive point in the next game, and Kim would not get any other look. With a friend who came on 4-3, 30-all-all, he came with a crucial bait and closed the game. After Kim had to bring the score to 5-4, benefiting from a destroyed call from friend on a first serve, friend served the title at Love.
In addition to the history friend who was made with his title, the ladies also placed Doubles champions in the record books of their school. Maria Sholokhova and Lucie Urbanova van Wisconsin defeated Oklahoma’s Roisin Gilheany and Gloriana Nahum 6-3, 6-3 in a final between non-featured teams and became the first team of Wisconsin, Men or Women, to win an All-American Doubes title. Sholokhova had written history last year with the first All-American Singles title from Wisconsin, and is the first woman since Robin Anderson of UCLA in 2013 and 2014 to win both All-American titles.
The title for Herendubbels went to the top seeds, with Benito Sanchez Martinez and Petar Jovanovic from Mississippi State who defeated DK Suresh and Andrew Delgado 7-5, 6-3’s units. Sanchez and Jovanovic are the second Mississippi State Men’s team that wins an All-American Title, which becomes a member of Daniel Courcol and Laurent Miquelard, the 1992 champions.
The last two qualifications for the NCAA Singles Championships were determined today, with the winners of the semi-final of the Feed-in Troost competitions guaranteed a place in the NCAA trekkings.
Piper Charney of Michigan defeated Anastasiia Grechkina of Pepperdine 6-1, 4-6, 7-6 (6) and Savannah Dada-Mascoll from Appalachian State, who had defeated top seeds DJ Bennett of Auburn in the first round in the first round, beating ashton bowigen in Texas’s nason Singles championships.
Duncan Chan of TCU defeated Emon van Loben Sels from UCLA 6-3, 2-6, 6-3 to earn his place in the NCAAs, just like Kenta Miyoshi from Illinois, Die Kentucky’s Jack Loutit 6-2, 4-1, RET defeated. injury.
All eight singles quarterfinalists and all four double -sided semi -finalists had already qualified for the NCAAs.
The ladies draw page is here; The men’s pulling page is here.
Kayla Day today won the Battle of the left -handed Kaylas in the USTA Pro Circuit W75 in Templeton CaliforniaEarning her seventh title with a 6-2, 3-0 retired victory over LSU second-year Kayla Cross of Canada on the 26th birthday of Day. Now back in the WTA Top 300 with the title, the USTA 18S National and US Open Girls Champion 2016 to the WTA Top 100, which she reached in 2023. Steve Pratt, the press officer for the tournament, gave this report of the final.
Templeton, California – September 28, 2025 – Kayla Day was Serenaded by a few hundred fans who sang her happy birthday after her seventh Pro Singles title that became the first Californian to win the seventh edition of the won Central Coast Tennis Classic offered by Central Coast Home Health On Sunday at the Templeton Tennis Ranch.
After winning the first set, 6-2, against the number 5 placed Canadian Kayla Cross, the day led 3-0 in the second set when the serving cross lost the first point. She then walked to the referee of the chair and inquired her that she would withdraw from the game due to a left hip injury.
After the trophy presentation and photos, day, which became on Sunday 26, then at a dozen Balkinderen and jump in the shallow end of the swimming pool, a tradition started last year after Renata Zarazua won the title of the singles a day before her 27one Birthday and only a few days after the new swimming pool on the Templeton Tennis Ranch was opened.
“I expect a fight today and you never want to win that way, so I am sorry for Kayla,” Day told the crowd and later added that “in those moments should just stay more focused because you never know if they could come back.”
Cross said she injured her hip at the start of the game. “I went for a broad forehand and I could see that I had drawn something,” said 20-year-old LSU-Tweede year student. “During the first set it got worse and worse.”
Asked how she would rank the victory under her seven career-pro titles, the WTA World-Gerangen arranged no. 345one Player Day said: “It’s certainly up there. It’s my biggest title because I had my injury and I came from California and so close to home, it’s pretty special, especially on my birthday.”
Day, who was only out nine months after the operation on her judge, won two ITF W100 singles titles in 2023, the same year that she reached the third round in the French Open.
Day, who earned 75 WTA ranking lists, gave a scream to her old coach Larry Mousouris, who was a Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo All-American in the late 1960s. “Larry has been my coach since I was 9 years old,” said Day. “Thanks to Larry that you are here because he can’t travel much with me.”
Mousouris couldn’t help it, but flash a smile or two on the big day of Kayla. “She worked very hard to get to this point,” he said. “But she knows that there is still a lot of work to do.”
The final on the W35 in Berkeley Between Qualifier Merna Refaat (Auburn) of Egypt and Johanne Svendsen or Denmark Has Been Delayed by Drizzle, But The Doubles Final Was Completed, With Top Seeds Rasheeda Mcadoo (Georgia Tech) and Auburn No. Defeating 2 Seeds Francesca Pace of Italy and Zuzanna Pawlikowska or Poland 7-6 (2), 6-4 in the final.
By the ATP Challenger 75 in Las VegasAbdullah Shelbayh (Florida) by Jordan claimed his second Challenger title and his first in two years, with the 21-year-old beating fellow linkiger Alex Rybakov (TCU) 6-2, 6-4 in today’s final. Shelbayh moves up to 302 in the ATP ranking list with the title.
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