Hazelitt and Johnson claim itf J200 titles in Corpus Christi; Last round qualification for Pan am closed Sunday; Zheng and Zinc meet in Tiburon Challenger Final; All-Australia final on W50; Perez progress on W35; Suresh seems to repeat on M15

Hazelitt and Johnson claim itf J200 titles in Corpus Christi; Last round qualification for Pan am closed Sunday; Zheng and Zinc meet in Tiburon Challenger Final; All-Australia final on W50; Perez progress on W35; Suresh seems to repeat on M15

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Andrew Johnson and Jordyn Hazelitt have today collected the biggest titles of their junior careers on the ITF J200 in Corpus Christi Texas.

Johnson, the No. 3 Seed, added the singles title to the Doubles title he won yesterday and defeated No. 8 Seed Tanishk Konduri 7-5, 7-5 for his fifth ITF Junior Circuit title. The 16-year-old from southern California, a quarter-final at the US Open Junior Championships, has won two J100 titles in the past year, but this is his first above that level.

Hazelitt, no. 8 seed, defeated no. 4 Seed Maggie Sohns 6-0, 6-3 to win her first J200 title, after reaching the final at a J200 in Mexico in June. The 15-year-old from Nevada will still fall outside the ITF-Top 100, but she is in the main drawing of the ITF J300 Pan I am closed Next week in Houston, so she has another chance to raise important points there.
The eligible for the Pan is closed Started today, and with neither of them full, most players only have to win two games, one today and on a Sunday to reach the main table. Top Seed Colter Amey is one of the 11 Americans in the last qualifying round, with the only international player who remains Francisco Salmain of Argentina.

All 12 of the girls who continue to the last qualifying round come from the United States, but top seeds Lucy Oyebog Atang lost to Enya Hamilton 4-6, 6-2, 10-3.

I am in Spring Texas for the tournament that starts early Monday.

Tyler Zink today reached the first challenge final of his professional career and ended the winning series of last week’s Las Vegas Challenger champion Abdullah Shelbayh (Florida) of Jordan with a 6-3, 6-4 victory in the Challenger 75 semi -finals in Tiburon California. Zinc, who completed his suitability in the state of Oklahoma in 2024, will break into the Top 300 for the first time, regardless of the result in the final.

Zinc will have to put an even longer winning series in the final of tomorrow, while confronted with the red-hot Michael Zheng, who has now won 14 Challenger matches in a row after a 6-4, 7-5 semi-final victory at the University of Virginia Sophael Jodar of Spain tonight. The Columbia senior, sown no. 7, is now on 195 in the ATP Live Rankings, which protects its place in the Australian Open qualification in 2026.

In the final of Tiburon Doubles of today, Topzaden Finn Reynolds (Ole Miss) and James Watt (st. Mary’s) of New Zealand Wreef Wreef Wreef Wreef in the Las Vegas Challenger, Die Wildcards Benjamin Kittay (UNC, Michigan) and Joshua Woeehy. Watt and Reynolds had lost to Kittay and Sheehy 7-5, 7-6 (2) in last week’s championship match.

By the ATP Challenger 75 in FrancePatrick Kypson (Texas A&M) is through to the final. The non-seeded 25-year-old from North Carolina defeated Top Zaad and ATP no. 93 Raphael Collignon from Belgium 6-1, 6-7 (2), 7-5 in today’s semi-final and plays 2024 Wimbledon boys champion Nicolai Budkov Kjaer van Norway, the number 7 seed. Budkov Kjaer is playing this year in his fourth challenge final. Kypson or Budkov Kjaer will undergo their first loss in a challenger final Sunday. Kypson is 5-0 in the final of the challenger, with the 19-year-old Budkov Kjaer with 3-0.
On the USTA Pro Circuit W50 in Rancho Santa Fe CaliforniaThe 17-year-old Emerson Jones of Australia plays on Sunday for her third ITF Women’s Pro Circuit title after the No. 3 Seed no. 2 Seed Iryna Shymanovich of Belarus 6-2, 6-2 beat in today’s semi-finals. It will be an all-Australian final, with Olivia Gadecki from Olivia who beats the Katrina Scott 6-4 qualifying match, 6-2 in the other semi-final.
Texas A&M Junior Lucciana Perez from Peru has already won two W35 titles this year, but if she claims the title on the USTA Pro Circuit W35 in San Rafael California Tomorrow it will be the first of her four four career titles, not on clay. The non-sowed 20-year-old went to the final when Johanne Svendsen van Denmark retired 6-1, 2-0 in today’s semi-final. Perez will be confronted with qualifying Madison Brengle, who defeats top seeds Lea Ma (Georgia) 6-2, 7-6 (3). The 35-year-old Brengle, who is as high as 35 in the WTA ranking, has played more than 1000 games in her career, while Perez has played less than 100, although that number comprises all college matches that she played on Texas A&M.
Last October Wake Forest Senior DK Suresh won his first singles title on the M15 in Winston-Salem North Carolina; Tomorrow he will play for his second, again on his home jobs, after the number 2 seed had posted a 7-6 (6), 6-3 victory over unwanted Martin Borisiouk, a senior at NC State. Suresh, a 25-year-old from India, had lost to Borisiouk, a 25-year-old from Belarus twice in double competitions last year, so this was clearly a big victory for him today.

In the final of Sunday he plays no. 8 seed Shunsuke Mitsui (Tennessee) of Japan, which was presented with an All-Demon Deacon final with a 2-6, 6-4, 6-3 victory over Wake Forest Junior Luca Pow of Great Britain.

Suresh and Wake Forest Second-year student Andrew Delgado, who reached the ITA all-American Championships last week, doubled the final, won the Winston-Salem Doubles title today. She defeated the University of South Carolina teammates Lucas Andrade da Silva from Brazil and Paul Barbier Gazeu of France 6-7 (3), 6-2, 10-6 in the final between non-seeded teams.

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