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Sunday, August 17, 2014

Giron Qualifies at Winston-Salem, Rubin Falls Just Short in ATP Debut; Gordon and Whoriskey, Singh and Dadamo in US Open National Playoffs Finals; Nguyen Takes Calgary Title; Mmoh Top Seed in ITF Grade 1


At the Winston-Salem Open, reigning NCAA champion Marcos Giron qualified for his first ATP main draw, winning three qualifying matches Saturday and Sunday.  Today former UCLA Bruin Giron defeated Mate Pavic of Croatia 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 and will play another ITA Player of the Year in the first round of the main draw, Alexsandr Nedovyesov of Kazakhstan, who played for Oklahoma State.  Giron has had a difficult summer, failing to win a main draw match on the Challenger level in five attempts, but he seems to be finding his form at just the right time, with his US Open debut a little over a week away.

Kalamazoo champion Noah Rubin made his main draw ATP debut tonight in Winston-Salem, with the 18-year-old wild card falling to 2010 NCAA champion Bradley Klahn(Stanford) 6-2, 0-6, 7-6(5).  Rubin trailed 4-1 in the final set, won four straight games to serve for the match, but was broken at love. Rubin forced the third set tiebreak serving down 5-6, but lost both his serves leading 3-2 in the tiebreaker, and Klahn won all the points on his serve to close it out.

The singles finals for the US Open National Playoffs are set for Monday, with 15-year-old Michaela Gordon playing Caitlin Whoriskey for the women's qualifying wild card, and defending champion Jeff Dadamo facing Sanam Singh for the men's qualifying wild card.

Gordon has been romping through her opponents the past two days. After losing just two games to No. 3 seed Jennifer Elie, Gordon beat No. 5 seed Jacqueline Cako 6-1, 6-2 today to reach the final. Former Tennessee Volunteer Whoriskey, who like Gordon is unseeded, reached the final with a 6-4, 6-1 victory over No. 4 seed Ashley Weinhold.

Top seed Singh, who played college tennis at Virginia, defeated No. 4 seed and rising North Carolina sophomore Ronnie Schneider 7-6(4), 6-1, while second seed Dadamo, who won the NCAA doubles title in 2011 while at Texas A&M, defeated former Kentucky All-American Jesse Witten 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

Due to the Nationals last week, I neglected to note the Pro Circuit winners, with rising Virginia senior Mitchell Frank winning his second Futures of the summer at the $10,000 tournament in Edwardsville Illinois.  The unseeded Frank beat top seed Yuki Bhambri of India 7-6(5), 6-2 in the final.

There are no Pro Circuit tournaments the rest of this month in the United States, but many Americans are playing in Canada.  Daniel Nguyen, the former USC Trojan, won his second Futures title in the past month, at a $15,000 tournament in Calgary, Canada.  Nguyen avenged a recent Futures quarterfinal loss to Bjorn Fratangelo, taking the title with a 7-6(7), 5-7, 6-4 victory over the 21-year-old American, who was also unseeded.  North Carolina teammates Jack Murray and Brayden Schnur won the doubles title 6-4, 3-6, 10-7 over Dennis Nevolo(Illinois) and Bulgaria's Dimitar Kutrovsky(Texas).

At the ITF Grade A Youth Olympic Games, the first round of the boys singles and the first round of the girls doubles opened the competition Sunday.  Alex Rybakov, the only US boy in China for the tournament, lost to Lloyd Harris of South Africa 7-6(10), 6-4.  Sofia Kenin, the only US girl in China, is playing doubles with Mexico's Renata Zarazua, and they advanced to the quarterfinals, beating French Open girls champions Ioana Ducu and Ioana Rosca of Romania 1-6, 7-5, 10-8.

The draws are out for the ITF Grade 1 in College Park, Maryland, where I'll be traveling on Monday.  Michael Mmoh is the top boys seed, Anna Kalinskaya of Russia is the top girls seed.  Draws and Monday's order of play can be found at the tournament website.

9 comments:

Pete dye said...

Great result by Rubin almost taking out Klahn. I didn't think his game was ready for top 100 but it appears it is. Maybe he will come to his senses and pass on wake forrest

Tedpras said...

I thought that the US Open Nat'l playoff was open only to US citizens? Is Singh a resident of the US?

Go pro said...

Agree with the above comment. Would be a shame to see him waste a year at Wake Forrest.

Only difference between him and Klahn right now is experience, and he will get a heck of a lot more of that playing pros every week than playing two dual matches per week against mostly inferior competition.

Ben said...

Collette - do you know who got the WC's for US Open juniors main and quailes.

Colette Lewis said...

I will post the US open junior wild cards as soon as I get the release, as always. Sometime this week I'm sure.

Colette Lewis said...

It is open to any USTA member regardless of nationality.

just saying said...

Keep in mind that Klahn is not 100% of his normal level. Counting Sunday's match, this is only the second tournament since early February where Klahn has won a match.

He was off the tour for about two months with an injury. A month ago, he won two matches at the Binghamton Challenger then had to retire. Klahn needs match play to get up to speed. And, hopefully, his body holds up.

Counting last night, Klahn has now won 2 main draw ATP matches in 2014. His other main draw victory was in the 1st rd of Auckland in early January.

While this is a solid result for Rubin, keep in mind that, at the moment, this is not the same Klahn that we saw at the beginning of the season and his ranking has tumbled as a result.

Lang said...

I was at the Klahn-Rubin match. Klahn was not 100%, struggled physically (arm/hand cramps). At one point in the match (3rd set), he had difficulty holding the racquet. Rubin competed well though.

Go go go said...

Wake Forest is def right move for Rubin, he is a great junior (and almost 19 years old), but don't see it in the pros. These days size matters. He will be far from undefeated in college. "Almost taking out" a returning Klahn or healthy anyone for that matter is irrelevant in the scheme of things. You don't know if the other guy was playing his best or worst, only the player does. Go to college! If he had to fight his way through futures he would go no where faster, the level isn't there. Easy to play a no pressure match at any level. It's a match, it's a loss that's all, a spit in the pond, certainly nothing to influence a decision. Non-players are so fast to conclude. At least Rubin knows what he is doing.