2025 Real Tennis World Championship
2025 Real Tennis World Championship | |
---|---|
Date | 23-27 September |
Edition | 70th |
Category | IRTPA |
Draw | 4D |
Location | Newport, Rhode Island |
Venue | International Tennis Hall of Fame |
Champions | |
Men's singles | |
TBC |
The 2025 Real Tennis World Championship (known in the US as the 2025 Court Tennis World Championship) is to be the 70th edition of the real tennis World Championship. It is scheduled to be held at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island.[1] The 2025 Ladies Real Tennis World Championship is to be held at the same venue in May.[2]
Defending champion Camden Riviere is expected to contest the Championship for the sixth time, having previously won on three occasions. His challenger will be chosen through a series of eliminators. It will be the third time that Newport has hosted the Challenge, being the venue that Riviere won his first World Championship in 2016.
Qualification
[edit]As the defending champion, Camden Riviere automatically qualifies for the final. The challenger is determined by a series of eliminators. The top four players in the World Race, excluding Riviere, qualify for the eliminators. Points in the World Race were available for events in 2023 and 2024 from the following tournaments:[3]
- Australian Open (2023, 2024)
- British Open (2023, 2024)
- Champions Trophy (2023, 2024)
- French Open (2023, 2024)
- US Open (2023, 2024)
- US Professional Singles (2023, 2024)
As at the conclusion of the 2024 British Open, the standings in the World Race were as follows:[4]
Rank | Player | Club | Points | Qualified |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Camden Riviere | International Tennis Club of Washington | 94325 | Yes, as Defending Champion |
2 | John Lumley | Racquet Club of Philadelphia | 59589 | Yes |
3 | Nick Howell | Aiken Tennis Club | 55159 | Yes |
4 | Ben Taylor-Matthews | Bristol and Bath Tennis Club | 39460 | Yes |
5 | Steve Virgona | Racquet Club of Chicago | 37226 | Yes |
6 | Leon Smart | Tennis and Racquet Club, Boston | 27373 | No |
7 | Bryn Sayers | Queen's Club | 18565 | No |
8 | Robert Shenkman (A) | Manchester Tennis and Racquet Club | 17459 | No |
9 | Robert Fahey | The Oratory School | 14954 | No |
10 | Matthieu Sarlangue (A) | Jeu de Paume de Paris | 12302 | No |
11 | Lewis Williams | Leamington Tennis Court Club | 10534 | No |
12 | Chris Chapman | Royal Melbourne Tennis Club | 9654 | No |
Should the top four players elect to enter the Eliminators, the matches will be seeded in the first round, with the first seed playing the fourth seed and the second seed playing the third seed. The winners will progress to the Final Eliminator, from which the winner will challenge Camden Riviere. The venues for the eliminators will be chosen through a series of monetary bids from the players in order to select their preferred court.[5] The Final Eliminator may also be bid by a neutral club.
The Challenger from 2023, John Lumley will return to the Eliminator process for the second time. Lumley won two tournaments during the qualification cycle, the 2023 Champions Trophy and the 2024 Australian Open. He also reached the final of every other tournament he entered. Lumley won through the 2023 Eliminators beating Chris Chapman and Nick Howell, both at his home court of Philadelphia.
Nick Howell will play in his third Eliminator. He lost the First Round Eliminator to Camden Riviere in 2020, and to Lumley in 2023. In the qualification period he won the 2023 French Open and the 2024 Champions Trophy, his first two singles tournament victories at the highest level. He also reached the final of three of four Opens in 2024, missing only the 2024 US Open.
Ben Taylor-Matthews will play in his fourth series of Eliminators. He lost to Bryn Sayers in a home and away format in 2012, and lost in first round Eliminators at away courts to Chris Chapman and Nick Howell in 2020 and 2023 respectively. Taylor-Matthews best results in the qualifying period was reaching the final of the Champions Trophy in both 2023 and 2024.
Steve Virgona was the Challenger in two World Championships, 2010 and 2012, both times losing to Robert Fahey. He returns to the Eliminator process for the first time since 2018, where he lost to Fahey in a home and away play-off. He was a finalist at the 2023 French Open.
World Championships
[edit]Venue
[edit]The event was announced as the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island on 1st October 2024. It will be organised by the United States Court Tennis Association. It will be the third singles World Championship held in Newport, following 2004 and 2016. It will be the second consecutive challenge held in the United States, the first time since 1994. Newport will also host the 2025 Ladies Real Tennis World Championship, having previously hosted that event in 2009 and 1995. The club has never hosted the World Doubles Championship. Riviere has not lost a match at Newport since 2013.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Challenge Venue For The 2025 Challenge". International Real Tennis Professionals Association. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
- ^ "Newport to Host 2025 Men's & Ladies' World Championships". United States Court Tennis Association. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
- ^ "Tournaments with ranking points". International Real Tennis Professionals Association. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
- ^ "World Race Points". International Real Tennis Professionals Association. Retrieved 3 December 2024.
- ^ "The 2025 World Challenge and Final Eliminator". International Real Tennis Professionals Association. Retrieved 6 October 2024.
- ^ "National League – New England vs. Chicago". United States Court Tennis Association. Retrieved 6 October 2024.