Teen Louisa Chirico Captures USTA French Open Wild Card

May 11, 2015 | By Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
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Eighteen-year-old Louisa Chirico of Harrison, N.Y. will make her Grand Slam singles main draw debut at the 2015 French Open after winning the Har-Tru USTA Pro Circuit Wild Card Challenge this weekend. Chirico finished the wild card challenge with 128 points by winning the singles title at the $50,000 USTA Pro Circuit event in Dothan, Ala., three weeks ago and by reaching the final at the $50,000 event in Indian Harbour Beach, Fla., this weekend.

Chirico tied fellow teenager Katerina Stewart in the wild card challenge. Stewart won the title in Indian Harbour Beach in three sets and also reached the final in both Dothan and at the $50,000 event in Charlottesville, Va. However, by rule of the Har-Tru Wild Card Challenge, in the event of a tie, the player with the best WTA singles ranking in the published WTA rankings of Monday, May 11, 2015, will be awarded the wild card. Since Chirico will have the best WTA singles ranking on Monday, she is awarded the wild card. As of today, Chirico is ranked 120th in the world and Stewart is ranked 201st. Chirico will be ranked higher than Stewart. 

Any American that did not receive direct entry into the 2015 French Open was eligible for the wild card, awarded to the man and woman who earn the most ATP/WTA ranking points at select USTA Pro Circuit clay court events. The USTA and the French Tennis Federation have a reciprocal agreement in which wild cards into the 2015 French and U.S. Opens are exchanged. USTA Player Development awards the women’s wild card to the player who accumulates the greatest number of WTA ranking points at two of three USTA Pro Circuit $50,000 clay-court events—the Hardee’s Pro Classic in Dothan, Ala., the Boyd Tinsley Clay Court Classic in Charlottesville, Va., and the Revolution Technologies Pro Tennis Classic in Indian Harbour Beach, Fla.

Chirico outperformed every other U.S. junior at the 2013 junior French Open, reaching the girls’ singles semifinals before falling to eventual champion Belinda Bencic in three sets. Chirico then reached the semifinals of the Wimbledon juniors, again losing to Bencic, and the quarterfinals of the junior US Open to finish the 2013 season in the Top 10 of the ITF World Junior Rankings. In 2012, she teamed with Taylor Townsend to lead the U.S. to the Junior Fed Cup title in Barcelona, Spain. Chirico won her first USTA Pro Circuit singles title that same year at the $10,000 event in Sumter, S.C., and her first doubles title in Indian Harbour Beach, Fla., in 2013. In 2014, she reached the doubles semifinals or better at five USTA Pro Circuit events, won an ITF-level singles title in Italy and reached one additional ITF singles final in Switzerland. This year, she competed in qualifying at the Australian Open, reached the final of the $100,000 USTA Pro Circuit event in Midland, Mich., and qualified for the WTA event in Acapulco, Mexico. Chirico has competed in singles qualifying at the US Open and Australian Open and played in the US Open doubles draw last year.

Seventeen-year-old Frances Tiafoe, of College Park, Md., clinched the men’s Har-Tru USTA Pro Circuit Wild Card Challenge last weekend, finishing with 77 points, reaching the $50,000 Tallahassee Challenger final and advancing to the semifinals at the $50,000 Challenger in Savannah, Ga., and the quarterfinals at the $100,000 Challenger in Sarasota, Fla. Tiafoe, who turned pro in early April and is currently ranked a career-high No. 293 in the world, will make his Grand Slam main draw debut after earning the main draw wild card into the French Open. He won his first USTA Pro Circuit singles title earlier this year at the $15,000 Futures in Bakersfield, Calif. He also served as a practice partner for the U.S. Davis Cup team against Great Britain in Scotland this March. As a junior, Tiafoe ascended to number two in the ITF World Junior Rankings last year and reached the boys’ singles semifinals at the 2014 US Open. He also won the prestigious Orange Bowl International Tennis Championships in December 2013 in Plantation, Fla., becoming the youngest Boys’ 18s champion in the 67 years of the event.

The USTA first used this wild-card challenge format for its 2012 French Open wild cards, won by Melanie Oudin and Brian Baker. Oudin and Baker each advanced to the second round at that year’s French Open and subsequently broke into the Top 100. In 2013, Alex Kuznetsov and Shelby Rogers earned the wild cards, with Rogers winning her first-ever Grand Slam singles match at the French Open. Last year, young American Taylor Townsend and veteran Robby Ginepri earned the wild cards, with Townsend becoming a top storyline at Roland Garros by reaching the third round.


Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
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