2026 Outdoor Nationals & World Championships Recap

The McDonald clan, headlined by eldest son Chris, took home six titles this weekend in California. Photo 2023 Outdoor Nats via Lara

This past weekend, the 52nd annual Outdoor Nationals tournament was held at Marina Park in Huntington Beach, California. Here’s a recap of the weekend’s event.

Congrats to your Pro/Open winners on the weekend:

– Men’s Pro Doubles: Kane Waselenchuk and Chris McDonald

– Women’s Open Doubles: Karen Grisz and Marie Gomar

– Mixed Open Doubles: Jack McDonald and Martha McDonald

There were no pro singles draws this year.

Exec summary: Kane wins his third straight Outdoor Nationals title, and his second straight with Chris McDonald. Martha and Jack McDonald defended their 2025 Mixed Open title, avenging a group stage loss in the final. Lastly in Women’s, Gomar, Marie and Grisz, Karen became first time winners.

R2 Sports App home page for event: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=51162

ProRacquetballStats.com Match Reports by Pro division (notification that the results have been loaded to the database):

– Men’s Pro Doubles: https://rball.pro/3194ac

– Women’s Pro Doubles: https://rball.pro/15da8c

– Mixed Pro Doubles: https://rball.pro/15da8c

Triple Crown Reports: (these show the winners of all Pro divisions at all WOR outdoor majors across time)

– Men’s Pro Doubles: https://rball.pro/j47

– Women’s Pro Doubles: https://rball.pro/2vv

– Mixed Pro Doubles: https://rball.pro/y43

– Men’s Pro Singles: https://rball.pro/86z

– Women’s Pro Singles: https://rball.pro/x8g

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Lets do a quick recap of the Pro/Open draws.

Men’s Pro Doubles: The men’s pro doubles draw had a slew of legends playing this year, including Greg Solis and Ravi Sohoni, past winners Brandon Davis & Josh Tucker, future hall of famer Rocky Carson & recently inducted Jesus Ustarroz, and of course my podcasting partner Brian Pineda . However, the draw was no match for the power of last year’s champs Kane Waselenchuk & Chris McDonald, who blew through the draw to repeat as champs.

Rocky & Jesus outlasted the long-time outdoor legends Solis & Ravi in the quarters, but fell 11-9 in the semis to Davis & Tucker. In the final, Kane & Chris ground out a 15-12 first game win, then blew their way to a 15-3 second game and the title.

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Women’s Open Doubles:

Four teams of ladies Open/Elite outdoor players played a well-balanced round robin draw, where three of the teams wen 2-1 and the finalists had to be determined by point differential. In the final, Marie Gomar & Karen Grisz avenged a group stage loss to Sandra Ramos Mowry & Susie Boulanger to take the title.

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Mixed Open Doubles: The legendary @Martha McDonald teamed with younger son Jack to finish 2nd in the group stage to the surprise team of Adrianna Moncada & Georges Barrera, then avenged the group stage loss in the final to repeat as champions.

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Other Major Draws in California:

– CPRT: Kane & Chris got the double win this weekend, taking out Carson & Ustarroz in the final.

– Men’s 75s: Brothers Chris and Jack McDonald teamed up to take the title, beating Sweet Lou Orosco and Max Heymann in the final.

– Men’s 100/Centurion: The biggest draw of the event was 100+, with 13 teams. In the final, Miguel Arriola / Tony Hernandez rebounded from a 15-0 first game loss to beat Scott St Clair / Tony Burg in a breaker for the title.

– Men’s Open: Brandon Davis / Brian Pineda ground their way to an Open title, beating Greg Solis / Lou Orosco in the final.

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Congratulations to the 2026 Hall of Fame Class, who were inducted Saturday afternoon. Kevin Booth and Greg Freeze both had decades-long dominance in the sport and in Outdoor Nationals and are well deserving. To read their bios, go to these links:

Booth: https://www.usaracquetball.com/news/2026/june/23/kevin-booth-wor-hall-of-fame-inductee-class-of-2026

Freeze: https://www.usaracquetball.com/news/2026/june/23/greg-freeze-wor-hall-of-fame-inductee-class-of-2026

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Thanks to the Tourney Directors Peggine Tellez, Mike Coulter, and the whole 3WallBall crew, who have now taken over Outdoor Nationals. Thanks once again to all the sponsors who make this event possible.

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Next up?

Per our handy master racquetball calendar … https://docs.google.com/…/1V6OTid6rZ356voXVkoV2sN7KMMb…

NMRA Masters is next weekend in Tempe, then August has both Mexican Junior Nationals and the IRF Central American & Carribean games, always a fun regional event.

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@3Wall Ball

@WOR – World Outdoor Racquetball

Mike Coulter

2026 USA Racquetball Junior Nationals Recap

DJ Mendoza has both outdoor and indoor chops, and won the Triple Crown at USA Junior Nationals this past weekend. Photo via Rick Bernstein

USA Racquetball held its 53rd annual Junior Nationals event last week in Des Moines, Iowa, getting some really huge draws for some of the mid-teen brackets in a promising sign for the future of tournament racquetball in the states.

With this post, is official notification that the Junior Nationals results have been entered into the ProRacquetballStats.com database. For Juniors, we upload full bracket results for 21s, 18s, 16s, and 14s, but just load up winners and finalists for all age groups younger than 14U. For doubles, we load up just the finalists.

The best way to see Junior Singles winners is with the cross-year/cross-age group Matrix reports built into the site. They show all the winners for all age divisions going back to 1974. Here’s direct links for each Matrix report:

– Boys USA Junior National Singles Champion Matrix: https://rball.pro/mey

– Girls USA Junior National Singles Champion Matrix: https://rball.pro/cpf

Each full division draw can be accessed from the “event” pulldown after you enter either the Juniors or the Junior Doubles section. One Junior Nationals results in 18-20 singles draws plus another 15 doubles draws being entered into the database, so there’s a lot of new data here this week.

R2sports home page for the 2026 event, with all the full brackets:

https://www.r2sports.com/tourney/home.asp?TID=50993

For 2026, congrats to your Boys Singles winners:

– Boys 21U: DJ Mendoza

– Boys 18U: London Townsend

– Boys 16U: Grant Williams

– Boys 14U: Scott Haacke

– Boys 12U: Ryan Joeckel

– Boys 10U: Damian Gil

– Boys 10Udb: Finn McGrath

– Boys 8U: Saharsh Gorthy

– Boys 8Umb: David Lopez

– Boys 6Umb: Vaihbhav Gorthy

Congrats to your Girls singles winners:

– Girls 21U: Naomi Ros

– Girls 18U: Alexis Boyko

– Girls 16U: Rebecca Christopher

– Girls 14U; Yana Alegria

– Girls 12U: Yana Alegria

– Girls 10U: Sameera Rai

– Girls 10Udb: Alyana Machado

– Girls 8U: Sasha Rai

– Girls 8Umb: Almira Pridatko

– Girls 6Umb: Nainika Singi

Congrats to your Boys Doubles winners:

– Boys 21U: Cole Sendrey & DJ Mendoza

– Boys 18U: Grant Williams & Evan Whitley

– Boys 16U: Grant Williams & Evan Whitley

– Boys 14U: Scott Haacke & Nicolas Suarez

– Boys 12U: Reyansh Chandel & Ryan Joeckel

– Boys 10U:Damian Gil & Luca Fernandez

Congrats to your Girls Doubles winners:

– Girls 21U: Naomi Ros & Ava Kaiser

– Girls 18U: Meyer, Elaina & Ortwerth, Stella

– Girls 16U: Boyko, Alexis & Christopher, Rebecca

– Girls 14U: Strobach, Addie & Whitley, Morgan

– Girls 12U: Singh, Riva & Marivada, Sloka

– Girls 10U: Rai, Sameera & Lu, Meiqi

And Congrats to your Mixed Doubles winners:

– Mixed 21U: Mendoza, DJ & Garcia Fatima Sanchez

– Mixed 18U: Reyes, Brandon & Torres, Montserrat

– Mixed 16U: Mangalampalli, Vaishant & Bawa, Sarah

– Mixed 14U: Haacke, Scott & Strobach, Addie

– Mixed 12U: Chandel, Reyansh & Marivada, Sloka

– Mixed 10U: Gil, Damian & Rai, Sameera

(Apologies for any typos: these were hand typed into this post, but should get typo-corrected in the database).

Here’s some quick commentary on the Singles champions by grouping.

Boys Singles quick recaps

Boys 21U came down to Mendoza and Sendrey once again, and once again DJ came out on top. These two have also met on the IRT recently, and after early career h2h dominance Mendoza has now taken over in their rivalry. In 18U, London Townsend (finalist last year) was able to take it one step further and claim his first Junior National title. Grant Williams, who was the losing finalist in four straight Junior National events prior to this year, finally got the gold, taking the 16U title with a dominant performance end to end.

In 14U, Scott Haacke took his second title (he won 12U two years ago). In 12U, Ryan Joeckel won his second straight title. Damien Gil took his first junior title in 10U while Finn McGrath took his first 10Udb title. Saharsh Gorthy took his 2nd straight 8U age group title, this year moving up from Multi-bounce. David Lopez took this year 8Umb title, and Saharsh’s younger brother Vaibhav Gorthy won the 6Umb division.

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Girls Singles quick recaps

LPRT touring pro and 2025 US National champ Naomi Ros won her 6th straight junior national title since converting over from Mexico; she has one remaining year in U21. Alexis Boyko, who has had a couple of silver medals in the past, broke through in 18U for her first Junior National title. Yana Alegria, who two years ago won 10U, took both the 12U and 14U title, something we havn’t seen in Junior Nationals for some time. Sameera Rai took the 10U title for her 2nd career win. Alyana Machado won her first title in 10Udb, beating the 8U gold medalist Sasha Rai in the final. The two multi-bounce champions were both first time winners: Almira Pridako in 8Umb and then Nainika Singi in 6Umb.

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Multi-title winners

The following players took home the coveted “Triple Crown,” winning singles, gender doubles, and mixed doubles this year:

– 21U DJ Mendoza: singles, doubles with Sendry, Mixed with Sanchez

– 14U: Scott Haacke: singles, doubles with Suarez, Mixed with Strobach

– 10U: Damian Gill: singles, doubles with Fernandez, Mixed with Rai.

Also, special mention to Grant Williams, who won three golds this weekend: 16U singles, 18U doubles with Whitley, and 16U doubles with Whitley.

The following players took home the “double,” winning both Singles and a Doubles title in their age groups:

– Boys 12U: Ryan Joeckel

– Girls 21U: Naomi Ros

– Girls 18U: Alexis Boyko

– Girls 10U: Sameera Rai

Special mention to Yana Alegria for winning gold in both 14U and 12U.

These players took the “Double Double,” winning both Gender and Mixed doubles titles.

– 14U Girls and Mixed: Addie Strobach

– 12U Girls and Mixed: Sloka Marivada

Phew. that’s it for USA 2026 Junior Nationals. Congrats to all the 2026 winners. The National team includes the two singles finalists and the doubles winners in each division; those players have first right of refusal to represent Team USA at Junior Worlds later this year at a date/site yet to be announced.

Next up on the racquetball calendar? 2026 Outdoor Nationals, teaming with 3WallBall this year in Huntington Beach! We’ll preview and recap that event as we always do. We also will announce the 2026 WOR Hall of Fame Class at 2026 Outdoor Nats.

Official Season-Ending data capture into Pro Racquetball Stats DB for both IRT and LPRT

This is just a quick note to the community that, as of 6/24/26, all tournament points from last season have officially rolled off, and the points are finalized for the 2025-26 seasons for both pro tours.

I have captured the season-ending stats for both the IRT and LPRT, done the data ingestion, name cleanup, and updated historical artifacts.

Here’s some links for you to peruse, if interested, related to this work. All the below have been updated for the rankings, Kane’s title, etc for the latest season:


IRT Season-Ending Links

  • 2025-26 Season ending rankings in the DB: https://rball.pro/b147b4
  • Distinct winners report for 2025-26: https://rball.pro/aca563 . We had 5 winners this season, including two first timers.
  • 2025-26 Season Summary Report, with rankings populated: https://rball.pro/f8328f
  • Tour History Major events: https://www.proracquetballstats.com/irt/tour_history.html
  • List of Year End title Winners: https://www.proracquetballstats.com/irt/year_end_titles.html
  • Number of Overall titles: Kane now at 16: https://www.proracquetballstats.com/irt/number_of_titles.html
  • IRT Tour Year end Summary: a detailed list of events related to the tour, its players, and the sport. https://www.proracquetballstats.com/irt/year_end_summaries.html
  • 2026-26 Season Seed Report: https://rball.pro/2bda1d . This is a cool query that shows all the players and their seeds in each event for the whole season.

LPRT Season-Ending links. Here’s the same links for the LPRT.

Note: Late in the 2025-26 season, the LPRT introduced ‘Frozen Rankings’ concept for injured or players out on maternity leave. On the LPRT website, this meant that Paola Longoria (maternity) finished in a frozen #2 ranking, while Samantha Salas (injury) finished in a frozen #9 ranking. We are showing their actual season-ending ranking based on performance in the database (Longoria finishing #3 on points, Salas finishing #20). This is consistent with the purpose of the frozen rankings in Tennis, which is to maintain seeding after a break so that a player does not have to enter qualifying upon their return

  • 2025-26 Season ending rankings in the DB: https://rball.pro/6ec129
  • Distinct winners report for 2025-26: https://rball.pro/fe6aba: Vargas won 5 of the 6 events, and Longoria failed to win a tournament for the first time since the 2006-7 season.
  • 2025-26 Season Summary Report, with rankings populated: https://rball.pro/07bb70
  • Tour History Major events: https://www.proracquetballstats.com/lprt/lprt_tour_history.html
  • List of Year End title Winners, which also has a couunt of the # of overall titles in the same file:
    https://www.proracquetballstats.com/lprt/lprt_year_end_titles.html
  • 2026-26 Season Seed Report: https://rball.pro/0507e0. This is a cool query that shows all the players and their seeds in each event for the whole season.

Next up? We’ll be doing our typical season-ending summary posts for both tours, breaking down the top10 finishers and making some predictions for next season. Look for those the rest of this month and into July.

After that, Look for Brian Pineda and I to do some off-season content and hopefully a Mailbag or AMA session where we take questions from the fans.

IRT 2026 Gateway City Pro/Am Recap

Acuna gets his second ever career win. Photo US Open 2019 Kevin Savory

Congrats to your Pro winners on the weekend:

– Singles: Andres Acuña

The Costa Rican takes advantage of a slew of upsets to come out on top and win his second career Tier 1 title.

R2 Sports App home page for event: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=54042

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Let’s review the notable matches in the Singles draw.

Singles Match report in the PRS database: https://rball.pro/760e6e

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In the 32s:

– LA-based former touring pro John Wolfe got an 11-9 win in the 16/17 seed match against Chicago’s Base Zera.

– DJ Mendoza needed a tiebreaker to beat his junior national doubles partner Cole Sendrey to move on.

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In the 16s:

– #8 Portillo got an injury walkover against Alonso in his 8/9 match to move on and save some effort on the court.

– #5 Montoya blasted Gastelum, who had upset him in the previous event, to move on.

– #4 Flores cruised past upset-minded Trujillo 5,4 after having been stretched to a breaker against him earlier this season

– #6 Parrilla had to go breaker to beat countryman Martell.

– #7 Manilla took out fellow American lefty #10 Carter to move on.

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In the Quarters

– #8 Portillo took out a somewhat disinterested Kane Waselenchuk in a breaker 9,(11),5. Kane often found himself slightly out of position on these very slow panel courts, hitting a number of balls between his legs or going for circus shots as the pace of play seemed to be throwing him off. Meanwhile, the slow courts and slow ball seemed better suited to Lalo’s game, as he cruised to a game 1 win and a lead in Game 2. At that point, a frustrated Kane, who the previous point had wanted an avoidable on a jam serve he was aiming at the right corner, blasted a full force forehand into Portillo’s leg, attempting again to hit that reverse pinch and again demanding an avoidable. To many, it seemed like an intentional shot meant to inflict pain, or intimidation. Lalo worked through the blast without comment or complaint, and eventually took the match, but the resulting bruise nearly covered his entire quad. Nonetheless, it ended Kane’s title-winning season early, and gave Portillo his second ever win over Kane (Lalo was on the court when Kane tore his Achilles back in Sept 2022).

– Montoya took out Flores 12,14 in a tight match of hard hitters.

– Acuna eased past Parrilla 8,5 and seems “on” this weekend for sure.

– Manilla beats his second US National teammate in a row, topping Jake 9,13 to make the semis.

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In the Semis, a wide-open field now missing both top seeds meant a title was there for the taking.

– #8 Portillo continued his run, beating #5 Montoya to make his 3rd final of the season.

– #3 Acuna beat #7 Manilla in a tactical battle 8,13 to move into just his second career final.

In the Finals, Acuna topped Portillo 7,12 to win his second ever Tier 1 title.

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Points Implications of results

Neither #1 Kane or #2 Moscoso changed their overall best 10 results, and finish the year 1-2 easily. Acuna’s title moves him to #3, jumping over Jake for 4th. Montoya’s h2h win over Flores seals 5th place for him over the Bolivian, while Portillo’s run to the title secures 7th place.

Mar’s last minute absence drops him to 10th, while Natera’s absence costs him a season top 10 finish; he drops to #11.

We’ll do our annual season-ending deep dive into the players once the season points are finalized.

Here’s a link to my IRT Rolling 2year Calendar XLS..

men

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1z6eg6NJT6fjGMfRRyKTNLShAiDoz0TzzmQCt1_SbNBo/edit?usp=sharing

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Open Singles, other notable draws

– There was no pro doubles, but the Open Doubles was stacked. It was taken by #3 seed Mexican youngsters Erick Trujillo / Alvaro Guillen.

– Guatemalan Juan Jose Salvatierra took the Open singles title, beating Mexican Miguel Angel Arteaga Guzman in the final.

– StL High school league grads Kyla Davis / Ella Boaz took the Women’s Open doubles title.

– Kelly Gremley / Blase Zera took the Mixed Open doubles title.

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Thanks for all the streaming on the weekend, especially from broadcasters Carrie Reitmeier, Favio Soto, Pablo Fajre, and the entire IRTLive crew.

Thanks to the Tourney Director @dan whitley for putting this event on!

Thanks to the Tourney Sponsors KWM Gutterman, Downey Ethics, St. Louis Redbirds, Wood Phillips Patent/Trademark/Copywright attorneys, and

Thurman Brooks – TLBJ CPA Firm.

Reminder to Players! Please like and follow this page so that when I tag you, you see it. Facebook will only retain tags of people that like/follow a page, which means lots of you are not getting the notoriety of getting tagged and noticed on Facebook. If your name is here and it isn’t tagged … it probably means I attempted to tag you but Facebook stripped it.

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Next up?

Per our handy master racquetball calendar …

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1V6OTid6rZ356voXVkoV2sN7KMMbIP9SZd0MssH_nPGU/edit?usp=sharing

In two weeks, we have US Junior Nationals, to determine the players eligible for the 2026 World Juniors later this year. That will then take us to the end of the 2025-26 season officially. July features Outdoor Nationals, NMRA Nationals. August will feature Mexican Junior Nationals, an IRF regional competition in the DR, and a lower tier IRT event in Costa Rica to kick off the 2026-27 season.

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tags

IRT 2026 Gateway City Pro/Am Preview

Andree Parrilla is a newlywed, and could make a deep run. Photo 2019 US Open via Kevin Savory

Welcome to the final event of the 2025-26 IRT season, the 2026 Gateway City Pro am, being held at the Vetta Sports clubs in the St. Louis area. This event takes the place of the postponed US Open, which was initially set to fall on this date but has been pushed a year due to unforeseen circumstances.

St. Louis holds an important spot in the history of our sport. It hosted a number of the early IRA Nationals events (in 1969, 1970, 1973, and 1975). It also was home to a slew of the sport’s early stars, including Marty Hogan, Jerry Hilecher, Steve Serot, Benny Koltun, Doug Cohen, Kenny Wong, Jerry Zuckerman, and the Gross brothers. More recently, StL hosted a decade-long event annually, named the IrtNetwork.com open initially, then Party with the Pros and Winter Rollout.

St. Louis’ High School league remains unique in the country, and the area still churns out hundreds of tournament players per year.

R2 Sports App link: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=54042

There are 33 players in the Men’s Pro singles draw, including four St Louis-area top high school players, the entire Guatemalan men’s national team and the entire Costa Rican men’s national team, who make up a bulk of the players seeded 20 and above. This event is the last pro event prior to this summer’s Central America and Caribbean Games event, which every north American country not called USA or Canada is playing.

top20 players missing; unfortunately we got word earlier this week that civil unrest in Bolivia made it impossible for #2 Conrrado Moscoso to get his visa processed in time to make the flight up here. This robs Moscoso of one final pay day for the season, and thins the draw considerably. He and Kane met 8 times this season, but we won’t get a 9th. I suppose i’m thankful that the tour race didn’t get decided by this event, in that Kane’s win a month ago in Montana sewed up the title for the season.

– #2 Moscoso (visa issues)

– #10 Natera

– #17: Carrasco (presumably also visa issues)

– #18, #20: Miranda and Garcia: funding, possibly visa issues (both still live in Bolivia as well)

– #19 Sam Bredenbeck: stepping back

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Let’s preview the draw. Here’s some notable qualifying matches that i’m looking forward to:

In the round of 32:

– Wolfe-Zera in the 16/17 should be close

– US Junior national team member Grant Williams faces down the always tough Jordy Alonso in the first round

– Sneaky good Costa Rican player Gabriel Garcia faces Montoya.

– We get an all-USA Junior U21 matchup between DJ Mendoza and Cole Sendrey, who have together won two straight US Junior national doubles titles together.

– Evan Whitley, son of the tournament director, gets to face #2 Jake Bredenbeck in his pro debut.

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round of 16:

– I like the 8/9 Portillo-Alonso match; that could go either way depending on who’s hot or who is rusty.

– Montoya has to play Gastelum again; last time they played, Diego beat him.

– The red-hot Trujillo plays into the similarly red-hot Jhonathan Flores; this is too early to see this matchup, which on form is at least a quarterfinal match.

– Parrilla faces Martell in a throwback to a decade-old WRT matchup

– An all USA lefty showdown between Manilla and Carter in the bottom half of the draw.

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Projected Qtrs:

– #1 Kane will face the Portillo/Alonso winner. Both have wins over him, but neither will be favored.

– In the 4/5, assuming seeds hold, we get a banger between Flores and Montoya. Two of the hardest hitters on tour could be awesome. Or, we could get a shocker rematch between Gastelum and Trujillo if things don’t fall the way the top seeds want.

– I’m projecting an upset in the 3/6 Acuna-Parrilla match; Parrilla owns a dominant 7-2 h2h lead in my database over Acuna, dating all the way back to a 10U world juniors matchup 20 years ago.

– Another all-USA matchup awaits Jake Bredenbeck, who will face either Manilla or Carter for a semis spot.

Semis:

– Kane vs Flores/Montoya winner; love this match, hope its Kane-Flores, who have met twice in their careers, both being relatively interesting matches to watch.

– Recently married Parrilla shocks the tour with his second upset in a row, beats jake to make the final of the event.

Finals; Kane over Parrilla in a fun contrast in styles.

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Doubles review: There are no Pro doubles this weekend, as the tour is focusing on driving more prize money to the singles draw, making this an IRT-800 event. There will be some solid teams in the Open Doubles draw, which we’ll recap on Monday.

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Look for Streaming in the regular places; follow the IRT on Facebook and sign up to get notifications when they go Live. Look for Carrie Reitmeier, Favio Soto, Pablo Fajre, @JTRball, and the IRTLive crew all weekend on the microphone, calling the shots!

Thanks to the Tourney Director @dan whitley for putting this event on!

Thanks to the event sponsors: KWM Gutterman, Downey Ethics, St. Louis Redbirds, Wood Phillips Patent/Trademark/Copywright attorney, and Thurman Brooks – TLBJ CPA Firm.

Thanks to tour sponsors: KWM Gutterman, Papa Nicholas coffee, Black & White Energy drinks, Reignstorm Group; tax and wealth management, Frank Hotels

Gearbox , and Formula Flow.

IRT Club Fantasy: If you’re in the IRT Club, sign up to play Fantasy Racquetball along with myself, Brian Pineda, and other club members. Also, be sure to tune into our Fantasy Fast Break podcast, which we do before and after every IRT Tier 1 event!

Associations

International Racquetball Tour

LPRT 2026 Northern Virginia Invitational Recap

Centellas has a career event, making her first pro final. Photo unknown.

Congrats to your Pro winners on the weekend:

– Singles: Maria Jose Vargas

– Doubles: Montse Mejia & Alejandro Herrera.

TL/DR executive Summary: Vargas finishes off the most dominant season on tour since the end of Longoria’s dominant run in the 2019-20 season, making the final of every event and winning all but one this season. Also, 3 of the 4 semi-finalists were Argentines, including a career run from Valeria Centellas to the pro final.

R2 Sports App home page for event: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=54043

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Let’s review the notable matches in the Singles draw.

Singles Match report in the PRS database: https://rball.pro/d9335b

In the 16s, there were no real upsets, as all the top seeds cruised to victories against lower seeds and a few of the teenagers who made the trip.

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In the Quarters

– Vargas took out Munoz 4,10

– Mendez upset Herrera 14,9. I know this wasn’t an “upset” by seed, but historically Herrera has been the better player.

– In a monumental upset, #3 Gaby Martinez was upset by #6 Valeria Centellas in an 11-10 thriller. This is her career best win, and she makes the semis for just the second time in her career.

– Mejia cruised past Amaya 6,1.

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In the Semis

– Vargas downed her Argentine teammate Mendez without much trouble to get to the final for the 7th straight event.

– Centellas, one day after beating Gaby 11-10, beats Montse 11-10 to set a new “career best win” mark and to make her first pro final, ever.

In the all-Argentina finals, Centellas finally ran out of gas and Vargas blew her out 8,0 to take the crown.

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Points Implications of results

Vargas easily finishes #1, and by virtue of Longoria’s absence Mejia should take over #2 to finish the season. Centellas’ big run jumps her to #6 for the season, easily a career-high ranking. Munoz’ quarter final run gets her back into the top 10 for the end of the season, while Annie Sanchez’ absence dumps her out of the top 10 and she misses out on a first pro top-10 finish.

Here’s a link to my Rolling 2year Calendar XLS, which I use to approximate the points after each event. It is not exact but it’s usually close enough to the actual rankings, which @Ryan Rodgers does with @R2 Sports App on behalf of the tour after each event, to allow some quick post-event analysis before the rankings post.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/16o0aE4YophvlQdezlMVj_dqPRUoDQqwE5-LtsLbOncg/edit?usp=sharing

When the tour publishes its final rankings, I’ll correct this xls, capture the data and do year-end data capture and posting.

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Doubles review

Match report in the PRS database: https://rball.pro/efecfc

Mejia & Herrera blasted Vargas & Centellas 3,2 to prevent a double title for Vargas on the weekend.

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Open Singles, other notable draws

– Atlanta’s Maurice Miller won the Men’s Open singles draw.

– Miller and Troy Warigon took the Men’s Open Doubles draw.

– Costa Rican’ teenager Larissa Faeth beat out three members of team Guatemala to take Women’s Open singles

– Christopher Ruano / Suresh Vemulapalli beat two former contemporaries of mine, when I used to actually play racquetball at something of a high level, topping Jeff Wilson and Rich Benderoth for the Combined 75+ doubles title.

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Next up?

Per our handy master racquetball calendar …

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1V6OTid6rZ356voXVkoV2sN7KMMbIP9SZd0MssH_nPGU/edit?usp=sharing

This coming weekend is the final IRT event of the season, 2026 Gateway City Pro/Am in St. Louis. I’ll be doing podcasting work with @Brian Pineda this week, preview videos for the streaming, etc. Then the last event of the “season” will be US Junior Nationals later this month.

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tags

LPRT Northern Virginia Invitational preview

Vargas has #1 sewn up; can she win one more? Photo US Open 2019 Kevin Savory

Well, it has been a minute since the Ladies Professional Racquetball Tour was in action, but here we are with one last event for the 2025-26 season. This is the 2026 LPRT Northern Virginia Invitational, being held at the Worldgate Club in Herndon, VA. This has always been one of the nicest clubs in the DC-area, just a few minutes from Dulles Airport and the flagship of a work/shopping complex that is home to more than a few tech firms that you may have heard of.

The Ladies tour has not had an event since January, a huge amount of time to be off, and a sign of the difficulties pro racquetball faces these days. The LPRT has lost half a dozen tournaments in the last few years alone; we used to have a slam in South Carolina at the Sweet Caroline Open, the Boston Open was a spring fixture, Malia Bailey used to get the crew together in Chesapeake at the end of every season, the Battle at the Alamo in San Antonio was a long-running LPRT stop, and of course for years the season ended with a Super Max slam in Kansas City thanks to Randy Root. All of these events are now gone for one reason or another, and the tour has struggled to get replacements.

The draw in DC is just 15 pros, and for the first time that I can remember there’s a bye in the round of 16 of a pro event. Hopefully the tour can rebound and put together a good slate of events for the fall.

#1 Maria Jose Vargas has officially sewn up the #1 ranking for the season; she has an unassailable lead at the top of the standings. We’ll cover her title and its implications in our season wrap up later this month. However, there’s still top 10 spots to jockey for, and the ladies in attendance are set to finish their season on a high note.

R2 Sports App link: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=54043

draw size, observations

top 10 players missing; #3 Longoria (pregnant, work or both), #6 Laime (who just recently graduated grad school, congrats), #9 Lotts.

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Let’s preview the draw.

round of 16:

– Munoz vs MRR (ahem, Josey) in the 8/9 is a fun one.

– Teenager Costa Rica phenom Larissa Faeth takes on Tier 1 winner Alexandra Herrera.

– the newly minted Hall of Famer @Rhonda Rajsich battles @Valeria Centellas, who is now up to #8 in the rankings and is seeded 6th here.

– Stephanie Synhorst, new Northern Virginia resident with her USMC-related transfer to the Pentagon, takes on Amaya.

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Projected Qtrs:

– Vargas over Munoz, a frequent 1-8 matchup

– Herrera over Mendez. They’ve played 12 times across LPRT and IRF, and though Mendez got her the last time they played (2025 PARC), Herrera h olds a commanding lead in their meetings.

– Gaby over Valeria: Centellas has been impressing, but Gaby still is the better player here.

– Mejia over Amaya

Semis:

– Vargas over Herrera: Maria Jose is too powerful.

– Mejia over Gaby in a battle that’s been fought for more than a decade.

Finals; Vargas takes out Mejia to finish the season with another title.

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Doubles review

Just 5 teams entered, but world’s two top teams are seeded 1 and 2. Look for Vargas/Centellas to meet Mejia/Herrera and for Vargas to take the double.

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Look for Streaming in the regular places; follow the LPRT on Facebook and sign up to get notifications when they go Live. Lok for Timothy Baghurst, Sandy Rios, Jerry J Josey Jr., and Tj Baumbaugh on the mike, calling the shots!

Thanks to the Tourney Directors X and X for putting this event on!

Thanks to our main sponsors X and X and X; it goes without saying that without you and your support, we don’t have a sport.

Racquetball Canada 2026 National Championships Recap

Juliette Parent wins her first ever Canadian National Singles title. Photo by Mike Sudoma/COC *MANDATORY CREDIT*

This past weekend, Racquetball Canada held its all-encompassing National championships in Burlington, Ontario. National titles and National team spots were handed in in Singles, Doubles, and Juniors. Here’s a quick summary of the winners and a recap of the surprising results in the Adults.

Congrats to your 2026 Canada National Open Singles winners on the weekend:

– Men’s Singles: Samuel Murray

– Women’s Singles: Juliette Parent

Congrats to your 2026 Canada National Open Doubles winners on the weekend:

– Men’s Doubles: Samuel Murray & Tommy Murray

– Women’s Doubles: Frederique Labert & Michelle Morissette

(Reminder: Canada doesn’t separately compete Mixed Doubles as US & Mexico does, instead selecting the international Mixed partners from the qualified pool. There was a Mixed Doubles event in Burlington but it was not a National-level field).

Lastly, Congrats to your 2026 Canadian Junior National Singles Champions:

– Boys 21U: Leyton Gouldie

– Boys 18U: Asher Pocsai

– Boys 16U: Evan Aiello

– Boys 14U: Oren Gouldie

– Boys 12U Friendship: Christopher Martin-Wiens

– Girls 21U: Chloe Jauvin

– Girls 18U: Kaitlyn Couckuyt

– Girls 16U: Ariana Buller

– Girls 14U: Talia King

We’ll do some commentary for each of the groups down below.

Trackie Sports App home page for event:

https://secure.racquetballcanada.ca/…/racquetb…/1017489/

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Men’s Open Singles

PRS report: https://rball.pro/ce1246

Change comes slowly at the top of Canada Racquetball, as the country’s two top players Sam Murray and Coby Iwaasa met for the title for the 8th straight season. Murray re-took the title after Iwaasa’s big upset in 2025, topping him in four to give him his 7th national crown.

Props to Leyton Gouldie for making the semis at Nationals for the first time.

See https://rball.pro/879898 for a list of all Men’s Canada National finals historically, going back to the mid 1970s.

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Women’s Open Singles

PRS report: https://rball.pro/6e1877

Juliette Parent, who has slowly been working her way up the ranks in Canadian Racquetball, finally broke through for her first ever National title, beating 5-time defending champion @Frederique Lambert for the title. These two met in the last four finals, but on this day Parent dominated, winning 4,6,8. Her younger sister Marjolaine took 3rd place.

See https://rball.pro/5deb35 for a list of all Women’s Canada National finals historically, going back to the mid 1970s. Fun fact: the very first Canadian National Women’s champion was none other than Monique Parent … and this year her daughters came in 1st and 3rd.

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Men’s Doubles:

PRS Report: https://rball.pro/f9b837

Brothers Sam and Tommy Murray returned to the top after several years away with a solid 3-game win over defending doubles champ Coby Iwaasa and his new partner Mitch Brayley.

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Women’s Doubles:

PRS Report: https://rball.pro/3f62a1

Frederique Lambert and partner Michele Morissette won their 5th straight Canadian National title over the Parent sisters7,8,8. It’s the 7th overall Doubles national title for both ladies, who each earned an additional two titles prior to their first title together in 2022 with other partners.

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Boys Junior Results.

Matrix report of all Canadian Junior boys champs: https://rball.pro/ny4

Leyton Gouldie wins in 21U after taking the last two 18U titles; this combined with his semis finish in the Adult bracket portends well for his future in Canadian Racquetball. Asher Pocsai takes 18U, for his first junior title since 2022. Evan Aiello gets his first Canadian title in 16U, while Leyton’s younger brother Oren Gouldie wins 14U for the third year in a row.

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Girls Junior Results.

Matrix report of all Canadian Junior boys champs: https://rball.pro/5zu

Chloe Jauvin takes the 21U title in the absence of last year’s winner, and in doing so completes a rather rare feat: she’s won every possible level of Junior titles. She now owns an 8Umb, two 10U, 12U, 14U, 16U, 18U last year, and now a 21U junior title. Amazing. Kaitlyn Couckuyt wins her 4th junior national title in a row in 3 successive age divisions. Ariana Buller’s 16U title his her 2nd career title, while 14U winner Talia King repeats as champion.

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That’s a wrap for Racquetball Canada Nationals for 2026. We’ll be back next fall with their qualifier. Congrats to all the new Canadian National team members, adults and juniors.

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Next up?

Per our handy master racquetball calendar …

https://docs.google.com/…/1V6OTid6rZ356voXVkoV2…/edit…

June gives us one last pro stop for both the IRT and the LPRT for the 2025-26 seasons; the ladies are in Northern Virginia at an old haunt of mine in Worldgate, while the Men travel to St. Louis to play at the Vetta center. At the end of June, we get the final USAR event of the season in Junior Nationals, being held in Des Moines, Iowa this year.

IRT 2026 Pro Nationals Recap

Kane wins the event and the year end title, his 16th. Photo Ken Fife

Congrats to your Pro winners on the weekend:

– Singles: Kane Waselenchuk

TL/DR Executive Summary: Kane wins the event, his 5th of the season, his 133rd of all time, but more importantly clinches the 2025-26 season ending title for his 16th career pro title. If there was a Mount Rushmore of Racquetball, it would be Kane, Cliff, Sudsy, and Hogan … and Kane now has as many year end titles as the other three legends combined.

R2 Sports App home page for event: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=51565

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Let’s review the notable matches in the Singles draw.

Singles Match report in the PRS database: https://rball.pro/08ee66

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In the 16s, a couple of monumental upsets

– Diego Gastelum, who has been slowly creeping up the rankings, got a career best win over #5 Rodrigo Montoya, who this pundit had pegged for the semis. (12),12,6 for his first ever win over a top 8 pro.

– Also in this same quadrant, Erick Trujillo continues his rise back up the rankings with a heart-stopping 11-10 win over #4 Andres Acuna. Acuna had match point at 10-4 in the breaker … but skipped a return for the win and then watched as Trujillo came all the way back for the win.

– Mar needed a breaker to over take Thomas Carter, then an ankle injury took him out of the quarters.

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In the Quarters

– #1 Kane handled #9 Manilla 3,9, about what you’d expect at this juncture. Adam is crafty enough to get points but not enough to really press Waselenchuk.

– Trujillo put down Gastelum 11-7 in the third to earn his first career pro semi.

– Flores has to go deep into the breaker to beat Jake 11-8 to advance to his third straight semi-final. Flores is establishing himself as the 3rd best player in the world behind the two top seeds on tour.

– Moscoso got a walkover against Mar … saving some wear and tear on his body for the eventual final against kane.

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In the Semis

– Kane obliterated Trujillo 0,4 in a match that looked for a bit like it may be a double donut in a pro semi.

– Moscoso topped Flores once again, but was pushed as hard as his younger countryman has done so far with an 11-7 breaker.

In the Finals

– Kane wasn’t really troubled throughout, opening up a 12-0 lead in game one. Moscoso, as he normally does, seems to start slow then wake up and pulled the match back to 14-9, but it was too much of a deficit. In game 2, led throughout the early portion of the game, then at the mid way point down 6-8, Kane took over, blitzing Conrrado for a handful of points to take the lead, one which he’d never relinquish. At match point, Kane put away an easy cross court winner for the game, the match, the tournament, and the season title.

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Points Implications of results

As mentioned at the top, and in the previews, Conrrado had to win out to win the title. With this win, Kane has an uncatchable lead … even if he didn’t even show up for the last event of the season. He wins his 16th career pro title at the age of 44, a pretty amazing feat.

Here’s a link to my IRT Rolling 2year Calendar XLS, which I use to approximate the points after each event. In the interests of the race, I have been keeping this artifact exactly matching the top 20-25 players for the season.

men

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1z6eg6NJT6fjGMfRRyKTNLShAiDoz0TzzmQCt1_SbNBo/edit?usp=sharing

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Open Singles, other notable draws

– Subieta beat Veronica Sotomayor in the Men’s Open final.

– Montoya/George topped Natera/Frank in the Men’s Open doubles final.

– Centurian Doubles: Monchik and Frank blitzed the draw for the win.

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Thanks for all the streaming on the weekend, especially from broadcasters Carrie Reitmeier, Favio Soto, Pablo Fajre, and the entire IRTLive crew.

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Next up?

Per our handy master racquetball calendar …

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1V6OTid6rZ356voXVkoV2sN7KMMbIP9SZd0MssH_nPGU/edit?usp=sharing

No pro events the rest of the month, but we do have Canadian Nationals on Memorial Day weekend. Then in June, each of the IRT and LPRT have season ending events, along with USA Junior Nationals. I’d imagine we’ll ahve Mexican Junior Nationals announced soon (Canada does its Jr. Nats at its May overall national championships).

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tags

International Racquetball Tour

IRT 2026 Pro Nationals Preview

Can Montoya shake up the year end title race? Photo Kevin Savory 2022 Portland IRT event

The 2025-26 IRT season is coming to an end, and the competition is heating up for the year-end #1 spot. The second to last event this season is the 2026 Pro Nationals, coming to you from Missoula, Montana. It’s the first time a Tier 1 has ever featured in Montana, and its the return of the venerable “Pro Nationals” title for events for the first time since 2009 in Chicago. Before that, it was a decade-long property run by Mike Coulter out of Las Vegas and was perhaps the 2nd most popular stop on tour for years.

R2 Sports App link: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=51565

23 players made the treck to Montana for the Singles draw; there’s no doubles so it’s win or go home all weekend for the pros.

top20 players missing; #7 Parrilla is still nursing an injury, #10 Lalo had a conflict. #12 Alonso and #14 Martell make it a quartet of top Mexicans missing this draw, and the two leading Argentines (Garcia and Miranda) did not make the long flight.

Many of the Bolivians stuck around for the week in between Los Cab and Montana, with Moscoso & Carrasco staying in California and winning titles at the Paddleball US Open, while others went to San Antonio or Iowa last weekend to compete in minor IRT events.

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Let’s preview the draw. Here’s some notable qualifying matches that i’m looking forward to:

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In the round of 32s,

– we get the sole Montana Resident in this draw Gatlin Sutherland going up against Carrasco in a fun one.

– In the 16/17 matchup we get Blase Zera versus Juan Herrera II for a shot at Kane.

– Canadian vet Lee Connell has a good shot at a main draw.

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round of 16:

– The 8/9 is Manilla vs Natera, should be a good match.

– I like the upset watch for Gastelum vs Montoya, for Trujillo over Acuna, and for Carter against Mar.

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Projected Qtrs:

– Kane vs Manilla in a battle of lefties

– Montoya over Acuna to setup a rematch of Los Cab semis against kane.

– Flores makes it 3 out of 4 this season over Jake

– Moscoso cruises past Mar once again.

Semis: I’m predicting the exact same semis that we saw in Los Cab.

– Kane tops Montoya in a rematch of two weeks ago. Montoya will get his points and make his acrobatic gets, but won’t get a win.

– Moscoso handles his countryman Flores once again.

Finals;

I’m predicting we get Kane vs Conrrado in the finals for the fourth time out of the last five events. They went 11-9 in a 2+ hour marathon in California and should do the same here.

All the marbles are up for grabs here on out: if Kane wins this event or the season finale in St. Louis, he sews up his 16th career pro title. But, if Moscoso wins here it’ll all come down to the potential final in June for who gets the #1.

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Look for Streaming in the regular places; follow the IRT on Facebook and sign up to get notifications when they go Live.

Look for Carrie Reitmeier, Favio Soto, Pablo Fajre, and the IRTLive crew all weekend on the microphone, calling the shots!

Thanks to the Tourney Directors Andy Weber for putting this event on!

IRT Club Fantasy: If you’re in the IRT Club, sign up to play Fantasy Racquetball along with myself, Brian Pineda, and other club members. Also, be sure to tune into our Fantasy Fast Break podcast, which we do before and after every IRT Tier 1 event!

Associations

International Racquetball Tou r