
Congrats to your Pro winners on the weekend:
– Singles: Jhonathan Flores
– Doubles: Conrrado Moscoso & Kadim Carrasco
TL/DR Executive Summary: Flores becomes the 47th ever IRT Tier 1 tourney winner at the tender age of 20, fulfilling the promise that many have been speaking of since he first popped onto the scene two years ago at this event and took a game off of Kane.
R2 Sports App home page for event: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=52434
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Let’s review the notable matches in the Singles draw.
Singles Match report in the PRS database: https://rball.pro/1bf755
In the 32s, a couple of notable results:
– A week after getting pounded by Carrasco, USA junior Cole Sendrey got a career win with an 11-10 squeaker over the veteran Bolivian.
– Trujillo, for the second event in a row, edged fellow Mexican up and comer Gastelum to move into the 16s.
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In the 16s:
– Portillo struggled against Natera but advanced, injuring his ankle in the process, an injury that would force him to retire against Kane in the Quarters.
– A couple weeks after trouncing Parrilla in the 16s, Flores carried an arm injury into this event but still managed to grind his way past the ultimate grinder in Andree to move into the quarters.
– Manilla continues his comeback with a solid win over Javier Mar
– Moscoso falls behind early to Trujillo, but advances 10,4.
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In the Quarters, a couple of shocks
– Kane gets a walkover after a 15-3 game one win
– Jake plays great ball and trounces Montoya 8,6 to move on.
– Flores grinds out a game 1 win over Acuna 15-12, then blows him away 15-1 to move into the semis.
– Manilla gets the best win of his career, controlling the tempo and ousting Moscoso in the quarters to put a big dent in his title chances.
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In the Semis
– Kane just looks ordinary and Jake comes out firing in an 8,12 win. Per Manilla, the court conditions really hampered left-handed drive serves up the right side, which presented a very tough challenge for Kane, Adam, and other lefties all weekend, and resultingly Kane resorted to lob serves far more than he may have liked. Did he have any lingering knee issues from two weeks prior? It did not seem so to this observer, and Jake played clean ball to move on.
– Flores moved past Manilla but needed a tiebreaker to do it.
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In the Finals, I watched and kept running notes based on the import of the match.
Game 1: Jake jumps out to early lead; he’s playing super fast, and interestingly getting points by taking pace off, not increasing pace. But, Flores digs in, starts chipping away at the lead point by point and goes from 2-7 down to 9-9. Flores first serving at a very high pace, getting a lot of weaker returns from jake. Flores also incredibly adept at ceiling ball rallies and gets a lot of “who makes the error first” points. Takes the lead at 10-9; jake only really successful against Flores’ serve when he attacks.
Clearly, Both players are struggling with court conditions, and seem to have best success working along the right side of the court and/or depending on pinch/splat kills. Manilla talks about just how fast Flores is on the court; not from a diving perspective but from a court coverage perspective. Flores rekill off of Jake’s drive is scary good.
The pair trade points 9-9, 10-10, 11-11… jake gets a couple of points quick where Flores tries to get too cute mid-rally with pinch shots while Jake is in front court. Jake’s use of jam serves all game pays off with a setup on 13-11 but Flores crushes a forehand kill to save first game point. Flores takes a curious timeout 11-14 and entering service box… doesn’t pay off. Flores skipping a ton of opportunities late leads to Jake winning first game 15-11.
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Game2
Flores jumps out early with a series of awesome rallies. Now both players taking pace off during the rallies, perhaps due to the inconsistencies of the court (bowed front wall, cement side walls vs panel front, weird bounces off the back). Suddenly Flores is up 6-0. Flores really showing how good a ceiling ball player he is; he “wins” ceiling ball rallies over and over, with Jake the first to make a mistake and give Flores an attacking opportunity. Flores just starts lob serving looking to enter into CB rallies as a result, with great success.
Suddenly you look up and its 10-1 … Flores is swinging easy, getting the bounces, makes some amazing adjustments off the back court bad bounces … game is getting away from Jake. Flores comes up slow from a dive and loses a couple of
quick points … ended by a buried backhand 2nd shot, which seems to give Flores his air back. Game seems stalled for Flores; he’s either tired or just a bit lackadaisical; suddenly its 13-7 as Jake goes on a run. Flores struggling to put
balls away he was killing before. Jake will get a couple points … then Flores wakes up and kills a ball with ease but is struggling to put the game away. Wakes up, hits a great jam for a 3-shot rally to get to game point then pulls out a rare right-side drive for an ace and Game 2. Lots of expended energy here from both players in a game that probably should have been like 15-2.
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Game 3
Flores serving to start TB; goes with lob serve again; someone (Alvi?) is giving him tips that he’s winning the CB rallies. Jake gets in the box, goes back to his Jam serve, which has give him a lot of success this match, boom up 3-1. Broken ball in game 3 … a rarity for the FF ball. Flores makes a couple of fatigue errors … jake sees it and runs off a bunch of points. Flores needs to take a TO, Jake quick serving him to take advantage … In a flash its Jake 6-2.
Flores clearly tired … needs to remember to hit the ball at full tilt and not to ease off; that’s his strength. He goes back to drive serve, gets a couple of points quick to get it back to 4-6. Ace serve for 5-6. Flores scores 5 in a row by getting his intensity back; scores them in a flash.
Now its Jake on his heels momentum-wise… jake gets a tricky service return to get the serve back at 6-7 but gets a crap bounce mid-rally to lose the serve again … everything going Flores way. Jake guts out a tough rally with a buried splat from deep to get the serve back at 6-7. Flores goes from a really poor circus shot mid-rally to give up a point for 7-7. Jake gets a killable return off a z serve for 8-7, but Flores kills a serve off the back wall to get back in the box.
Flores keeps jake on the move for 8-8. Flores cracks out a serve leading to 9-8 lead and jake TO. Back in the box; great rally ends with a Flores diving kill for 10-8.
match point on his racquet: Went for a pinch rollout; 2nd serve … lob serve, yet another CB rally … jake leaves one short and Flores eventually buries it for his first pro win. Fitting that he wins the match on yet another ceiling ball error from Jake;
Some quick stats/info here: This is obviously Flores’ first tourney win. He wins in his 11th career event, which is pretty fast but not really near the 7-8th event range that the likes of Kane, Cliff, Sudsy all achieved.
Flores Age at first win: 20years, 249 days.
Youngest 1st time winners: 10th youngest ever.
– age 17: Serot, Harnett, Hogan
– age 18: Swain
– age 19: Huczek, Monchik, Waselenchuk
– age 20: Wagner, Yellen, Flores, GPeck
– age 21: DLR, Doyle, Hilecher, Inoue, Parrilla, Rojas
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Flores is the 47th player ever to win a Tier 1. Here’s the last 10 or so first-time winners and the date they won:
35: De La Rosa is the 35th distinct player to win an event with his Dec 2014 tourney win in New Jersey
36: Charlie Pratt is the 36th ever winner by virtue of his Dec 2017 Portland win
37: Alejandro Landa is the 37th ever distinct winner with his Sioux Falls 2018 win
38: Sebastian Franco 38th with his San Antonio 2018 win
39: Andree Parrilla the 39th distinct winner with his March 2018 Lombard win.”;
40: Conrrado Moscoso became the 40th and most recent distinct winner in Mar 2019 with his win at the Bolivian Grand Slam”;
41: Samuel Murray became the 41th and most recent distinct winner in Jan 2021 with his win at the Suivant Consulting Grand Slam”;
42: Mario Mercado became the 42nd and most recent distinct winner in Nov 2021 with his win at the Arizona Pro-Am”;
43: Eduardo Portillo became the 43rd and most recent distinct winner in Sept 2022 with his win at the Capital Classic in Severna Park”;
44: Jake Bredenbeck became the 44th and most recent distinct winner in Dec 2022 with his win at the John Pelham memorial in Portland”;
45: Rodrigo Montoya became the 45th and most recent distinct winner in Mar 2023 with his win at the Minnesota HoFame tourney in Minneapolis”;
46: Andres Acuna became the 46th player in the history of the pro tour to win a Tier 1 with his 9/7/25 win over Kane Waselenchuk at the World Singles & Doubles event in Colorado”;
47: Jhonathan Flores became the 47th player in the history of the pro tour to win a Tier 1 with his 3/15/26 win over Jake Bredenbeck to take the 2026 Shamrock Shootout”;
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Points Implications of results
As Noted, Kane missed a massive opportunity to bury Moscoso in the season standings with Conrrado’s quarter final upset. He extends his lead a little bit for the season … but if Conrrado wins 2 of the remaining 3 and makes the final of the third, he’ll take the season title. However … the presence of Flores now really complicates things for both players; he’ll move up to 8th in the standings, meaning he’ll play into Kane in the quarters in a full draw, Conrrado if someone in the top8 is missing. So we’re likely to get more matchups of the new young gun against the established top 2 players.
Here’s a link to my IRT 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.
men
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Doubles review
Match report in the PRS database: https://rball.pro/8bd97a
Carrasco and Moscoso won their 4th pro doubles title of the season, topping the long-running top-dogs Montoya & Mar once again. It’s just a matter of time before the Bolivians take over the top spot, and they have to be the PARC favorites now, even over the newly crowned Mexican national champs Parrilla & Portillo.
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Open Singles, other notable draws
– Open Singles: Flores, two weeks after staying in Open singles to the detriment of his pro results, was absent from the Open singles this weekend smartly, which opened the door for new blood. In the final, Guatemalan Juan Salvatierra took out Ohioan Victor Migliore in a tough final.
– Open Doubles: Migliore teamed with Herrera Jr. to make it two titles, topping the kids Williams & Sendrey in a walkover final that smells like travel issues.
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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 Dave Negrete for putting this event on!
Thanks to the Tourney Sponsors Papa Nicholas, KWM, and others. Without you, we do not have a pro sport.
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 …
Beach Bash 2026 is this coming weekend! quite a change to go from windy 30s to sunny 80s in Florida. Then, the week after starts the 2026 Pan American Racquetball Championships (PARC) along with the World Team Racquetball event in Louisiana. We also have USAR Intercollegiates the last weekend of the month, finishing off a very busy stretch.
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