Racquetball 2024 Year in Review

Here’s a collection of the notable/seminal moments in the sport this year, primarily focusing on those events that impacted the pro game. As I could think of them, I threw in other events of note, though I’m sure one could argue I’m missing items.

– 1/14/24: @Maria Jose Vargas wins her third straight LPRT tournament in a row, taking a commanding lead in the season to date points rankings for the 2023-24 LPRT season.

1/28/24: On the IRT at the season’s first event, 3-time defending champ Daniel De La Rosa is soundly defeated by Kane Waselenchuk in the round of 16 as the #1 seed,

which immediately puts a huge dagger into DLR’s fleeting chances at retaining #1 on tour for 2024. He had already announced he will not be playing a full slate of 2024 events, but losing in the 16s makes it even that much tougher. As it turned out, this was the sole IRT event DLR played on the year, with his pro pickleball commitments turning into a full time job.

– 2/1/24: Conrrado Moscoso ascends officially to #1 on the IRT for the first time, a seminal moment for the sport. This is the first time a non-north American

has held the #1 spot on tour.

– 2/11/24: LPRT #4 and USA #1Erika Manilla is forced to retire the US National singles final due to what was thought to be a back injury at the time. Subsequent tests and MRIs show that Erika suffered a hip labrum tear. She goes in for surgery to correct the issue mid March. She doesn’t return for fully 10 months, costing her huge portions of both the 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons as well as multiple international tournaments representing Team USA.

– 3/1/24: During the Minnesota Pro/Am, Mark Gibbs of the IRT ownership group discloses publicly that the the IRT ownership group has opened discussions

related to attempting to resurrect the US Open. This information leaks on KRG, as someone publishes the zoom link that preliminary discussions were held on without the knowledge or permission of the people on the call. Eventual discussions with the USAR board go nowhere due to the planned proximity of the US Open to 3WallBall, and the project is dropped.

– 3/3/24: Kane tops Moscoso to take the IRT Minnesota Hall of Fame event, and in doing so wins his first Tier 1 event in nearly two years. His last win was March of 2022, and he clearly showed emotions on the court after finishing off his final’s win over new IRT #1 Moscoso. With the win, he becomes the oldest player to win a Tier 1

at 42yrs, 114 days, breaking a 30-year old record held by Ruben Gonzalez.

– 3/3/24: Despite losing in the semis of the weekend’s LPRT event, Vargas ascends to #1 on tour for the first time in her career. She now leads both the rolling 365 calendar and the season to date points rank and is the odds-on favorite to take the 2023-24 title.

– 3/3/24:Paola Longoria announces her candidacy for the Mexican Chamber of Deputies (the US Equivalent of the House of Representatives) from District 5/Nuevo Leon. Elections are in June. @Samantha Salas Solis, who has family connections to Mexican politics, also runs.

– 3/24/24: Erika Manilla is featured in a full-page story in the Denver Post.

– 3/30/24: Team USA wins its first Combined Team championship in several years at the 2024 Pan Am Racquetball Championships in Guatemala.

– 4/2/24: IRT #1 Bolivian Conrrado Moscoso is chosen to light

the flame at the semi-annual Bolivarian Youth Games.

– 4/28/24: Maria Jose Vargas wins her 5th event of the season at the Sweet Caroline grand slam, essentially wrapping up the 2023-24 title. It’s her first pro title, and

she dominated the tour this year. She topped Paola in the final 11-10, and Longoria’s husband posted ugly rants on social media in the aftermath, claiming biased

refereeing (one of the line judges was Argentine for the final) as the main reason that Paola lost and has been losing all season.

– 5/25/24: Kane Waselenchuk is upset in the first round (round of 32) at the 2024 SoCal Open by Jordy Alonso . It’s the earliest defeat of his career. He had one

round of 64 forfeit from mid 2023, but otherwise he had never been defeated in any qualifying round before the 16s, even during his tour debut. As it turned out, this blip on Kane’s comeback meant little, but it propelled Alonso to make a deep run at this event and others throughout the rest of the season.

– 5/29/24: Racquetball Warehouse announces in an email to its customers that it will be closing its doors, selling itself to RacquetWorld. This is a very long-running, well known name in the industry.

– 6/5/24: Neither Longoria nor Salas, both of whom were running for the Mexican chamber of Deputies, were directly elected in the National elections. They

can still be selected/appointed by the party.

– 6/9/24: Vargas officially wins her first ever pro title by entering the season’s final event in Chesapeake and advancing past the opening rounds. She had a large enough lead on Longoria to essentially have the title wrapped up after Greenville, so this was a formality to complete her dominant season. She becomes the third

different pro to win the last three LPRT seasons.

– 8/3/24: after missing basically the entire 2023-24 season, Valeria Centellas is back and committed for the new season.

– 8/31/24: IRF Worlds are completed in San Antonio; its the first time the US has hosted a PARC or Worlds in nearly 30 years. De La Rosa wins two titles (Singles and Mixed) for team USA to power them to a #2 overall team standing behind Mexico, but then USA wins the team knockout competition to give Daniela 3-gold weekend.

– 9/1/24: Word comes out that Longoria has been selected by her party (Movimiento Ciudadano, or Citizens’ Movement, abbreviated MC) to serve in the 66th Legislature

of the Mexican Congress. This has the likelihood of restricting her travel flexibility and could impact the 2024-25 title race.

– 9/25/24: the first ever World Team Racquetball event is competed on the Las Vegas 3Wall courts. The event features four teams of players competing in doubles for a price purse. Team Dovetail wins.

– 10/4/24: Cliff Swain and Jeff Collins announce preliminary plans to bring the US open to SW Missouri State University in June 2026. They apparently

do this and publish a video before talking to the USAR board. As i can attest, being on the board for the March 2024 discussions with the IRT group, there’s a lot of steps involved with this property before it can just be handed over. I’ll certainly be curious to see how this project evolves over the next 1.5 years.

– 10/10/24: IRT #1 Conrrado Moscoso withdraws from the Inland Empire Pro/Am with an arm injury. Two days later he has surgery to treat what is described

as “periostitis” in his right arm. Then, days later the IRT issues a press release that says that the injury was “more serious than expected” and that Moscoso is now out for the rest of 2024. Moscoso’s missing the remaining events almost certainly locks up the 2024 #1 spot for Kane Waselenchuk.

– >10/13/24: Kane wins the Inland Empire event over Parrilla in a final that was marred by cross-talk between the players that spilled over into social media in the days following. More importantly, Kane regains the #1 ranking on tour for the first time since the 2021 US Open and is now the clear favorite to win the year end title at the age of 43.

– 10/20/24: In a one week period, three former IRT touring pros were all inducted into local Hall of Fames. Mike Ceresia was inducted into the Ontario Sports hall of fame, Scott Oliver was inducted into the Stockton Athletic

Hall of Fame, and Andy Roberts was inducted into the Memphis Sports Hall of Fame. Congrats to all.

– 10/31/24: young up and coming Bolivian Micaela Meneses Cuellar announces her intentions to leave the sport due to a lack of financial support from the Bolivian ministry of Health and sports and a lack of recognition to the Bicentennial Dream program. This seems to be a common refrain from Bolivian athletes, more than a dozen of whom have switched away from their home country to compete internationally for other South American countries (usually Colombia or Argentina).

– 11/5/24: Erika Manilla does a FB live session giving updates on her playing status, hip rehab, etc. She’s going to play her first tournament back at the IRT Golden State Open to test out fitness, hip, recovery, etc.

– 11/18/24: Kane Waselenchuk wins the final event of the IRT 2024 season, the Golden State Open, and with it secures his 15th career pro title. He wins in dominant

fashion, never seriously challenged, and will end up winning the year end title by more than 800 points. It is an amazing accomplishment for the 43-yr old.

After the final, he gave a heart-felt, emotional, and classy speech thanking his sponsors the tournament hosts, and his life partner for all their support in his journey back to the top from injury.

– 12/6/24: Manilla makes her return to the tour, seeded 16th at the Xmas classic. She won her opener but fell to #1 Vargas 4,8 in the round of 16. The injury ends

up costing her 10 months of the tour and she’ll have her work cut out for her to get back to the top 10 by season’s end.

– 12/9/24: Longoria re-takes #1 on tour for the first time since Dec 2023 with a win at the Xmas Classic. She’s now halfway to another pro title after two seasons of losing out to her rivals Vargas and M ejia.

– 12/15/24: IRF’s World Juniors finishes in Guatemala, with players from Mexico and Bolivia winning 29 of the 30 junior titles. Team USA had just a handful of players even making event finals and finished a distant third in the team rankings.

– Dec 2024: sources noted that Head/Penn will not renew its ball contracts that remain with any organization (they already lost the IRT contract some time ago after putting in a non-competitive bid) and sources say that Head is leaving the racquetball R&D space altogether. This would remove one of the major racquet manufacturers from the industry.

– 12/31/24: as has been known for some time, USAR’s Mike Grisz steps down from his volunteer stewardship of the role of Executive Director. Grisz’s legacy as ED will be the saving of the sport financially in the wake of the 2022 US Open financial debacle, and his championing the return of Worlds to the US in 2024.

– Dec 2024: Sudsy’s Florida based Treasure Coast series finishes for the season, having held14 events this year. It’s the only such series in the country and proof that tournament racquetball can still be successful. Monchick, who has relocated to the Pacific Northwest for work, is planning to continue the series in his new home area.

– 12/20/24: Major News in the pro sport: the IRT has reorganized and installed Keith Minor as the new majority shareholder. Minor has brought in a new leadership team and shaken up the existing organizational structure. Former IRT owner/commissioner (he was the commissioner from 2001-2009) Dave Negrete returns as the President of the tour and returns as its new Commissioner. Former Commissioner Pablo Fajre drops to be the Deputy Commissioner but retains the title of Head of Media. Pro player Adam Manilla is installed as the VP and Secretary of the tour. Immediately, there’s action taken on the months-dormant IRT website, with four new events announced for the first quarter of 2024.

– 12/21/24: USAR announces the “Office of the Executive Director” as the replacement for Mike Grisz. A three-woman team of Karen Grisz, Cheryl Kirk, and Kristin Wattz will share the executive duties of the sport on a volunteer basis going forward.

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Tags

International Racquetball Tour

LPRT

USA Racquetball

International Racquetball Federation – IRF

2024 IRF Junior Worlds Recap

One of the biggest tournaments of the year just wrapped up; Junior Worlds 2024, held at the fabulous facility in Guatemala City for the fourth time in out of the last five years. More than 200 Juniors from 14 countries competed there for the last week.

Champions were crowned in Singles, Doubles, and Mixed Doubles in six age groups: 21U, 18U, 16U, 14U, 12U, and 10U, as well as a team competition, meaning that in essence this tournament actually held 30 separate competitions. All 30 competitions are now in the database; If you see any typos, or name corrections, please don’t hesitate to reach out.

Reminder: as a practice, Pro Racquetball Stats does not capture full draws for any groups younger than 14yr olds; for the 12s, 10s, and younger we just capture the champions for historical reporting. Junior Doubles only has the gold medal match, not the full draws. If you’d like to see more data than this for juniors in the database, reach out and I’ll guide you on doing data entry.

Congratulations to your champions:

Boys Singles:

– Boys 21U: Jhoel Acha Portugal, Bolivia

– Boys 18U: Jhonathan Flores, Bolivia

– Boys 16U: Sebastian Terrazas, Bolivia

– Boys 14U: Santiago Borja, Bolivia

– Boys 12U: Alejandro Robles Picon, Mexico

– Boys 10U: Vincent Riveros, Bolivia

Bolivia takes 5 of the 6 Boys titles. Not only that, but every single final was lost by either a player from Team Mexico or a fellow Bolivian for a clean sweep of both Gold and Silver across the board.

Girls Singles:

– Girls 21U: Camila Rivero, Bolivia

– Girls 18U: Yanna Salazar, Mexico

– Girls 16U: Miranda Barraza, Mexico

– Girls 14U: Larissa Faeth, Costa Rica

– Girls 12U: Mary Hinojosa Garcia, Mexico

– Girls 10U: Lia Montserrat Gonzalez, Mexico

Mexico takes 4 of the 6 Girls Singles titles. Mexico was also the finalist in 4 of the six draws, showing a real dominance this year.

Team USA had a few of its singles entrants advance to the quarters, but USA did not have a single finalist at this event. The best result in singles for any American was @Annie Sanchez making the semis of U21 and @Naomi Ros making the semis of 18U.

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Boys Doubles:

– Boys 21U: Erick Trujillo/Sebastian Hernandez, Mexico

– Boys 18U: Eder Renteria/Jorge Gutierrez, Mexico

– Boys 16U: Sebastian Ruelas/Nicolas Galindo, Mexico

– Boys 14U: Santiago Castillo/Brian Axel Sanchez, Mexico

– Boys 12U: Alejandro Robles Picon/Max Soto, Mexico

– Boys 10U: Leonardo Zuna Campero/Benjamin Lino Daza, Bolivia

Mexico wins 5 of the 6 doubles titles, losing on the Boys 10U doubles title, where they made the finals. The losing finalists were mostly Bolivians and Team USA, the best result for USA for the event (Sendry/Mendoza losing finalists in 18U and Mangalampalli/Williams making the 14U doubles final).

Girls Doubles:

– Girls 21U: Camila Rivero/Natalia Mendez, Bolivia

– Girls 18U: Adriana Noelia Blacutt/Natalia Mendez, Bolivia

– Girls 16U: Andrea Perez Picon/Miranda Barraza, Mexico

– Girls 14U: Julia Rebello/Angelica Villaroel Garzon, Bolivia

– Girls 12U: Sofia Rocabado/Adriana Bazan, Bolivia

– Girls 10U: Lia Medrano/Lia Montserrat Gonzalez, Mexico

Bolivia takes 4 of the 6 Girls doubles titles, including a doubles double for Natalia Carolina Mendez. Team USA Victoria Rodriguez & Montserrat Tores made the 16U final for our best result.

Mixed Doubles:

– Mixed 21U: Erick Trujillo/Ivanna Balderrama, Mexico

– Mixed 18U: Nicolas Ramiro Iglesias/Florencia Villazon Chalco, Bolivia

– Mixed 16U: Sebastian Ruelas/Andrea Perez Picon, Mexico

– Mixed 14U: Santiago Borja, Valentina Villarroel Garzon, Bolivia

– Mixed 12U: Hermann Racial Gracia/Michelle Gomez, Mexico

– Mixed 10U: Kerman Damian Gracia/Lia Montserrat Gonzalez, Mexico

Mexico takes 4 of the 6 Mixed doubles titles.

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Grand total of Titles won by Country:

– Mexico: 16 of 30

– Bolivia: 13 of 30

– Costa Rica: 1 of 30

There was just one Triple Crown winner on the weekend:

– Girls 10U: Lia Montserrat Gonzalez, Mexico

These players earned two titles:

– 21U Boys: Erick Trujillo, Mexico (2 doubles titles)

– 16U Boys: Sebastian Ruelas, Mexico (2 doubles titles)

– 14U Boys: Santiago Borja, Bolivia (singles and gender doubles)

– 12U Boys: Alejandro Robles Picon, Mexico (singles and gender doubles)

– 21U Girls: Camila Rivero , Bolivia (singles and gender doubles)

– 21U Girls: Natalia Mendez, Bolivia (who won both 21U and 18U doubles)

– 16U Girls: Miranda Barraza, Mexico (singles and gender doubles)

– 16U Girls: Andrea Perez Picon, Mexico (2 doubles)

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Team Winners:

– Boys Team: 1. Mexico, 2 Bolivia, 3 USA, 4 Costa Rica

– Girls Team: 1. Mexico, 2 Bolivia, 3. USA, 4 Guatemala

– Combined Team: 1. Mexico, 2. Bolivia, 3. USA, 4.

– Boys Esprit cup: 1. Bolivia, 2. Mexico, 3 Costa Rica, 4. USA

– Girls Espirit Cup: 1. Bolivia, 2. Mexico, 3. USA, 4. Ecuador

– Combined Espirit Cup: 1. Bolivia, 2. Mexico, 3. USA, 4. Ecuador

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Every singles and doubles draw has a match report in the database that you can run: instead of repeating dozens of links we’ll give some examples here. Surf to www.proracquetballstats.com, click on either Juniors or “Junior Doubles” database, then at the very top you can pull down a match report. You can also run a number of different reports for singles and doubles.

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Singles Draw commentary

Now some quick commentary division by singles division, mostly to recognize winners who have earned multiple Junior World titles over the years, and to provide some commentary on the older divisions with players who have already competed on the pro tours…

I use these “Matrix Reports” constantly; they show all the Junior winners across every age group for all of time. These links are for the Junior Worlds and date to 1989, the first ever Junior Worlds event, but are also available for USA, Canada, and Mexico.

Boys Singles Matrix Report: http://rb.gy/acygod

Girls Singles Matrix Report: http://rb.gy/yfsvqq

Boys 21U: #1 seed Bolivian Jhoel Alexis Acha took the U21 world title, topping current IRT top-10 ranked Erick Trujillo in the semis and Sebastian Hernandez in the final. This immediately makes Acha one of the top 20 players in the world in my personal pecking order, by virtue of the company he’s keeping. One thing Junior Worlds provides is a pathway into the top players in Bolivia, who we never get to hear about other wise.

Boys 18U: Jhonathan Flores repeated as 18U World Junior champ. The only player to get a game off of him the entire tourney was in the semis, when Mexico’s #1 Eder Renteria took him to five games. Flores, for those who forgot, took out Jake, Collins, Ulliman, and Alonso in Chicago’s IRT event in March. He’s legit, and as an 18yr old is probably better than any of the U21 players still juniors-eligible.

Boys 16U: Bolivian Sebastian Terrazas wins his 2nd career junior world title; he took 12U title in 2021 previously. Terrazas did not win his own National title this year, losing to Bismark Pereria (who was upset early here), but took out both of Mexico’s top 16U players in the semis and finals to win.

Boys 14U: Bolivian Santiago Borja repeats as 14U champ, but the story of this draw was the sole South Korean entrant at Junior Worlds: Taein Woo came in and upset Mexico’s Santiago Castillo 12-10 in the fifth to open the event, then made a run to the semis before falling to the eventual champ Borja.

Boys 12U: Alejandro Robles Picon, who made the rare switch from USA to Mexico for the start of 2024, captured his first ever Junior worlds title. He and his sister had huge weekends.

Boys 10U: Bolivian Vincent Riveros starts out his junior career with a win.

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Girls 21U: Camila Rivero, who briefly switched to play for Colombia but who now is back in the Bolivian fold, repeated as U21 champ. Last year she also won the 18U title, meaning she has another two years in the U21s. She’s got a few LPRT results on her resume from a few years back, but her most notable result may be a quarter finals finish at Worlds in San Antonio earlier this year when she played Longoria tough in a loss.

Girls 18U: Yanna Salazar topped America’s best chance for a medal in Naomi Ros in the semis, then beat her country-man Cynthia Gutierrez for her first World title.

Girls 16U: First time singles winner Miranda Barraza topped Andrea Perez Picon in the final to win the all-Mexico gold medal match.

Girls 14U: Costa Rican Larissa Faeth won the sole medal at these competitions not won by someone from either Mexico or Brazil, She moved up to 14U after winning 12U last year and claimed the title in her age 13 season.

Girls 12U: Mary Hinojosa Garcia moved up from 10U to win back to back titles.

Girls 10U: Lia Montserrat Gonzalez, the sole triple crown winner, got started with a singles title.

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Thanks to the International Racquetball Federation for hosting the event, thanks to the great hosts in Guatemala, thanks to all our the coaches and parents who sacrificed to get your kids down there, especially this close to the holiday season, thanks to @Gary Mazaroff for the streaming and broadcasting with partners all tournament.

That’s it for the 2024 Racquetball year. I still owe an IRT season summary article (waiting for the final season rankings to publish), plus I’ll throw together a recap of the calendar year of events before the year is out.

International Racquetball Federation – IRF

32nd Annual LPRT Christmas Classic Wrap-Up

Longoria is back on top, both in Maryland and of the tour. Photo via US Open 2019, Kevin Savory

Congrats to your Pro winners on the weekend:

– Singles: Paola Longoria

– Doubles: @Montse Mejia and Brenda Laime Jalil

comments on winner; updated # of tourneys, updated season, etc

R2 Sports App home page for event: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=46046

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

Singles Match report in the PRS database: https://rball.pro/bd7

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In the 32s:

– @Erika Manilla made a winning return to the tour, topping newlywed Maria Renee Rodríguez 11,7 in the opener. She fell to Vargas in the next round, but she’s back on tour, which is the best news following her 10-month injury absence.

– @Frederique Lambert blasted Michelle Key 6,1 in a surprise first round matchup. Key is coming off taking Longoria to a breaker in the last event but was handled easily by the part-time player/ER doctor Lambert.

– @jesJessica Parrilla topped @Laura Brandt 0,4 to move on. Notable only because Brant’s appearance on tour at age 62 was the 3rd oldest known tour appearance in the history of the Ladies pro tour. https://rball.pro/nyi

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In the 16s:

– #9 Carla Muñoz turned the tide on a recent lost to Cristina Amaya Cassino , topping the #8 seed in a breaker. This could be a fun rivalry for a while.

– #3 Mejia was pressed by @Valeria Centellas but moved on 10,14.

– #11 Parrilla got a solid win over #6 @Kelani Lawrence to earn a rare quarter final.

– #7 @Natalia Mendez kept her recent streak alive over #10 @Samantha Salas Solis , going breaker to advance.

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In the Quarters

– #1 @Maria Jose Vargas moved past Munoz 1,11

– #4 @Ana Ana Gabriela Martínez held off #5 Laime in a close 10,12 match.

– #3 Mejia moved past country-woman Parrilla with ease 4,5

– #2 Longoria was not troubled by Mendez, winning 6,8

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In the Semis

– Vargas and Gaby went down to the wire, with Gaby having a match point at 10-10 but was unable to convert. This was just the opening Vargas needed, as she rolled off a couple points 9-10 down to win the semi 11-10 and move on. Heartbreak for the Guatemalan.

– Longoria continued her recent mastery over Mejia on the singles court 13,5 to earn another final.

In the Finals, Vargas and Longoria had another back and forth affair, this time with the long-time #1 coming out on top.

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Points Implications of results

With this win. Longoria should take back over the #1 spot on tour, which she relinquished in December 2023 for the first time since 2008. Munoz and Amaya should switch spots at the 9/10 range. Michelle Key rises to #14, which may be a career high. Lastly, Manilla comes in at #20 and will have her work cut out for her as she regains ranking points here on forward.

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Doubles review

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

Manilla and her Team USA teammate Michelle Key topped the #2 and #3 seeds to earn a final, but lost to the #1 seeds Mejia & Laime there. Still, a great result.

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Open Singles, other notable draws

– Women’s Open Singles: Centellas got the title, with a win over MRR in the final. MRR had topped Parrilla in the semis for a solid win.

– Men’s Open Singles: Local IRT veterans @Mario Mercado and MoMo Zelada , co-founders of @Formulaflow and playing out of their home club, met in the final, taken by Zelada in three.

– Mens Open doubles: IRT staff member Samuel Schulze and local Maryland player John Behm shocked Mercado/Zelada in the Open doubles final.

– The Simmons Father/daughter duo took the Mixed Open/Elite doubles title, topping two local players Imani Valentine & Chris Ruano in the final.

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Thanks for all the streaming on the weekend, especially from broadcasters Favio Soto, Steve Schulze, Pablo Fajre and the IRTLive crew

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

the International Racquetball Federation – IRF World juniors event is underway in Guatemala, with group stages going on now. We’ll possibly post a preview of the knockouts based on time this week, otherwise we’ll recap it next week. There’s one big outdoor event happening this weekend, then the year wraps up.

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tags

LPRT

LPRT 32nd Annual Christmas Classic Preview

Erika is back for the first time in months. Photo 2021 US Open via Kevin Savory

Welcome to the halfway point of the LPRT season, and the final pro event of the 2024 calendar year. It is the long-running DC-area based Christmas Classic, which has been an LPRT stop for years. The event is in its 32nd year, which puts its first iteration in the 1991.

I first helped out with this event, as far as my old files tell me, in the 8th iteration in 1999 when the event was run in at the Tysons club in Tysons Corner (McLean) Virginia. The event has moved around the DC area as clubs were closed or lost enough courts to make hosting impossible; the event has gone from Tysons to Crystal Gateway in Arlington, to Sportfit in Laurel Maryland, and now at the Severna Park Health & Racquet facility in Millersville/Severna Park area closer to Baltimore. LPRT sanctioning began in 2007 and has been consistent ever since, making it one of the longest continually running pro events out there, for either the Ladies or the Men.

R2 Sports App link: https://www.r2sports.com/website/event-website.asp?TID=46046

There’s 24 players here this weekend. Top players missing include #4 Herrera, #15 Barrios, #19 Ros and #20 Scott.

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

In the 32s:

– We have the triumphant return of @Erika Manilla , who comes in at the #16 seed. She’ll face off against another player who’s attendance has been spotty lately , long-time tour player #17 Maria Renee Rodríguez for a shot at #1 Vargas.

– The 24th seed out of 24 is California @Erica Williams, who’s flow 3,000 miles from her home town in the Bay Area to play and watch. Williams is one of the biggest supporters of racquetball on the west coast and its great to see her in the DC area.

– Two top Canadian players are entered this weekend; @Juliette Parent faces off against #12 @Lexi York in what could be a great match. Meanwhile, Frederique Lambert makes a rare appearance coming off her Canadian National selection event win last weekend; she plays into #13 Michelle Key , who’s been on fire lately.

– #12 @Jessica Parrilla faces off against Laura Brandt , who is playing this event in her age 62 season, which has to be close to a record for the LPRT. Hmm; that sounds like a query worth writing: oldest player ever to appear in a pro event? That might be a fun one.

– In the 15/18 we get María Paz Riquelme versus Khyathi Velpuri , a good test for the young Colorado based American.

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Projecting the round of 16:

– #1 @Maria Jose Vargas has to contend with Manilla in her first event back: it may be a bit too early for Erika to take out Vargas, but this is a semis-quality match in the 16s.

– In the 8/9 @Carla Muñoz and Cristina Amaya Cassino face off in the round of 16, in this 8/9 match, for the 4th time since May. Munoz won the first two this year, but Amaya got her two weeks ago in Chicago. Coin flip.

– #4 @Gaby Martinez is here, making a somewhat rare appearance, and she gets the winner of the Lambert/Key match as an opener. Gaby is a threat to win whenever she enters and has three tournament wins in the last four seasons. If she’s to go on a run she’ll have a tough opener to get her started.

– #6 @Kelani Lawrence makes the drive up from Virginia and gets a second ever meeting against @Jessica Parrilla . Kelani beat Leoni in May; can she do it again?

– #7 @Natalia Mendez and #10 @Samantha Salas Solis look to meet for the third time in the round of 16 since June; Mendez has crushed Salas the previous two times.

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Projected Qtrs:

– #1 Vargas over Munoz/Amaya winner; Vargas is 15-1 combined against her two possible opponents career on the LPRT and is coming off a win in Chicago two weeks ago.

– Great potential quarter between #5 Brenda Laime Jalil and #4 Gaby. Laime had Longoria beat two weeks ago in Chicago; I thought she rolled out match point before having it called a skip and then losing 11-10. If she’s playing at that calibre, then she’s going to be tough for Martinez to beat here. These two met in the semis in Denver, a tough TB win for Gaby before she won the title. however, these are Laime’s home courts, and they’re not playing at altitude as they did in Denver (where Gaby lives and trains and had the advantage). I’ll go with Laime in the upset.

– #3 @Montse Mejia versus the Lawrence/Parrilla Winner: Mejia got waxed in the last pro event, and hasn’t made a final since April. She shouldn’t be troubled by either player at this juncture, but can’t look forward to her anticipated semis meeting against Paola.

– #2 Paola Longoria likely faces Mendez, just as she did two weeks ago, and likely moves on with little trouble.

Semis:

– Vargas over Laime. They’ve played 5 times, but most are older results. The last time they met was in June 2023, a tie-breaker win for Vargas. I sense Laime presses Vargas to a breaker but falls.

– Longoria over Mejia; they’ve met 26 times in top-level/non-regional event competitions. After a spell in 2022 when Mejia had her number, Longoria has taken back over the h2h rivalry and should win here.

Finals; I like Vargas over Longoria again to keep her lead atop the rankings.

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Doubles review

The partnerships in DC are crazy this week, with Longoria curiously not playing and Herrera missing. After winning the previous title with Key, Laime picked up Mejia and are the #1 seeds. meanwhile, Key teams with the returning Manilla to form a pretty solid team on paper; all depends on how rusty Manilla is. Team Argentina remains #2, while team Guatemala is #6 and is a real favorite from the bottom half. The two top Canadians are here, but both Lambert and Parent are playing with others (instead of getting cycles playing together for future IRF events). So, interesting draw for s ure.

I’ll go with #1 Laime/Mejia from the top, Rodriguez & Martinez from the bottom, and Laime/Mejia title.

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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. Look for Timothy Baghurst, Sandy Rios, Jerry J Josey Jr., and Tj Baumbaugh on the mike, calling the shots!

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Racquetball Canada Fall Selection Event Recap

Sam Murray wins his 19th career Canadian title (photo via Rball Canada)

While us pilgrims in the US were celebrating Thanksgiving and watching football, Racquetball Canada held the first of its two “Selection” events for its national team, with the nation’s top players heading to Brandon, Manitoba, Canada for the 2024 Fall Selection Event.

Here’s a quick recap of the event with some fun stats.

Website for results: https://secure.racquetballcanada.ca/entry-list/matches/1014507/

Men’s Open singles Recap

Match Report in PRS database: https://rball.pro/oe6

@Samuel Murray and Coby Iwaasa met in the finals for the 15th time out of the last 16 Canadian national events, continuing their collective stranglehold on the Canadian men’s scene. In this final, Murray collected his 19th Canadian title with a come-from-behind victory over his long-time rival.

Women’s Open Singles recap:

Frederique Lambert also won her 19th career Canadian Nationals event, topping Danielle (Drury) Ramsay in the finals. Ramsay upset @Juliette Parent to get to the finals, breaking up what had been the last four Canadian national event finals.

Next up for Racquetball Canada will be the second Selection event of the 2024-25 season next February, both of which help seed players for the May 2025 Nationals that determines their National team.