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by Ceni » Wed Feb 01, 2023 10:21 am
by Dexterra » Wed Feb 01, 2023 1:33 pm
by Ceni » Wed Feb 01, 2023 3:43 pm
Ivan Štimac (SRE) 1 5 2
Michael Loy (DEX) 6 7 6
Xander Foyner-Devatee (CEN) 3 4 6 3
Ardil Navsal (CEN) 6 6 3 6
Elia Xal/Fia Xal (CEN) 4 4
Val Korekal/Luciano Crepaldi (CEN/SOR) 6 6
Arne Oxwald/Georg Heraklit (PUG) 2 4
Tena Špiričić/Alina Koreleva (SRE) 6 6
by Srednjaci » Thu Feb 02, 2023 10:48 am
Arne Oxwald/Georg Heraklit (PUG) 2 4
Tena Špiričić/Alina Koreleva (SRE) 6 6
Ivan Štimac (SRE) 1 5 2
Michael Loy (DEX) 6 7 6
by Dexterra » Thu Feb 02, 2023 1:16 pm
by Ceni » Thu Feb 02, 2023 5:40 pm
by Ceni » Thu Feb 02, 2023 6:07 pm
Michael Loy (DEX) 4 6 6 6 5
Ardil Navsal (CEN) 6 4 7 4 7
Tena Špiričić/Alina Koreleva (SRE) 6 0 3
Val Korekal/Luciano Crepaldi (CEN/SOR) 3 6 6
by Dexterra » Tue Feb 21, 2023 10:50 pm
by Electrum » Wed Feb 22, 2023 4:34 am
by Gnejs » Wed Feb 22, 2023 5:45 am
Ardil Navsal (1) (CEN) 6 7
Valery Ushakov (WSN) 1 6
Estée Bonnet (ARC) 6 1 7
Indigo Crawford (UAD) 3 6 5
Jack Ho (13) (ETM) 7 6
Komang Agus Artawan (PCU) 5 1
Mikhail Korotkevich (WSN) 4 4
Julia Dobrovolskaya (WSN) 6 6
Dioro Hansil (6) (CEN) 4 0
Jean van de Kloor (TJU) 6 6
Ilonka Plevnik (DOT) 2 2
Lucas Parvash (ACS) 6 6
Ralph Newkarn (11) (BRI) 6 6
Pristina Trevante (QAD) 3 3
Vivian Walsh (UAD) 3 0
Rog Ion Tralito (NTN) 6 6
Michael Loy (3) (DEX) 4 1
Johmer Vales (CEN) 6 6
Fabio Rocco (GEM) 1 4
Davi Malakkar (ACS) 6 6
Tena Špiričić (14) (SRE) 6 6
Floriano Clemente (GEM) 3 0
Vladimir Mikhailov (WSN) 7 6
Isenaka Koju (ARC) 6 3
Dewa Putu Adrian Putra (8) (PCU) 7 6
Liboria Mariani (GEM) 5 2
Jumal Huyluer (HOP) 6 6
Leone Na (BRI) 4 2
Indah Susanti (9) (PCU) 6 7
Jason Gordon (BRI) 3 6
Kyrsten Fletcher (HOP) 6 2 2
Tristan Armstrong (DEX) 2 6 6
Georg Heraklit (2) (PUG) 6 4 7
Ioana Amúlio Constantinescu (NTN) 4 6 5
Dijana Jukić (DOT) 6 6
Kim Chester (UAD) 0 3
Maddison Scott (16) (ETM) 5 7 6
Iris Bergadhga (ACS) 7 5 3
Dale Carman (UAD) 6 6
Philippe Baloui (TJU) 2 2
Janet Riley (7) (ETM) 6 6 6
Maria Cláudia Amúlio (NTN) 7 1 0
Ichitsuki Nokku (ARC) 1 5
Erik Burawa (HOP) 6 7
Augusta Björnstjärna (12) (PUG) 6 7
Hyouko Amara (ARC) 2 6
Ottavio Tessaro (GEM) 7 2 0
Lucija Bagarić (SRE) 5 6 6
Dorotea Granit (4) (PUG) 7 6
Andrew Simmons (ETM) 6 2
Michael Juno (QAD) 2 1
Alen Glesnik (DOT) 6 6
Ivan Štimac (15) (SRE) 1 4
Ven Van der Vin (QAD) 6 6
Alina Koreleva (SRE) 6 7
Felipe de la Rosa (TJU) 1 6
Lonus Varalin (5) (CEN) 6 7
Shinji Makauchi (TJU) 3 6
Mihaela Ioana Prisco (NTN) 3 4
Kora Sunder (QAD) 6 6
Ricardo Toli (10) (BRI) 6 2
Ayu Ratih Kemalasari (PCU) 7 6
Wen Si Ye (DOT) 6 7
Leonora Gaditas (ACS) 2 5
Madeleine Jeffries/Karina Gourde (HOP) 6 1 6
Fabio Rocco/Bettino Campo (GEM) 3 6 2
Ruslan Chernichenko/Alexander Zaretsky (1) (WSN) 6 6
Madeleine Jeffries/Karina Gourde (HOP) 4 2
Miguel Taberon/Pedro Arrachar (4) (ACS) 6 6
Simon Oxford/Will Washer (QAD) 2 1
Márcus Gabriel Alencastro/Mihai Caeso Mihailescu (2) (NTN) 7 6
Tomás Nascimento/Duarte Cerqueira (ARC) 6 1
Ilonka Plevnik/Mihaela Mazurkijević (3) (DOT) 2 1
Kim Chester/Vivian Walsh (UAD) 6 6
Sigrid Vasakärven (1) (PUG) 6 7 5
Damir Pernar (DOT) 7 6 7
Shroom Wafa (NTN) 7 6
Ljubomir Ivanković (SRE) 6 3
Madeleine Jeffries (16) (HOP) 6 6
Kalumu Jusu (ARC) 3 2
Isis Dimpal (ACS) 7 7
Laurence Ophelia (QAD) 5 6
Noah Damaris (5) (CEN) 6 3 6
Eric Li (ARC) 3 6 0
Jane Floral (QAD) 2 3
Harold Crawley (TJU) 6 6
Bruno Radmar (10) (ACS) 6 2 6
Derby Cuellar (UAD) 2 6 1
Stina Jansson (NAE) 4 2
Ayu Diah Padmi (PCU) 6 6
Marcus Hathwar (3) (ETM) 6 6 6
Ingrid Dal (PUG) 7 4 2
Karina Gourde (HOP) 4 3
Pedro Sanchez de la Cruz (TJU) 6 6
Eva Sarvan (14) (ACS) 6 6
Vasilisa Vasilyeva (WSN) 2 2
Nora Kahurangi (GEM) 2 3
Timaeus Andersson (PUG) 6 6
Livinia Moore (6) (ETM) 6 6
Aegis Geronimo (QAD) 0 3
Iohanna Márcia Enderssen-Moura (NTN) 6 3 4
Cornelis Zapfe (PUG) 2 6 6
Kush Acharya (11) (BRI) 6 6
Wirema Ganza (GEM) 1 4
Igor Matković (SRE) 6 6 2
Nomin Ionescu (NTN) 7 4 6
Xander Foyner-Devatee (2) (CEN) 6 6
Ion Victor Amúlio (NTN) 3 0
Dora Klemenčić (SRE) 6 0 6
Katia Hino (GEM) 1 6 3
André Bapako (15) (ACS) 6 6
Austin McDanielson (TJU) 0 2
Lukas Valerio (BRI) 6 6
Bojan Nož (DOT) 4 4
Derek Dubrovnik (8) (BRI) 6 7
Sonja Torp (NAE) 3 5
Selina Favreau (ETM) 6 6
Greta Dogsmouth (QAD) 1 1
Lacey John (12) (UAD) 6 6
Teagan Cantrell (UAD) 2 4
Luka Šatorić (SRE) 3 7 12
Putu Agus Palguna (PCU) 6 5 10
Dewa Ayu Cintya Dewi (4) (PCU) 6 3 6
Byron Aucamon (CEN) 2 6 1
Lydia Turnowski (HOP) 2 6 3
Carmichael Brown (ETM) 6 4 6
Kirigundi Padurjili (13) (PCU) 6 2 6
Gordon Li (ARC) 4 6 0
Andrew Ayama (ARC) 2 6 6
Aaren Seabrooke (UAD) 6 3 2
Marisa Maradona (7) (CEN) 3 7 6
Arthur Phoenix-Howard (BRI) 6 5 3
Jasmin Wayverson (TJU) 1 3
Vilim Gulić (DOT) 6 6
Kevin Lindman (9) (HOP) 4 6 6
Timoti Angioli (GEM) 6 1 1
Jonas Jonasson (NAE) 0 7 6
Sandra Mae (DOT) 6 6 2
by Qasden » Wed Feb 22, 2023 1:28 pm
By Jackson Darvel
Floundering Fallacies
Ambitions Come Short in Prosaic Series Opener
The National Tennis Exploratory Program of Qasden (since rebranded back to the Qasden Tennis Organization) had aimed to capitalize on a resurging interest in the sport by posting a delegation poised for good promises to the Cenian Open, a Grand Slam tournament known for kicking off the annual tennis season. What followed was a damn near total disassembling of said delegation within the opening rounds, but what little lightning they did have would be bottled and marketed in the form of one Kora Sunder. The young left-hander, the prodigy pupil of the legendary Halaeo DiGaldi, was able to put on a spectacular performance of endurance and aggression that garnered widespread attention to her name and merit, beating out a solid amount of champions of tournies past before finishing in a respectably close Octofinal bout with Cenian mainstay, Johmer Vales. It was her success that brought about the exploratory program's ascension in confidence, allowing them to safely pursue further submission for future NSTT events, including the two we'll be speaking about today: the Vika Open and Esaias International.
The Prosaic Union of Gnejs has been no stranger to triumph in the tennis circuit, having claimed several titles last season, including the Tour Singles Championship won out by their Dorotea Granit. Now, they stand hosting the 2nd and 3rd tournaments of the cycle, with Vika entering its 2nd operation, being promoted to a Tier 1 event since its debut. The Open is where Qasden had last played prior to its hiatus, with Michael Juno accumulating 55 points in the tourney that, in the future, would only ever amount to 55 points. But the past isn't what we're dwelling on, not far past, at least. We're breaking down the Qads' overall performances within the Gnejsian Series openers, a show that we can, very confidently, say has been overwhelmingly disappointing for the Vans. A complete wipeout of our singles in Esaias, combined with major ball drops from big names in Vika, has lead the second expedition back into tennis once again in the hands of Killer Kora, though with some additional faces.
For starters, who's left in Vika? Pristina Trevante, one of 5 newcomers and the only one to win the first round of qualifiers in Ceni, was blanked out by a dominant Ralph Newkarn. Michael Juno, the Kanelious Subjugate, had an even worse performance, only garnering 3 worthwhile games in a beatdown by Dotivijan Alen Glesnik. Of course, there's also the experienced duo in Simon Oxford and Will Washer, but they also failed to gain any traction in qualifiers, losing out in the second round. That leaves all but 2 names in the Vika hat: Vin Van der Ven and Kora Sunder. Triple V found himself getting hot in a daunting matchup with the tournament's #15 and Cenian Open semi-finalist, Ivan Štimac, leading to a surprisingly sound sweep over the Srednjaci native. Sunder, meanwhile, had some tense, but worthwhile back-and-forths with the Natanian, Mihaela Ioana Prisco, ultimately defeating her in 2 sets. Both of them are put through to the Round of 32, a pivotal moment in sports that decides who'll be playing with the big ones going forward, and it's a round that's not looking to throw any soft blows to either of them. For Van der Ven, it's Alina Koreleva next, an individual capable of sweeping Felipe de la Rosa who, assumingly, doesn't take to kindly to Vin ousting her Srednjacian ally in this contest. Even more threatening, however, is Kora's upcoming throwdown with the mutliversal #5, Lonus Varalin. The Cenian is an icon within the circuit, and after a great performance in his home's Grand Slam, Varalin is keen to make the Prosaic Trophy painted in red and orange. In addition and coincidence to these fortunes, these two Qads happen to be doubles partners in the Open's other tournament, being granted a Wild Card entrance into the Round of 32 against Leonid Farkaš and Goran Ibrahimović.
What about Esaias? Is there still any hope there? A smithereen, but it's a little cloudy in its self. The singles squad, comprised of the other 4 Qads sent to Ceni, were wiped out completely in Round 1, each and everyone of them sent to the sidelines in pitiful sweeps. The Doubles, however, start up tomorrow, meaning our presence in Tier 2 competition isn't gone entirely, yet. Megan Ives and Edsan Gallagher, the under-the-radar cousin pair of QTO's main fleet, is due to square off against Katia Hino & Sara Aroha of Gemmisland, a new challenger in the ring for the tour. Lastly, we got the Charmers of Chevlin, Jordanien Hutch and Flagstaff McCroy, two jacked men from the bowels of Inner Qasden's ranch lands who won hearts in Ceni, but not any matches. They'll be tasked with taking on Hopal's Lydia Turnowski & Irene Ichikawa in the Doubles' Hexadecafinal, a must-win match if they wanna catch the eyes of national schedulers the next time they need to select who plays in what tier.
That about sums up what we'll be lookin' at from here on out, at least 'til the tour moves back to Terranea for the upcoming Burnton Classic and Electrum Slam. Stay tuned, stay updated, and stay alert for future reports, live from between the rocks and hard courts of Rushmore's most metamorphic union!
by Dexterra » Wed Feb 22, 2023 9:18 pm
by Gnejs » Thu Feb 23, 2023 1:14 am
Ardil Navsal (1) (CEN) 6 6
Indigo Crawford (UAD) 4 3
Jack Ho (13) (ETM) 4 3
Julia Dobrovolskaya (WSN) 6 6
Jean van de Kloor (TJU) 7 7
Lucas Parvash (ACS) 5 6
Ralph Newkarn (11) (BRI) 6 6
Vivian Walsh (UAD) 3 4
Johmer Vales (CEN) 6 4 8
Davi Malakkar (ACS) 4 6 6
Tena Špiričić (14) (SRE) 5 6 7
Vladimir Mikhailov (WSN) 7 3 5
Dewa Putu Adrian Putra (8) (PCU) 6 7 3
Jumal Huyluer (HOP) 7 5 6
Indah Susanti (9) (PCU) 6 7
Tristan Armstrong (DEX) 3 5
Georg Heraklit (2) (PUG) 2 6 6
Dijana Jukić (DOT) 6 4 4
Maddison Scott (16) (ETM) 7 0 6
Dale Carman (UAD) 5 6 4
Janet Riley (7) (ETM) 6 6 9
Erik Burawa (HOP) 7 2 7
Augusta Björnstjärna (12) (PUG) 6 5 4
Lucija Bagarić (SRE) 3 7 6
Dorotea Granit (4) (PUG) 6 6
Alen Glesnik (DOT) 2 0
Ven Van der Vin (QAD) 6 6
Alina Koreleva (SRE) 4 3
Lonus Varalin (5) (CEN) 6 4 6
Kora Sunder (QAD) 1 6 0
Ayu Ratih Kemalasari (PCU) 7 4 6
Wen Si Ye (DOT) 6 6 2
Arne Oxwald/Georg Heraklit (1) (PUG) 6 3 8
Ruslan Chernichenko/Alexander Zaretsky (Q) (WSN) 3 6 6
Márcus Gabriel Alencastro/Mihai Caeso Mihailescu (Q) (NTN) 2 2
Damir Pernar/Bojan Nož (DOT) 6 6
Sonya Gredello/Rosa Levinsky (7) (ETM) 2 6 6
Eka Putrawan/Dwi Ratmadi (PCU) 6 4 2
Kora Sunder/Ven Van der Vin (WC) (QAD) 6 6
Leonid Farkaš/Goran Ibrahimović (SRE) 3 4
Elia Xal/Fia Xal (3) (CEN) 3 7 6
Sibylla Naess/Timaeus Andersson (PUG) 6 6 3
Kim Chester/Vivian Walsh (Q) (UAD) 6 3 6
Mason Woodmere/Maxine Woodmere (DEX) 2 6 3
Coosal Darlcheri/Perger Rianor (6) (CEN) 6 3
Marcus Hathwar/Jack Ho (ETM) 7 6
Bruno Ayragadh/Chandra Wiguna (ACS/PCU) 6 4 7
Vuyani Rabada/Kaui Kamakawiwo'ole (TJU) 4 6 9
Val Korekal/Luciano Crepaldi (2) (CEN/SOR) 6 6 3
Nathan Bensaïd/Kell Korden (BRI/CEN) 7 4 6
Jan Turovets/Vitaly Rakov (WSN) 6 7
Kayla McKerrin/Vladimir Boiyskovsky (TJU) 3 5
Tena Špiričić/Alina Koreleva (8) (SRE) 7 3 6
Maria Cláudia Amúlio/Iohanna Márcia Enderssen-Moura (WC) (NTN) 5 6 8
Putu Listya Dewi/Putu Ayu Maherani (PCU) 6 4 6
Sora Alya/Yashiro Toshiro (WC) (ARC) 4 6 3
Sara Zhuo/Gyrachor Rentos (4) (ETM/CEN) 7 6
Ottavio Tessaro/Catello Zappa (WC) (GEM) 5 3
Ricardo Toli/Elizabeth Quehall (BRI) 6 6
Ana Radkkar/Eva Radkkar (ACS) 4 3
Jaguar Zenteanite/Zeke Newham (5) (BRI) 6 6
Jumal Huyluer/Kyrsten Fletcher (HOP) 3 2
Indigo Crawford/Dale Carman (UAD) 3 4
Miguel Taberon/Pedro Arrachar (Q) (ACS) 6 6
Damir Pernar (DOT) 2 4
Shroom Wafa (NTN) 6 6
Madeleine Jeffries (16) (HOP) 2 7 6
Isis Dimpal (ACS) 6 5 2
Noah Damaris (5) (CEN) 6 4 6
Harold Crawley (TJU) 4 6 3
Bruno Radmar (10) (ACS) 6 4 6
Ayu Diah Padmi (PCU) 3 6 3
Marcus Hathwar (3) (ETM) 6 6
Pedro Sanchez de la Cruz (TJU) 4 4
Eva Sarvan (14) (ACS) 6 6
Timaeus Andersson (PUG) 3 4
Livinia Moore (6) (ETM) 6 6 12
Cornelis Zapfe (PUG) 1 7 10
Kush Acharya (11) (BRI) 6 2 4
Nomin Ionescu (NTN) 0 6 6
Xander Foyner-Devatee (2) (CEN) 4 6 6
Dora Klemenčić (SRE) 6 3 1
André Bapako (15) (ACS) 6 3 6
Lukas Valerio (BRI) 1 6 3
Derek Dubrovnik (8) (BRI) 6 6
Selina Favreau (ETM) 2 3
Lacey John (12) (UAD) 6 3 6
Luka Šatorić (SRE) 2 6 4
Dewa Ayu Cintya Dewi (4) (PCU) 7 5 2
Carmichael Brown (ETM) 5 7 6
Kirigundi Padurjili (13) (PCU) 6 6
Andrew Ayama (ARC) 1 3
Marisa Maradona (7) (CEN) 3 3
Vilim Gulić (DOT) 6 6
Kevin Lindman (9) (HOP) 2 6 6
Jonas Jonasson (NAE) 6 3 2
Jac Iegis/Cornelis Zapfe (1) (CEN/PUG) 7 6
Sandra Mae/Vanesa Mae (DOT) 5 2
André Bapako/Isis Dimpal (ACS) 1 4
Oscar Lamurdela/Rebecca Vasankar (ACS) 6 6
Kim Li Bo/Mei Li Bo (5) (TJU) 6 6 6
Erik Burawa/Kevin Lindman (HOP) 1 7 4
Megan Ives/Edsan Gallagher (QAD) 6 6
Katia Hino /Sara Aroha (GEM) 2 2
Will Nolovor/Dusan Ivanovic (3) (CEN/CDO) 6 6
Leanne Stewart/Rachel Simon (ETM) 4 4
Ion Victor Amúlio/Ioana Amulio Constantinescu (NTN) 2 4
Rachel Archibald/Phillip Mabott (BRI/BPE) 6 6
Jacob Smith /Owen Kennedy (7) (ARC) 5 5
Ljubomir Ivanković/Martin Ocvirek (SRE/RAS) 7 7
Leone Na/Abi Forrest (BRI) 2 6 7
Igor Matković/Madyson Ryding (SRE) 6 4 5
Jana Arkinn/Myria Primarch (2) (CEN) 6 6
Jonas Jonasson/Stina Jansson (NAE) 4 2
Vječeslav Korent/Alen Glesnik (DOT) 4 6 6
Sigrid Vasakärven/Botack Andiam (PUG/CEN) 6 2 2
Teagan Cantrell/Derby Cuellar (8) (UAD) 4 5
Bryson Dingley/Nissa Tran (ETM) 6 7
Jordanien Hutch/Flagstaff McCroy (QAD) 3 2
Lydia Turnowski/Irene Ichikawa (HOP) 6 6
Kendra Fulhampton/Michael Fulhampton (4) (TJU) 6 6
Sonja Torp/Torkel Torp (NAE) 4 1
Aaren Seabrooke/Lacey John (UAD) 4 6 5
Nora Kahurangi /Ada Kahurangi (GEM) 6 3 7
Lukas Emery/Mijaso Oyanari (6) (ARC) 2 5
Jayadi Ahmad/Luh Putu Yundari (PCU) 6 7
Mihai Carolus Maro/Claudius Ion Varro (NTN) 2 6 6
Ilham Nugraha/Duwanisarga Yajamaja (PCU) 6 2 4
by Qasden » Thu Feb 23, 2023 8:27 pm
By Jackson Darvel
V for VVV
Killer Kora Lives On Through Doubles Partner
The long awaited Day of 32 has arrived in the south of Gnejs, bringing with it either a mist of wonder or a fog of despair.
Matches with 'QAD' trigrams were thinning out in Vika and Esaias quicker than a WBC; much of the Principality's delegations were glassed in the opening rounds, taking ambitious names from the get-go and making the Tier 2 International entirely a matter of Doubles performance. The numerous L's were able to, in protest, make out 2 W's, at least, with Ven Van der Vin and Kora Sunder overcoming difficult first round adversaries to mark their bookings for a Hexadeca Bout and its prize pointage it provides. The duo, conveniently on a doubles team, as well, served as the final representation of Qasden at the Vika Open, the more significant of the two featuring world-class talent chopping the tarts of the multiversal Tennis Tour. The Round of 32 is a great place to be at this level, but how much joy it brought would be solely limited to repetitive consonant-loving fellows.
Triple-V, regarded as a 'Jaxton Monty' type for his aloofly aggressive style of all-arounder, found his thunder early in the Prosaic Union with an impressive sweep of Ivan Štimac, a semi-finalist at the recent Cenian Open and a favorite to win the pod. The triumph overshadowed the shameful loss of Michael Juno to Alen Glesnik by a mile, with many lime-faring Qad sporties believing the 'Sunder Effect' of beating bigger players was finally starting to make its way down the rungs. The son of Von Van der Vin, the subwealthy founder of assorted department store, Vander's, Ven was tasked to carry the bottle of lightning through the Round of 32 past an opponent known as Alina Koreleva, another member of the Srednjaci delegation, who had approached the Hexadeca Stage of the tournament mountain following her narrow dismantlement of Felipe de la Rosa one match earlier. The match proved to be one of slight endurance, seeing multiple occasions in which both parties found themselves in a deuce. Van der Vin was able to make headway with a 6-4 set win early into the match's beginning, but the embers caught ablaze in the second half, turning a bumbling performance into watching an amateur paint a masterpiece. It wasn't total annihilation, but Ven's new-found ambition to control directions and efficiency was enough to overwhelm Koreleva, finishing her off 6-3 in a confident sweep, the second of such in succession. A very substantial win in rank value, for sure, but the guarantee of another Qad in the Round of 16 felt like a win on its own merit. Granted, that guarantee was time-limited. Kora Sunder, the Cenian Open Octofinalist who kicked off the Post-Slam Era as the focal point of QTO attention, had come off of a successful victory over Mihaela Ioana Prisco in Round 1, enabling her to encounter what we can now safely assume to be her greatest foil: a Cenian with name recognition. World #5 Lonus Varalin awaited her in the Round of 32, a forbidding name to meet so early on. His tense kerfuffle with Shinji Makauchi in the opener gave a vague sense of hope for an weakness to be exposed, one that a fully ignored in the first set as he slammed Sunder 6-1. She picked up her A-game, albeit briefly, giving herself the wiggle room of a third round by beating out Varalin in set 2, 6-4. The happiness was short-lived, as all great things are, as she ultimately got wiped in the final set, ending her solo run a mere two matches in.
This leaves the Prosaic Singles Campaign completely in the hands of Van der Vin, the posh man now destined to take on the defending NSTT Multiversal Champion: Dorotea Granit, the hometown homefry that avenged Juno in one of the most savage fashions seen in this tour so far. Beating her grants Ven a treasure trove of valuable points, potentially enough to leap frog Sunder in the standings, though that should be taken with a sturdy wood knocked. Of course, the duo are still around in Doubles, miraculously surviving their encounter with Farkaš & Ibrahimović in an opening blank. They're now set to play Sonya Gredello and Rosa Levinsky of Electrum, the shared #7's of the tourney with the possibility of meeting the #1's in the next round. In Esaias, the charming Hutch and McCroy found themselves in front of a pack unphased, Lydia Turnowski and Irene Ichikawa of Hopal smacked the duo upside the head to keep the cowboys as Qasden's most beatable Doubles team. Not all is lost in Tier 2, however, as a victory for Ives and Gallagher over Hino and Aroha has set them up in the Round of 16 against Kim and Mei Li Bo, presumed relatives who take on the #5 rating in the lower tournament despite the narrow victory over Erik Burawa and Kevin Lindman in Round 1. Could the Vans keep their Triple-V train going into the Quarter-Finals? Will Juno and the rest of the eliminated be able to repair their images again after this heresy? Stay tuned, stay updated, and stay alert for more reports coming, aggressively co-opted by the NS Tennis Tour!
by Ceni » Thu Feb 23, 2023 11:06 pm
by Gnejs » Fri Feb 24, 2023 12:47 am
Ardil Navsal (1) (CEN) 6 6
Julia Dobrovolskaya (WSN) 4 3
Jean van de Kloor (TJU) 7 4 4
Ralph Newkarn (11) (BRI) 5 6 6
Johmer Vales (CEN) 7 6
Tena Špiričić (14) (SRE) 6 4
Jumal Huyluer (HOP) 6 5 2
Indah Susanti (9) (PCU) 4 7 6
Georg Heraklit (2) (PUG) 6 6 3
Maddison Scott (16) (ETM) 7 4 6
Janet Riley (7) (ETM) 6 7
Lucija Bagarić (SRE) 4 6
Dorotea Granit (4) (PUG) 4 6 6
Ven Van der Vin (QAD) 6 4 2
Lonus Varalin (5) (CEN) 6 6
Ayu Ratih Kemalasari (PCU) 1 3
Arne Oxwald/Georg Heraklit (1) (PUG) 6 7
Damir Pernar/Bojan Nož (DOT) 2 5
Sonya Gredello/Rosa Levinsky (7) (ETM) 6 6
Kora Sunder/Ven Van der Vin (WC) (QAD) 4 3
Elia Xal/Fia Xal (3) (CEN) 3 6 6
Kim Chester/Vivian Walsh (Q) (UAD) 6 4 8
Marcus Hathwar/Jack Ho (ETM) 4 7 6
Vuyani Rabada/Kaui Kamakawiwo'ole (TJU) 6 6 4
Nathan Bensaïd/Kell Korden (BRI/CEN) 2 6 6
Jan Turovets/Vitaly Rakov (WSN) 6 3 2
Maria Cláudia Amúlio/Iohanna Márcia Enderssen-Moura (WC) (NTN) 2 7 3
Putu Listya Dewi/Putu Ayu Maherani (PCU) 6 5 6
Sara Zhuo/Gyrachor Rentos (4) (ETM/CEN) 6 6
Ricardo Toli/Elizabeth Quehall (BRI) 3 2
Jaguar Zenteanite/Zeke Newham (5) (BRI) 7 6
Miguel Taberon/Pedro Arrachar (Q) (ACS) 6 0
Shroom Wafa (NTN) 5 0
Madeleine Jeffries (16) (HOP) 7 6
Noah Damaris (5) (CEN) 7 7
Bruno Radmar (10) (ACS) 5 5
Marcus Hathwar (3) (ETM) 1 4
Eva Sarvan (14) (ACS) 6 6
Livinia Moore (6) (ETM) 2 7 7
Nomin Ionescu (NTN) 6 6 5
Xander Foyner-Devatee (2) (CEN) 6 6
André Bapako (15) (ACS) 1 2
Derek Dubrovnik (8) (BRI) 6 7
Lacey John (12) (UAD) 4 5
Carmichael Brown (ETM) 4 6 6
Kirigundi Padurjili (13) (PCU) 6 4 4
Vilim Gulić (DOT) 6 0 1
Kevin Lindman (9) (HOP) 3 6 6
Jac Iegis/Cornelis Zapfe (1) (CEN/PUG) 6 6
Oscar Lamurdela/Rebecca Vasankar (ACS) 4 4
Kim Li Bo/Mei Li Bo (5) (TJU) 6 6
Megan Ives/Edsan Gallagher (QAD) 3 2
Will Nolovor/Dusan Ivanovic (3) (CEN/CDO) 6 6
Rachel Archibald/Phillip Mabott (BRI/BPE) 4 3
Ljubomir Ivanković/Martin Ocvirek (SRE/RAS) 3 5
Leone Na/Abi Forrest (BRI) 6 7
Jana Arkinn/Myria Primarch (2) (CEN) 6 6 5
Vječeslav Korent/Alen Glesnik (DOT) 7 0 7
Bryson Dingley/Nissa Tran (ETM) 6 2 6
Lydia Turnowski/Irene Ichikawa (HOP) 2 6 2
Kendra Fulhampton/Michael Fulhampton (4) (TJU) 7 7
Nora Kahurangi /Ada Kahurangi (GEM) 6 6
Jayadi Ahmad/Luh Putu Yundari (PCU) 3 6 6
Mihai Carolus Maro/Claudius Ion Varro (NTN) 6 2 4
by Electrum » Sun Feb 26, 2023 5:16 am
by Gnejs » Mon Feb 27, 2023 12:15 am
Ardil Navsal (1) (CEN) 2 6 6
Ralph Newkarn (11) (BRI) 6 4 4
Johmer Vales (CEN) 6 6
Indah Susanti (9) (PCU) 3 1
Maddison Scott (16) (ETM) 4 6 2
Janet Riley (7) (ETM) 6 2 6
Dorotea Granit (4) (PUG) 4 6 4
Lonus Varalin (5) (CEN) 6 4 6
Arne Oxwald/Georg Heraklit (1) (PUG) 5 4
Sonya Gredello/Rosa Levinsky (7) (ETM) 7 6
Kim Chester/Vivian Walsh (Q) (UAD) 5 5
Marcus Hathwar/Jack Ho (ETM) 7 7
Nathan Bensaïd/Kell Korden (BRI/CEN) 2 6 7
Putu Listya Dewi/Putu Ayu Maherani (PCU) 6 4 5
Sara Zhuo/Gyrachor Rentos (4) (ETM/CEN) 7 6
Jaguar Zenteanite/Zeke Newham (5) (BRI) 6 3
Madeleine Jeffries (16) (HOP) 6 7
Noah Damaris (5) (CEN) 4 6
Eva Sarvan (14) (ACS) 7 5 2
Livinia Moore (6) (ETM) 6 7 6
Xander Foyner-Devatee (2) (CEN) 6 6
Derek Dubrovnik (8) (BRI) 3 3
Carmichael Brown (ETM) 4 6 5
Kevin Lindman (9) (HOP) 6 4 7
Jac Iegis/Cornelis Zapfe (1) (CEN/PUG) 1 6 6
Kim Li Bo/Mei Li Bo (5) (TJU) 6 1 2
Will Nolovor/Dusan Ivanovic (3) (CEN/CDO) 6 7
Leone Na/Abi Forrest (BRI) 3 5
Vječeslav Korent/Alen Glesnik (DOT) 4 4
Bryson Dingley/Nissa Tran (ETM) 6 6
Kendra Fulhampton/Michael Fulhampton (4) (TJU) 4 4
Jayadi Ahmad/Luh Putu Yundari (PCU) 6 6
by Electrum » Mon Feb 27, 2023 5:57 am
by Ceni » Mon Feb 27, 2023 11:02 pm
by Gnejs » Tue Feb 28, 2023 12:36 am
Ardil Navsal (1) (CEN) 5 6 2
Johmer Vales (CEN) 7 2 6
Janet Riley (7) (ETM) 7 6
Lonus Varalin (5) (CEN) 5 3
Sonya Gredello/Rosa Levinsky (7) (ETM) 6 6 5
Marcus Hathwar/Jack Ho (ETM) 7 4 7
Nathan Bensaïd/Kell Korden (BRI/CEN) 7 3 7
Sara Zhuo/Gyrachor Rentos (4) (ETM/CEN) 5 6 9
Madeleine Jeffries (16) (HOP) 6 6 4
Livinia Moore (6) (ETM) 4 7 6
Xander Foyner-Devatee (2) (CEN) 6 6
Kevin Lindman (9) (HOP) 1 3
Jac Iegis/Cornelis Zapfe (1) (CEN/PUG) 6 3 6
Will Nolovor/Dusan Ivanovic (3) (CEN/CDO) 1 6 4
Bryson Dingley/Nissa Tran (ETM) 4 6 6
Jayadi Ahmad/Luh Putu Yundari (PCU) 6 2 3
by Ceni » Tue Feb 28, 2023 10:39 pm
by Gnejs » Tue Feb 28, 2023 11:41 pm
Johmer Vales (CEN) 7 3 6
Janet Riley (7) (ETM) 6 6 4
Marcus Hathwar/Jack Ho (ETM) 4 4
Sara Zhuo/Gyrachor Rentos (4) (ETM/CEN) 6 6
Livinia Moore (6) (ETM) 1 2
Xander Foyner-Devatee (2) (CEN) 6 6
Jac Iegis/Cornelis Zapfe (1) (CEN/PUG) 4 5
Bryson Dingley/Nissa Tran (ETM) 6 7
by Archalit » Wed Mar 01, 2023 6:12 pm
by Britonisea » Thu Mar 02, 2023 7:13 pm
Congratulations to Ralph - our new Britonish #1 player!
Ralph Newkärn becomes only the third Briton in history to be the Britonish #1 on the NSTT Tour...
For many nations part of the tour, whoever is their number one tennis player changes relatively frequently. Though in Britonisea, that isn't the case. The country has only had two players, since the inception of the NSTT, holding the title of Britonisea's best tennis player. A few days ago, one more player joined the list...
On behalf of Associasoin Tennis Brityunik [ATB] and the organisers of the Britonish Open, we would like to congratulate Ralph Newkärn on this fantastic achievement. Not only has Newkärn become the first new Britonish #1. Since Newkärn's debut on the tour at the Cenian Open back in Season 2, he has relentlessly tried hard to better himself as a tennis player, slowly rising in the rankings year on year. His resilience and patience have finally been fortuitous as he officially makes the Top 10 ahead of the Burnton Classic. We wish Newkärn and all Britonish tennis players the best of luck for the rest of season nine - who will finish the season on top? Only time will tell..
History of Britonish #1s
As previously mentioned, the Britonish #1 position has only been held by two tennis players - Ricardo Toli and Leo Garry. The former has been Britonish #1 for the most prolonged period of time, finishing as Britonish #1 at the end of NSTT Seasons 1, 6, 7 and the most recent season - 8. Leo Garry finished the year as Britonish #1 at the end of NSTT Seasons 2, 3, 4 and 5. With Ricardo Toli taking a temporary break from the Tour after Season 2 due to an injury and then surgery, Garry rose to fame and at the end of Season 4, Garry was the only player not from the Afanc Strait to be in the top 10 - mostly down to his fantastic run at the Electrum Slam. However, the tide changed in Season 6 when Toli came back strong after recovering. The Electrum Slam returned a year later and Garry was seeded #1 (the closest to a Britonish World Number 1 we've ever had!) with Toli #4. Both players made it to the semi-finals - a Britonish first, but it was Toli who made it to the finals. While Toli lost in the end, it gave him enough of a boost to overtake Garry and restore himself as the Britonish #1 at the end of the season. Garry retired from tennis while Toli won Britonisea's first-ever tournament(!) and Grand Slam at the Mercedinian Open in Season 7 consolidating himself as Britonisea's best player at the time. Ralph Newkärn first captured the attention of Britons at the aforementioned Open as he managed to reach the quarterfinal - where he played eventual winner Ricardo Toli. The five set thriller highlighted the strength of Newkärn and despite Jason Gordon Tier 1 win only weeks later, Newkärn was a favourite to one day become the Britonish #1. Season 8 was tumultuous for Britonish tennis, with there being a lot more focus on the doubles with the rise of Zeke/Jaguar. Ralph Newkärn and Ricardo Toli both made it to the semifinals of the CNR, while Newkärn also made it to the semifinals in Mercedini. The two players were points away from each other at the end of the Season, but with Newkärn's strong performance so far this year, he has managed to push himself into the Top 10 while Ricardo Toli has dropped points.
The End of Year Britonish #1 this season has yet to be decided. Ricardo Toli will be hoping to make another Electrum Slam final, and regain his Mercedinian Open title from Season 7. Ralph Newkärn has points to save and then improve on at CNR and Mercedini. Other Britonish tennis players such as Leone Na, Kush Acharya, Aaliyah de Leon and Lukas Valerio are rapidly rising in the rankings. Veterans Derek Dubrovnik and Jason Gordon might finally snap! No one knows who the End of Year Britonish #1 will be, but for the moment a new face - Ralph Newkärn - will be steering Britonisea's ship in tennis...Arley Nixon
Chairman of Associasoin Tennis Brityunik [ATB]
WINNER OF THE 112ND WORLDVISION SONG CONTEST
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