Entries confirmed for 2025 ITF Wheelchair Tennis Junior Masters
The International Tennis Federation can confirm the entries for the 2025 ITF Wheelchair Tennis Junior Masters, which will be held at the Orange Bowl International Championships, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida (11-14 December) for the first time.
As the premier season-ending championships for the world’s best junior wheelchair players, the event has launched the careers of some of the sport’s biggest stars. Past champions include Alfie Hewett, Tokito Oda, Diede de Groot, Yui Kamiji, Sam Schroder and Niels Vink, all of whom have gone on to achieve international success at the highest levels.
Oda, Kamiji and Schroder all recently won the senior men’s, women’s and quad singles titles at the NEC Wheelchair Singles Masters and UNIQLO Wheelchair Doubles Masters in China.
In 2025, the top seven boys and top seven girls from the ITF Junior Rankings of 27 October 2025, plus one wildcard per draw, qualify for the ITF Wheelchair Tennis Junior Masters.
(Figures in Brackets are ITF Junior Rankings as of 17.10.25
| BOYS | GIRLS |
| 1. Jin Woodman (AUS) (2) | 1. Luna Gryp (BEL) (2) |
| 2. Luis Calixto (BRA) (5) | 2. Lucy Heald (USA) (4) |
| 3. Lucas John de Gouveia (GBR) (7) | 3. Emma Gjerseth (SWE) (5) |
| 4. Charlie Cooper (USA) (8) | 4. Seira Matsuoka (JPN) (6) |
| 5. Matthew Knoesen (GBR) (10) | 5. Paula Michelle Lopez Meza (COL) (7) |
| 6. Tomas Majetic (USA) (15) (WC) | 6. Ellen Tribley (GBR) (8) |
| 7. Arlo Shawcross (AUS) (12) | 7. Cleo Ginterdaele (FRA) (10) (WC) |
| 8. Marijn Bruinooge (NED) (13) | 8. Lucy Foyster (GBR) (11) |
Players will compete in two round-robin groups of four for boys' singles and girls' singles, followed by finals and playoff matches.
The same eight players qualified for boys' singles and girls' singles will also make up four partnerships for boys' doubles and girls' doubles knockout draws.
Ahead of the tournament, the ITF will host a development camp for the 16 qualified players at the USTA National Campus in Orlando in partnership with the Cruyff Foundation and multiple Grand Slam champion, Diede de Groot, who will provide mentoring to both players and coaches.
The Orange Bowl International Tennis Championships, originally founded in 1947, has a storied history of shaping tennis stars. By bringing the Wheelchair Junior Masters to this prestigious stage, the ITF gives junior wheelchair players the same spotlight as other rising stars of the sport.