• 3 MINUTE READ
British players won four of the six main draw titles contested at the Abingdon Futures as international wheelchair tennis returned to Oxfordshire for the first time since 2019.
Dahnon Ward and Andrew Penney dominated the men’s singles and doubles events, with Ward extending an unbeaten sequence of matches in Abingdon that started with his victory in the junior singles in 2019. This time the Leicestershire 17-year-old earned his first senior international title, dropping just four games across his four matches and beating Penney 6-0, 6-1 in the final.
“It’s been a long time coming, but I’m really pleased with how I performed,” said Ward, who has subsequently improved his men’s singles world ranking to a career-best No.34. “On paper it may not have seemed as hard as some of the other events I’ve played in, but I think the way that I played was good enough to win any other Futures tournament. I think I’ve shown everyone that I’ve taken a step forward since the US Open juniors.”
Penney and Ward eased to their second men’s doubles title of the year without dropping a game, continuing to demonstrate the potential they showed when winning the ITF 2 Austrian Open together in August.
There was also a British clean sweep in the quad singles and quad doubles as James Shaw clinched his first singles title since 2020, defeating 15-year-old Oliver Cox 6-2, 6-3 after Oxfordshire’s Cox reached the final in his first senior world ranking event. Gary Cox, runner-up in the quad singles in Abingdon in 2019, partnered Shaw to win the quad doubles after defeating Oliver Cox and Dan Pennington-Bridges 6-2, 6-4.
Hopes of British success in the women’s singles and doubles was spearheaded by Abbie Breakwell and Ruby Bishop, with Breakwell returning to the scene of her first senior women’s doubles title in 2019.
A singles semi-finalist in 2019, this time Breakwell met Bishop in the semi-finals, earning the second of back-to-back 6-3, 6-3 wins to book her place in the final against Israeli top seed Maayan Zikri. Breakwell and Zikri’s only previous meeting this season ended in a three-set win for Zikri in the semi-finals of the Bucharest Open in Romania in August, but Breakwell was unable to take their latest head-to-head to a decider as Zikri took the title 6-1, 7-5.
There were also runners-up honours for Bishop and Breakwell in the women’s doubles final, as Zikri and Austria’s Christina Pesendorfer justified top seeding to prevail 6-3, 6-4.
Just the ten titles for the Brits this week (yes, you read that correctly!) – catch up on all the latest from your favourite British tennis stars on tour last week.
Find out which Brits will be competing at this year's summer grass court wheelchair events.
All the latest results and updates from the British Open Wheelchair Tennis Championships at the Nottingham Tennis Centre.
International wheelchair tennis returns to Oxfordshire this week as we host the Abingdon Futures tournament at the White Horse Leisure and Tennis Centre from 21-23 October.
GET INVOLVED
LTA YOUTH
Level up your kids’ tennis skills with fun, dynamic sessions for players aged 4-18.
Follow Us
Lead Partner
LTA Official Partners & Supporters
© Copyright 2022 LTA Operations Limited
We use cookies to store information about how you use our website – such as the pages you visit – so we can ace your experience when you’re browsing.
All information about the cookies we use and why we use them are in our Cookie Policy.
You can control which additional cookies we use in the settings below:
We have necessary cookies, which always need to be turned on to help our website function and enable you to use all of our features. These cookies collect anonymised data, such as information about your browser type and version, without collecting any personal data which relates to you.
These cookies allow our website to remember the choices you make (such as your username, your preferred language or where you live) to give you a faster and more personalised experience when browsing. This means we can show you more of the content we think you’d like to see.
Performance cookies are used to collect data about how you use our website so we can continue to improve it in the future. For example, these cookies track the pages you go to most often, the time spent on our website, and any issues encountered, such as error messages, so we can fix these in the future. All data is gathered anonymously and is only used to benefit the functionality of the site.
We have several partners who may also set cookies on our behalf when you visit our website. This allows them to deliver tailored LTA advertising within their domains.
We use cookies on our site to ACE your experience, improve the quality of our site and show you content we think you’ll be interested in. Let us know if you agree to cookies or if you’d prefer to manage your own settings.