Fudge And Munro Win Double Golds At 2025 US Pickleball Open


Tucked in between the excitement of MLP’s two opening events was an event that used to be a lot bigger deal to those who follow pro pickleball, the 2025 Minto US Open Championships, powered by Margaritaville.

While the US Open remains the premier annual tournament for both Amateurs and Senior Pros, the exclusivity contracts barring UPA-signed players from competing in this event for the third year running has taken its toll on the quality of the pro draws. In the first year without PPA players in 2023, there remained enough quality “APP players” at the time to ensure solid podiums. 2024 enabled a few top players who were in the midst of contract disputes to compete and allow the likes of JW Johnson, Dylan Frazier, and Jorja Johnson to take home medals. However, in the 2025 iteration only a UPA contract carve-out enabling Anna Leigh Waters to compete prevents the pro draws from resembling an APP major. One by one, the UPA has signed away/locked up nearly every pro medalist in the last three seasons, leaving this event as a pro afterthought. While the event benefitted from the fun ALW-Agassi storyline, the rest of the pro draws seemed to pale in comparison to the excitement we had at a run-of-the-mill MLP event a thousand miles away.

Click here for the Pickleballden.com home page for the tournament, the software platform owned by the new US Open tour operators and which was used to coordinate signups and matches. As far as I can tell, Pickleball Den does not maintain a permanent/persistent link directly to the tournament, and I found the software quite challenging to use as someone attempting to cover the event. If you’d like to view matches, you’ll have to search for the tournament then navigate a slew of pop-up boxes in a user experience that is truly lacking. Anytime the back arrow is hit, you’re dropped back to the search bar instead of back to, say, a list of brackets or a tournament home page.

With that said, let’s recap the action.


Men’s Pro Singles Recap

No. 1 seed Christopher Haworth cruised to the gold medal, beating No. 2 seed Grayson Goldin in the final and rehashing their frequent APP gold medal matches from the past half season or so. Ammar Wazir surprised the field to claim bronze. Other Notable results included a very early loss for No. 3 Ryler DeHeart to Nejc Sitar and defending champ No. 6 Jack Foster withdrawing early.

Gold: Christopher Haworth. Silver: Grayson Goldin. Bronze: Ammar Wazir.


Women’s Pro Singles Recap

No. 1 Megan Fudge improved on her 2024 2nd place finish by claiming Gold in Naples. She topped four-time US Open singles champion Simone Jardim in the semis, then Bobbi Oshiro in the final. Rising star Sofia Sewing was upset in the 16s by Emilia Schmidt, teenage sensation Alexa Schull fell to the Agassi-scalping Trang Huynh-McClain in the 32s, and the defending APP pro champ Pei chuan Kao was felled by Oshiro early on her way to the finals.

Gold: Megan Fudge. Silver: Bobbi Oshiro. Bronze: Amanda Hendry.


Mixed Pro Doubles Recap

The APP’s top Mixed pair Megan Fudge & Jack Munro had an adventurous run to the gold medal at the US Open. In the round of 16 they downed the US Open legend Simone Jardim, playing with her brother Marcello (who was looking to win more gold after his double senior golds earned later in the week). In the quarters, Megan had to play her husband Ryler DeHeart and downed him and partner Pei chuan Kao 0,3. In the semis they topped two of the better up-and-coming players in the sport in Sofia Sewing & Casey Diamond. In the final they topped another couple of APP-Nextgen graduates in Richard Livornese & Riley Bohnert, who had gone on a solid run of their own from the bottom half of the draw. Fudge goes home with a double gold for the weekend.

The Mixed draw here was overshadowed by the debut of Andre Agassi, which we covered last week. Agassi & Waters fell in the 16s.

Gold: Fudge/Munro. Silver: Livornese/Bohnert. Bronze: Sewing/Diamond.


Men’s Pro Doubles Recap

APP No. 1 Jack Munro was without his normal partner Will Howells (on MLP duty in Columbus), and teamed with the little-known Len Yang for the event. They powered to the final regardless, where they met No. 2 Ryler DeHeart & Richard Livornese. In the final, Munro was the best player on the court and led his team to gold. The win gave Munro a double for the weekend.

Notable finishes: the bronze medalists were none other than the top Indian pair Armaan Bhatia & Harsh Mehta, who toppled APP veterans and No. 3 seeds Brandon Lane & Ben Newell in the 3rd place match. This is a notable result; Bhatia has some significant accomplishments in the burgeoning world of pro pickleball in Asia and Australia, but this is his first major foray into the US-based competitions. The pair’s run to the semis (where they lost a 12-10 game three to Munro & Yang) should be a warning shot for the globalization of the pro game.

Gold: Munro/Yang. Silver: Livornese/DeHeart. Bronze: Bhatia/Mehta.


Women’s Pro Doubles Recap

Anna Leigh Waters may not have had the mixed pro success she had last year (where she teamed with JW Johnson to take US Open gold), but she was able to repeat last year’s success by repeating as US Open Women’s Pro doubles champions with her mom, Leigh Waters. The two won a slew of pro medals during the early parts of the PPA tour before Leigh was forced to the sidelines with an ACL injury. However, mother-daughter pairing occasionally rekindles their partnership, and this weekend they defended their 2023 US Open title. They dominated a top APP pair Megan Fudge & Jill Braverman in the final 0,4.

Gold: Waters/Waters. Silver: Fudge/Braverman. Bronze: Bates/Sewing.


Split Age Pro Competition Recaps

The U.S. Open features a fun Pro competition called “Split Age,” where doubles teams are comprised of one 50+ player and one under-50 player. These draws are held earlier in the week before the main pro draws get started, serving as nice warm-up events for the top touring pros. Here’s a quick review of those competitions.

  • Men’s Split Age Pro Doubles Recap: When you pair arguably the best senior pro out there (Jamie Oncins, currently No. 1 in APP Men’s Champions doubles) with one of the best “young” pros (Jack Munro, currently ranked No. 2 in APP Men’s Doubles), you’re going to get a team that’s tough to beat. This pair cruised to the gold medal, topping Kyle Yates & Dave Weinbach in the final.
  • Women’s Split Age Pro Doubles Recap: APP No. 1 Ranked Women’s Doubles player Megan Fudge teamed with Sheri Courtier to cruise through the split age draw for the title.
  • Mixed Split Age Pro Doubles Recap: Newly minted “senior pro” Lee Whitwell teamed with one of the young guns on tour Patrick Kawka to take the split age mixed gold.

Senior Pro Competition Quick Recap

  • Men’s Senior Open Singles: Marcello Jardim cruised to the gold medal as the No. 1 seed and defended his 2024 singles title here.
  • Men’s Senior Open Doubles: Jamie Oncins & Marcello Jardim, ranked No. 1 and No. 4 on the APP’s Champions tour, took the final as the No. 1 seeds. Jardim gets the senior men’s double for the weekend.
  • Women’s Senior Open Singles: Karin Ptaszek-Kochis defended her 2024 US Open senior singles title.
  • Women’s Senior Open Doubles: Sheri Courter & Molly Carter took the title after the top seeds were upset early.
  • Mixed Senior Open Doubles: Jaime Oncins paired with Lee Whitwell to make it a double Senior pro gold weekend.

The Pro Pickleball Medal Tracker has now been updated with these results; check out this link online for a complete pro medal history for all tours and all pro events dating to the beginnings of all the major pro tours, plus pro events that predated 2020.

Next up on the Pickleball Calendar? According to my Master Pickleball Schedule, the APP returns to action next weekend at the Vlasic Classic in Cincinnati. It’s also the first waiver period for MLP (which should be fascinating). The rest of the month gives us some of the biggest events of the season: PPA’s Atlanta Grand Slam and the APP’s NYC Open follow in successive weekends in mid to late May. It’s a great month for pro pickleball!


All match stats quoted in this article are courtesy of PickleWave. Visit picklewave.com for the premier source of Pro Pickleball data, including match replays, highlights, stats, and discussion. PickleWave has more than 22,000 matches in its database across all the pro tours.



Source link

Scroll to Top