Samantha Crawford Wins U.S. Open Wild Card Challenge

August 3, 2015 | By New York Tennis Magazine Staff
Photo credit: Eric C. Peck

Twenty-year-old Samantha Crawford of Tamarac, Fla., the 2012 U.S. Open Girls Champion, will compete in the U.S. Open main draw for the second time in her career, after winning the USTA Pro Circuit’s U.S. Open Wild Card Challenge. Crawford finished the challenge with 49 points after reaching the final of the $50,000 Kentucky Bank Tennis Championships in Lexington, Ky. and competing in the $50,000 events in Stockton, Calif., and Sacramento, Calif.

Crawford won the 2012 U.S. Open Girls Singles title and qualified for the women’s singles main draw of the U.S. Open that year as a qualifying wild card. She has also competed in the U.S. Open women’s doubles draw three times (2011-12, 2014). At 6-foot-2, Crawford’s big serve and aggressive baseline game helped her rise to number five in the ITF World Junior Rankings in 2012. This year, she won her fourth and fifth career USTA Pro Circuit doubles titles at the $25,000 USTA Pro Circuit events in Rancho Santa Fe, Calif., and Baton Rouge, La. She also reached three USTA Pro Circuit singles finals this year. Crawford is ranked 223rd in the world.

In the men’s wild card challenge, Bjorn Fratangelo increased his leading point total to 77 by advancing to the semifinals of the $50,000 Challenger in Lexington last week after reaching the final of the $50,000 Challenger in Binghamton, N.Y., the week prior. Mitchell Krueger is in second place with 44 points. The men’s U.S. Open Wild Card Challenge concludes the week of Aug. 10 with the Comerica Bank Challenger in Aptos, Calif.

The standings, through Aug. 3, are as follows:

USTA Player Development awards a U.S. Open main draw wild card to one American man and one American woman who earn the most ATP World Tour and WTA ranking points in a series of USTA Pro Circuit hard-court events this summer. Men’s events include $50,000 Challengers in Binghamton and Lexington, Ky., as well as a $100,000 Challenger in Aptos, Calif. Women’s tournaments include $50,000 events in Stockton, Sacramento and Lexington.

Ranking points from two out of the three men’s and women’s events are used and combined to calculate the point total and determine the U.S. Open wild card recipient. If a player competes in more than two events, only his or her two best tournaments will be counted in calculating the point total. In the event of a tie, the player with the best ATP or WTA singles ranking will be awarded the wild card. Only players who have not earned direct acceptance into the U.S. Open are eligible for the wild card.

The USTA first used this U.S. Open wild card format for its 2012 wild cards, won by Steve Johnson and Mallory Burdette, both of whom reached the third round of the U.S. Open. In 2013, Bradley Klahn and Shelby Rogers earned the wild cards, with Klahn winning his first-round match. And, last year, Nicole Gibbs reached the third round of the US Open (her career-best Grand Slam result), while Wayne Odesnik earned the men’s wild card. The USTA also utilizes this wild card challenge format for the French Open and Australian Open.

The 2015 US Open main draw will be held Monday, Aug. 31, to Sunday, Sept. 13.


New York Tennis Magazine Staff
Oneononedoubles banner art resize
USTA NTC

January/February 2024 Digital Edition