Qualification
Tennis at the 2023 Pan American Games

The following is the qualification system and qualified countries for the Tennis at the 2023 Pan American Games competition.

Qualification system

A total of 82 tennis players will qualify to compete at the Games (41 men and 41 women). Each country is allowed to enter a maximum of three male and three female athletes (with one pair maximum in each of the doubles events). The singles events will consist of 41 men and 41 women respectively, with those athletes competing in the doubles events. The host nation Chile was allowed to enter with a maximum team of 6 athletes, while the remaining spots were distributed using two regional Games and the ATP rankings, WTA rankings and ITF rankings. A further three wildcards for men and women will be also awarded.[1]

Qualification timeline

EventDateVenue
2021 Junior Pan American GamesNovember 29 - December 4Colombia Cali
2022 South American GamesOctober 1 – 15Paraguay Asuncion
2023 Central American and Caribbean GamesJune 23 – July 8El Salvador San Salvador
ATP or WTA RankingSeptember 11, 2023

Qualification summary

NationMenWomenMixedTotal
SinglesDoublesSinglesDoublesDoublesAthletes
 Antigua and Barbuda11
 Argentina2X4XX6
 Bahamas21X3
 Barbados11
 Bolivia11X2
 Brazil2X2X2[upper-alpha 1]6
 Canada11X2
 Chile (Host)3X2X (1)[upper-alpha 2]X6
 Colombia2X (1)[upper-alpha 3]3XX6
 Costa Rica2X2
 Cuba11
 Dominican Republic3X2XX5
 Independent Athletes Team2X2
 Ecuador3X3
 El Salvador2X2
 Haiti11
 Honduras12XX3
 Jamaica3X3
 Mexico2X2
 Paraguay3X1X4
 Peru2X3XX5
 Saint Kitts and Nevis11
 Trinidad and Tobago11
 Uruguay2X2
 United States3X1X4
 Venezuela3X1X4
Total: 26 NOCs371237111378
  1. Both players on the mixed doubles pair (Luisa Stefani and Marcelo Demoliner) played only in doubles events.
  2. Alexa Guarachi played only in doubles events.
  3. Nicolás Barrientos played only in doubles events.

      Men's singles

      EventVacanciesQualifiers
      Hosts
      3
       Tomás Barrios (CHI)[2]
       Alejandro Tabilo (CHI)[2]
       Gonzalo Lama (CHI)[2]
      2021 Junior Pan American Games
      1
       Gonzalo Bueno (PER)[3]
      2022 South American Games
      2
       Facundo Díaz Acosta (ARG)[4]
       Gustavo Heide (BRA)[5]
      2023 Central American and Caribbean Games
      2
       Nick Hardt (DOM)[6]
       Roberto Cid (DOM)[6]
      ATP or ITF ranking
      26
       Thiago Monteiro (BRA)
       Facundo Bagnis (ARG)
       Tristan Boyer (USA)
       Nicolás Mejía (COL)
       Omni Kumar (USA)
       Ernesto Escobedo (MEX)
       Evan Zhu (USA)
       Blaise Bicknell (JAM)
       Daniel Vallejo (PAR)
       Darian King (BAR)
       Adriá Soriano (COL)
       Justin Boulais (CAN)
       Conner Huertas del Pino (PER)
       Peter Bertran (DOM)
       Justin Roberts (BAH)
       Alan Rubio (MEX)
       Jesse Flores (CRC)
       Federico Zeballos (BOL)
       Ricardo Rodríguez (VEN)
       Jody Maginley (ANT)
       Hernando Escurra (PAR)
       Brandon Pérez (VEN)
       John Chin (JAM)
       Rowland Phillips (JAM)
       Kevin Major (BAH)
       Ignacio Martínez (VEN)
      Wildcards
      3
       Rodrigo Crespo (CRC)
       Alejandro Obando (HON)
       Martín Vergara (PAR)
      Total37

      Men's doubles

      EventVacanciesQualifiers
      Host
      1
       Chile
      World ranking
      11
       Brazil
       Colombia
       Peru
       Dominican Republic
       Venezuela
       United States
       Costa Rica
       Jamaica
       Argentina
       Paraguay
       Mexico
      Total12

      Women's singles

      EventVacanciesQualifiers
      Hosts Daniela Seguel (CHI)[2]
       Fernanda Labraña (CHI)[2]
      2021 Junior Pan American Games
      1
       Luciana Moyano (ARG)[7]
      2022 South American Games
      2 1
       María Herazo González (COL)[8]
       Verónica Cepede (PAR)[8][upper-alpha 2]
      2023 Central American and Caribbean Games
      2 1
       María Herazo González (COL)[upper-alpha 3]
       Yuliana Lizarazo (COL)[10]
      WTA or ITF ranking
      29

       Laura Pigossi (BRA)
       Rebecca Marino (CAN)
       María Carlé (ARG)
       Julia Riera (ARG)
       Martina Capurro Taborda (ARG)
       Carolina Meligeni Alves (BRA)
       Jamie Loeb (USA)
       Noelia Zeballos (BOL)
       Romina Ccuno (PER)
       Anastasia Iamachkine (PER)
       Mell Reasco (ECU)
       Camila Romero (ECU)
       Lucciana Pérez Alarcón (PER)
       María Paulina Pérez (COL)
       Kelly Williford (DOM)
       Juliana Rodriguez (URU)
       Leyla Britez (PAR)
       Sydney-Nicole Clarke (BAH)
       Roxana Valdés (CUB)
       Ana Zamburek (DOM)
       Isabel Andrade (ECU)
       Daniela Aguilar (ESA)
       Valentina Cruz (ESA)
       Natalie Espinal (HON)
       Daniela Obando (HON)
       Taly Licht (URU)
       Vanesa Suarez (VEN)
       Andrea Weedon (EAI)
       Deborah Dominguez (EAI)

      Wildcards
      3
       Love-Star Alexis (HAI)
       Arina Valitova (SKN)
       Yolande Leacock (TTO)
      Total37
      1. The third chilean female player, Alexa Guarachi, only played in the doubles events.[2]
      2. Retired after 2022 South American Games.[9]
      3. Already qualified via 2022 South American Games.

          Women's doubles

          EventVacanciesQualifiers
          Host
          1
           Chile
          World ranking
          10

           Brazil
           Colombia
           Argentina
           Peru
           Ecuador
           Dominican Republic
           Uruguay
           Independent Athletes Team
           El Salvador
           Honduras

          Total11

          Mixed doubles

          EventVacanciesQualifiers
          Host
          1
           Chile
          World ranking
          12
           Brazil
           Colombia
           Bolivia
           Peru
           Argentina
           Dominican Republic
           Canada
           United States
           Venezuela
           Bahamas
           Honduras
           Paraguay
          Total13

          References

          1. "Tennis" (PDF). www.santiago2023.org/. Pan American Sports Organization. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
          2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Tenemos nómina para los Juegos Panamericanos Santiago 2023" [We have the roster for the Santiago 2023 Pan American Games] (in Spanish). FETECH. 20 September 2023. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
          3. "Gonzalo Bueno ganó medalla de oro para Perú en el tenis de los Juegos Panamericanos Junior Cali 2021" [Gonzalo Bueno won a gold medal for Peru in tennis at the Junior Pan American Games Cali 2021]. El Comercio (in Spanish). 4 December 2021. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
          4. "Juegos ODESUR: Facundo Díaz Acosta, el gran ganador del ténis argentino" [ODESUR Games: Facundo Díaz Acosta, the great winner of Argentine tennis]. www.elgrafico.com.ar/ (in Spanish). El Gráfico. 17 October 2022. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
          5. "Gustavo Heide leva a prata nos Jogos Sul-Americanos" [Gustavo Heide takes silver at the South American Games]. www.olimpiadatododia.com.br/ (in Portuguese). Olimpíada Todo Dia. 15 October 2022. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
          6. 1 2 "Hardt da otro oro a Dominicana al vencer a Cid en la final individual" [Hardt gives another gold to the Dominican Republic by beating Cid on the singles final]. Diario Libre (in Spanish). 4 July 2023. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
          7. "Luciana Moyano y un doblete en Cali" [Luciana Moyano and a double in Cali]. www.aadeporte.com.ar/ (in Spanish). Argentina Amateur Deporte. 4 December 2021. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
          8. 1 2 "Verónica Cepede se queda con la medalla de plata en los Juegos Odesur 2022" [Verónica Cepede wins the silver medal at the Odesur 2022 Games]. www.lanacion.com.py/ (in Spanish). La Nación. 15 October 2022. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
          9. "Vero Cepede anunció melancólica y agradecida su retiro del tenis profesional" [Vero Cepede announced melancholic and grateful her retirement from professional tennis] (in Spanish). ABC Color. 20 June 2022. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
          10. "Mafe Herazo, oro en el tenis de los Juegos Centroamericanos y del Caribe 2023" [Mafe Herazo, gold in tennis at the 2023 Central American and Caribbean Games] (in Spanish). El Heraldo. 4 July 2023. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
          This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.