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#500 Yannick Hanfmann (USC ’15) won his second singles title this year and fourth of his career with a straight set win over #357 Stefanos Tsitsipas at the $10K Kramsach, Austria, F2 Futures (Clay). Hanfmann broke Tsitsipas to start the match and made the break lead hold up to take the opening set 6-4. Hanfmann broke for 2-1 in the second and made that break hold up as well to close out the 6-4, 6-4 win in 1 hour and 8 minutes. 


Joao Monteiro (Virginia Tech ’16) advanced to his first-career Futures final with a tough three-set win over #599 Frederico Gil in the semifinals of the $10K Idanha-A-Nova, Portugal, F8 Futures (Hard). Monteiro fell behind 2-0 in the first set then rattled off six straight games to take the opening set 6-2. The second set stayed on serve until Monteiro was broke from 30/40 while serving at 3-4 and Gil would then hold at love to take the set 6-3. Monteiro broke Gil from 30/40 to go up 3-1 in the third but Gil would break back on a four-deuce game to put it back on serve. The match would go to a third set tiebreak and after Monteiro jumped out to a 3-0 lead Gil would take the next four points to go ahead 4-3. Monteiro fought off a match point when serving at 5-6 and he’d then take the next two points after that to win it 6-2, 3-6, 7-6(6). 

 
#743 Alexis Musialek (Kentucky ’12) advanced to his first Futures final since winning in Toulon, France, last June after defeating #617 Xin Gao 6-1, 6-1 at the Saint-Gervais, France, F14 Futures (Clay). Musialek will meet the top seed #380 Maxime Hamou in the finals with Hamou holding a 2-0 H2H advantage although both matches were very close. 
 
Daniel Nguyen (USC ’12) and Mitchell Krueger won their first doubles title as a team with a 6-2, 7-5 win over Jarryd Chaplin (Tennessee ’14) and Benjamin Mitchell at the $75K Winnipeg Challenger (Hard). It was Nguyen’s sixth career Futures doubles title but first since 2014; it was also Krueger’s sixth doubles title and his first since February 2015.
 

#196 Aleksandr Nedovyesov (Oklahoma State ’10) made his fourth semifinal this year but unfortunately his record fell to 0-4 after a 6-1, 6-2 loss to #92 Radu Albot at the $42.5K Poznan, Poland, Challenger (Clay).
 
Both Alan Gadjiev (Wake Forest Redshirt Freshman) and #1513 Jarmere Jenkins (Virginia ’13) lost in the semifinals at the $10K Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, F15 Futures (Hard).  Gadjiev never led against #720 Luca Pancaldi and fell 6-3, 6-3 while Jenkins pushed #772 Tomas Papik to three sets but ultimately fell 6-3, 6-7(5), 6-2. 
Wil Spencer (Georgia ’12) won the $30K USTA/MAS McDonald’s Open Clay Court Championships in Midlothian, Virginia with a 6-4, 7-6(2) win over current Alabama assistant coach and 2006 Illinois graduate Ryler DeHeart. Spencer won $7500 while DeHeart took home $3000 as a finalist – as a reference point the winner and runner-up at a $25K Futures event take home $3600 and $2100. Spencer announced his retirement back in March so it’s interesting to see him back on the court just four month later – he will also be competing next week at the Futures event in Godfrey, Illinois.