French Open 2020: Britain's Alfie Hewett completes double by winning singles title

Britain’s Alfie Hewett won his second title of the 2020 French Open by beating Belgium’s Joachim Gerard in the wheelchair men’s singles final.

Hewett, who won the doubles event with Gordon Reid on Friday, won 6-4 4-6 6-3 to seal his fourth singles Grand Slam.

He trailed 3-1 in the decider, received treatment for a left shoulder issue but returned take the next five games.

It is the second time he has won the singles title at Roland Garros and his 13th Slam win in singles and doubles.

“I hope to get a good pizza in tonight to celebrate,” Hewett ,22, said.

“It’s amazing to come here today and get the double. Me and my left shoulder are ready for a break.”

As Hewett served for the match there was a lengthy delay at 15-15 because of an mechanical issue with Gerard’s chair.

When play resumed Hewett won the next three points, sealing the match after two hours 36 minutes with a volley at the net.

Hewett’s win with Reid on Friday meant the British pair completed a clean sweep of the doubles titles in the three Grand Slams available this year.

He also reached the singles final at the US Open last month.

Hewett – who has Perthes disease which affects his hip and femur – had been told earlier this year that 2020 would be his final year on the circuit because his disability is not severe enough to meet new classification criteria but he was given a 12-month reprieve last month.

There were defeats, however, for Britons Andy Lapthorne and Jordanne Whiley in the men’s quad singles final and women’s wheelchair doubles final respectively.

Lapthorne was beaten 6-2 6-2 by Dylan Alcott of Australia, while Whiley and partner Yui Kamiji lost on a match tie-break 7-6 (7-2) 3-6 10-8 to Diede de Groot and Aniek van Koot.

After his defeat Lapthorne, 29, said he would take a break from tennis because of mental health issues.


Australian Open 2020: Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid win men's doubles wheelchair final

Alfie Hewett celebrated an Australian Open title that he is expecting to be his last after being told he does not meet new classifications for wheelchair tennis.

The 22-year-old teamed up with fellow British player Gordon Reid to beat French top seeds Stephane Houdet and Nicolas Peifer 4-6 6-4 (10-7) in the men’s doubles final.

Hewett, who has two Paralympic silver medals and nine grand slam titles across singles and doubles, has Perthes disease, which affects the hip and femur.

He told BBC Sport: “There’s a new system that’s come in, and I just don’t meet the requirements for it. But there’s no other option for me, because I’m not able to compete on my feet.

“I’m kind of just using it to my advantage at the moment. At the moment it is my last year, so that’s why today meant a lot to me. Coming into that third set tie-break, it was just a case of going out there and giving it my all.

“I shed a few tears at the end, and back in the locker room. We’ve had a great time together, and a good adventure, and if this is the last time I play the Australian Open, then it’s very, very happy memories.”

Reid, who will contest the singles final against Shingo Kunieda of Japan, said: “It’s obviously been tough.

“I can’t imagine putting myself in Alfie’s position. Classification in Paralympic sport is a very controversial subject, one that’s never going to be perfect, and there’s always going to be someone that misses out.

“Things could change – I wouldn’t be surprised if they did – and hopefully this isn’t the last year we see Alfie playing wheelchair tennis.”

Andy Lapthorne, the British No 1 quad wheelchair star reflected on his defeat to Australia’s Dylan Alcott by acknowledging the passionate support he received from the crowd.

“From all four corners there were people shouting me on, I really wasn’t expecting the amount of support I got and it shocked me when I got out onto court and heard that especially from people I didn’t know,” he told Sky Sports.

“It just brought back memories of when I’ve been here cheering Andy Murray on and it was on another level to be down on that court myself and be that guy because that’s why we play and that’s why we work so hard.

“I can take so much from today it was an amazing experience and hearing the noise that was created in there for a wheelchair tennis match is unreal.”


'I am puzzled as to why they want to exclude me' - Alfie Hewett on being told he is not disabled enough to play his sport

The International Tennis Federation decided that Hewitt was not disabled enough to play in its tournaments.

After the last ball of January’s wheelchair doubles final was hit, the new Australian Open champion, Alfie Hewett, pushed himself over to fellow Briton Gordon Reid for a celebratory high-five. Then he dissolved into tears….


Alfie Hewett: ‘My sport is being snatched from me. It’s not fair’

For most elite sportspeople in Britain the Covid-19 lockdown is a temporary, if painful, episode. For Britain’s three-time wheelchair tennis grand-slam event champion and Paralympic silver medallist Alfie Hewett, coronavirus brings added anguish.

Mercifully for one born with a congenital heart defect that required surgery at six months, and a victim of rare hip abnormality Perthes Disease, Hewett’s physical health is not at issue. The torment is, however, real.

Following revisions to the wheelchair tennis classifications made by the International Tennis Federation and approved by the International Paralympic Committee last year, Hewett was advised that 2020 would be his last season in a sport that has shaped his life.

His ability to walk, though severely impaired, took him outside the new regulations. At 22 years old you can imagine the sense of devastation evinced, a situation compounded by a lethal pandemic that has already seen Wimbledon wiped from the calendar and the Olympic Games postponed.

The French Open has been rescheduled for September and the US Open hangs on to its 24 August start date for now, but neither can be confident of surviving. The hope is that those who qualified for the Tokyo Olympics will still be able to compete in 2021, but that has still to be confirmed by the ITF. So Hewett waits while what remains of his astonishing career is suspended in a state of wicked uncertainty.

“I’ve been keeping on a physical programme, watching matches and keeping that tennis brain active,” he says. “It is a strange period. As things stand, my career will have to finish at the end of the year. With this pandemic going on there is obviously a bigger picture. I just hope they will allow me and the other athletes affected to compete in the Games next year.”

Hewett first took to his wheelchair after being diagnosed with Perthes Disease, a condition that inhibits blood flow from the pelvis to the hip joint, at six years old. Successful treatment, which involves immediate wheelchair use to protect against load bearing on the legs, depends on early diagnosis. As a football-mad kid, Hewett ignored the early signs and played on with negative consequences in adulthood. Though walking is possible, Hewett is not mobile in the conventional sense and nowhere near athletic in any meaningful way while upright.

“I want to carry on competing for the foreseeable future, not just an extra year,” he says. “Obviously the ITF have a lot on their plate deciding what happens with Olympic qualification, classification, rankings, points systems, etc. Questions have been asked from my side whether this is going to be my final year. It is still unknown.”

Over and above the Olympic situation, there is a sense of injustice around the treatment of Hewett, and others similarly affected, for whom the able-bodied game is not an option. “It’s not fair,” he says. “I was allowed into the sport when I was eight or nine. There were certain rules and guidelines then. I have played for 13 years. I have had an unbelievable career. I’m proud of where I have got. There has been a lot of sacrifice and hard work. I wanted to get to the top and make it a full-time living. Just as I reach that point, these guidelines have come in and it has affected where I stand.”

What should be an uplifting story about a boy overcoming not one, but two chronic health conditions to carve his place in the world through wheelchair sport has turned into a political mess. Not only is Hewett denied a future, his achievements, which include two US Opens and a French Open singles title and five major doubles titles, plus two Paralympic silvers, might be construed by those of a cynical disposition as tainted.

“The decision makes you out to be a fraud almost,” Hewett says. “If you look at the top 10 there is such a range of disabilities, and everyone beats everyone. If it was clear that my disability was giving me an advantage and I was sweeping up left, right and centre you could argue maybe it wasn’t fair. But the truth is I have no advantage over other players. In a wheelchair my legs aren’t being used.”

Hewett’s account of his condition shines a harsh light on the rules changes. “Perthes varies from person to person,” he says. “The severity from the beginning depends on circumstances. As a six or seven year-old you don’t want to be told you can’t run around and play football. I loved playing football. I must have been undiagnosed for eight months to a year. My parents and friends thought I was whinging about a couple of bad slide tackles. But being on my feet and still running around was making the condition a lot worse. It just got to a point where I was in absolute agony. I collapsed. I couldn’t put any weight through my leg. An ambulance came and I was rushed to hospital. I came out of that in a wheelchair and my life changed from that moment.”

Understandably, Hewett is frustrated at the ruling. “They don’t understand what I’ve had to go through. I have had to come through a lot of adversity. I never dreamed of being a wheelchair tennis player when I was three of four years old. I wanted to be a footballer, then life throws this monster at you. I had to overcome that and all the mental and social struggles that go with it. I found disability sport. I played wheelchair basketball and tennis and created a job for myself. To make a living from a wheelchair sport is rare. We are so lucky in what wheelchair tennis has to offer and now it is being snatched out of my hand through no fault of my own.”

Hewett’s powerful testimony begs the question why the authorities cannot refine the regulations still further to create a category that would allow similarly affected athletes to continue in the sport. “I know what I felt when I first got in that chair. It gave me a new purpose in life. I would hate for a seven-year-old with Perthes today, or another disability, to be denied that opportunity because their condition no longer fits the criteria. It turned my life around. It has been one hell of a ride. That’s where it gets to me, the idea that it might prevent others from doing what I did. It’s not right.”


Head to Head: Alfie Hewett vs Gordon Reid

Ahead of their match in today’s US Open men’s wheelchair singles opening round, we take a closer look at the history between team mates, and rivals, Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid.

Going into today’s contest, their head-to-head record on the international stage is tightly poised at 12-12. Here, we dig deeper into how their careers have developed to date.

Reid’s early dominance

The two Brits have been a feature at the top of their sport for several years. Hewett is a three-time Grand Slam champion, Reid has won two, and as a partnership they have claimed a remarkable seven men’s doubles Slam victories – all since 2017.

But on their journey to the summit of wheelchair tennis, the pair have faced off regularly against one another – first meeting in 2013 at the North East Wheelchair Tournament. Reid would triumph 6-0 6-1 over Hewett, and would go on to his next six meetings against his future doubles partner.

Hewett, who is now the British No.1 and World No.3, wouldn’t defeat Reid for four years – making his breakthrough in the semi-final stage of the 2017 Sydney International Open.

2013 North East Wheelchair Tournament First Round Gordon Reid 6-0 6-1
2014 Bolton Indoor First Round Gordon Reid 6-2 6-1
2014 Open de La Baie Somme Quarter-final Gordon Reid 6-3 6-3
2014 Nottingham Indoor Round of 16 Gordon Reid 6-4 6-1
2015 Sydney International Open Round of 16 Gordon Reid 6-0 7-5
2016 Japan Open Round of 32 Gordon Reid 6-2 2-6 6-1
2016 Paralympic Games First Round Gordon Reid 6-2 6-1

Times they are a-changin’ in 2017

Hewett’s first win against his close friend and doubles partner would not be his last of a 2017 which proved to be a huge year for both men.

The duo would be involved in a number of firsts in the wheelchair game. They featured in the first all-Brit men’s singles semi-final at the British Open, thefirst all-Brit men’s singles semi-final at a Grand Slam in the US Open, and Hewett would win his first Grand Slam title at Roland Garros (Reid won two Wimbledon and the Australian Open in 2016).

In total the pair faced off against each other on seven occasions – Reid won three and Hewett won four.

2017 Sydney International Open Semi-final Alfie Hewett 7-5 6-2
2017 Melbourne Open Semi-final Gordon Reid 6-4 3-6 6-2
2017 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament Quarter-final Gordon Reid 6-0 6-4
2017 SA Open Quarter-final Gordon Reid 6-4 3-6 6-1
2017 British Open Semi-final Alfie Hewett 6-3 1-6 6-3
2017 US Open Semi-final Alfie Hewett 7-5 5-7 7-6 (8)
2017 NEC Wheelchair Tennis Masters First Round Alfie Hewett 6-3 6-2

Hewett on top since 2019

Following a blockbuster 2017 for both men 2018 was also evenly-matched – the duo met on four occasions winning two apiece – but since 2019 Hewett has dominated.

Hewett – who won the US Open in 2018 and 2019 – was forced to work hard in his last encounter with Reid, winning 7-5 7-5 in a match held last week at LTA Wheelchair Tennis Series at the National Tennis Centre, and he will have to overcome his fellow Brit once again if he is to make it a three-peat of titles in New York.

2018 Sydney Open Semi-final Alfie Hewett 6-0 6-4
2018 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament Semi-final Alfie Hewett 6-0 7-5
2018 Japan Open Semi-final Gordon Reid 6-2 6-3
2018 Roland Garros Quarter-final Gordon Reid 6-4 6-4
2019 Georgia Open Quarter-final Alfie Hewett 7-5 6-2
2019 Cajun Classic Quarter-final Alfie Hewett 6-3 6-1
2019 Korea Open Semi-final Alfie Hewett 7-6 (3) 6-3
2019 Fever-Tree Championships First Round Alfie Hewett 6-2 7-5
2020 Melbourne Open Quarter-final Alfie Hewett 4-6 7-5 6-4
2020 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament               First Round Alfie Hewett 6-0 6-3


Wheelchair star Alfie Hewett to compete in 2021 after ITF postpones new classification rules

Wheelchair star Alfie Hewett has been granted a stay of execution in his bid to continue his tennis career.

The 10-time Grand Slam champion was told last year that he would not be able to carry on playing wheelchair tennis professionally beyond 2020 because his disability was not regarded as severe enough under new classification rules.

Hewett has challenged the decision but faced the very real possibility that the US Open, where he defeated countryman and doubles partner Gordon Reid 6-0, 6-2 in the quarter-finals on Thursday, could have been his penultimate major.

However, following the postponement of the Paralympics to next summer, the International Tennis Federation has followed suit and allowed Hewett and other players in the same situation to continue competing until the end of 2021.

The 22-year-old, who was diagnosed with Perthes Disease at the age of six, said: “That’s obviously great news. At least I can carry on playing for another 15 months or so. Hopefully there can be decisions overturned.”

Hewett, from Norwich, was emotional after he and Reid won their seventh slam doubles title together at the Australian Open in January, and he is candid about how difficult the situation has been.

“It’s tough, I’m not going to lie,” he said. “It’s not easy to go out and play what could be your last New York or your last Australian Open. It’s something that I have struggled with and I won’t hide from that.

“It’s hard to be told that your career has to be stopped from a decision that’s not in your own hands. You’re going to have to go out there and try to win and put all that behind you, which is not easy when maybe you’re in a final or a semi-final and there’s something in the back of your head that keeps reminding you it could be the last time.”

Hewett was threatened with another blow when the United States Tennis Association announced wheelchair events would not be played at this year’s behind-closed-doors US Open.

The decision was swiftly overturned after an outcry among players, giving Hewett and Reid the chance to challenge for a fourth straight doubles title at Flushing Meadows, while Hewett is going for a hat-trick of singles trophies.

The only match he has lost at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center was the singles final on his debut in 2017.

“I love it here,” said Hewett, who was due to face second seed Gustavo Fernandez in the semi-finals on Friday.

“I don’t even know why I play so well to be honest. I just must have this confidence that when I step on a New York court I do well.”


US Open: Alfie Hewett fails in bid to win third consecutive wheelchair singles title

Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid showed why they are the world’s top ranked men’s doubles partnership on Saturday’s penultimate day of the US Open Wheelchair Tennis Competition, as they claimed an unprecedented fourth title together in New York.

Britain’s Alfie Hewett missed out on a third successive US Open wheelchair singles title after losing a final-set tie-break to top seed Shingo Kunieda.

Hewett recovered from 4-1 down in the third set to serve for the match at 6-5, but eventually was beaten 6-3 3-6 7-6 (7-3) after two hours and fifty-four minutes on Louis Armstrong Stadium.

The 22-year-old, whose only previous defeat at Flushing Meadows was the singles final on his debut in 2017, won the doubles title alongside compatriot Gordon Reid on Saturday.

There was success, though, for fellow Brit Jordanne Whiley and her Japanese partner Yui Kamiji as they won the US Open women’s wheelchair doubles to claim their 11th Grand Slam title together.

Jordanne Whiley (right) and Yui Kamiji last won the US Open doubles title together in 2014

They beat Dutch top seeds Marjolein Buis and Diede de Groot 6-3 6-3 in New York.


US Open glory for British wheelchair trio Alfie Hewett, Gordon Reid and Andy Lapthorne

Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid showed why they are the world’s top ranked men’s doubles partnership on Saturday’s penultimate day of the US Open Wheelchair Tennis Competition, as they claimed an unprecedented fourth title together in New York.

Fellow Brit Andy Lapthorne also secured his fourth successive quad doubles title.

With players on the LTA’s Wheelchair Tennis World Class Programme having won four titles at Flushing Meadows in 2019, Hewett and Jordanne Whiley will now aim to help equal that record when they contest Sunday’s men’s singles and women’s doubles finals, respectively.

Reigning Australian Open champions Hewett and Reid took their tally of Grand Slam men’s doubles titles together to eight after beating French second seeds Stephane Houdet and Nicolas Peifer 6-4, 6-1.

Reid, who stretched his own personal tally of US Open doubles titles to five after partnering Houdet to win the 2015 title, said: “It means a lot to both of us. I’ve not lost a doubles match here since 2014, so it’s amazing to have that record.

“At Wimbledon and Roland Garros last year we were pretty disappointed with the results and made a big effort with the team at the LTA to make sure we turned things around and improved. I think we can really take pride in our results since then.”

After winning the first two games but then dropping the next three, Hewett and Reid got the better of the early momentum swings and attacked Houdet’s serve in the 10th game, the Frenchman producing a double fault to give the Brits three set points.

The Brits only needed the first as Hewett made the most of the ball hitting the net cord and presenting him with the option of a cross court forehand winner, which he put away with pinpoint accuracy.

The defending champions grew in stature to take the first five games of the second set and two games later they were presented with their first match point. Hewett made short work of the opportunity as he feigned an overhead smash at the net and calmly put away a delicate drop shot to wrap up a dominant performance.

With Hewett and Reid winning the first ever wheelchair tennis final to be staged on Arthur Ashe Stadium, Hewett said: “I think there are always going to be patches when you’re not playing your best tennis and there were a couple of games in that first set when I was getting a bit frustrated, but then we took control of the match and played the style we wanted to and in the second set our level definitely went up.

“It’s pretty spectacular to be on Arthur Ashe for a final on a Saturday at midday. That doesn’t come around often, so you’ve got to make the most of it.”

Hewett, who plays on Louis Armstrong Stadium on Sunday as he faces world No 1 Shingo Kunieda of Japan in a bid to win his third US Open men’s singles title in a row, added:

“It really means a lot to us as players, for all the work we’ve put in off court and the training with our teams. To perform so consistently well at this tournament, you just have to embrace that.

“I’m sure Gordon will be sipping some champagne later, but I’ll be on the recovery drinks in preparation for tomorrow. Mentally I’m in a really good place, my confidence is at the highest that it’s been for a while and I’m sure it will be a great final.”

Lapthorne and Alcott, the inaugural Wimbledon quad doubles champions in 2019 before winning their first US Open title together 12 months ago, had to come from behind before retaining their crown with a 3-6, 6-4, (10-8) victory over Dutchman Sam Schroder and David Wagner of the USA.

Schroder and Wagner gained momentum midway through the opening set to take the lead. However, Lapthorne and Alcott opened up a 3-0 second-set lead and although they missed chances to convert game points that would have given them a 5-1 lead, Lapthorne ultimately scrambled a drop shot over the net on set point to force a deciding match tie-break.

After a series of tense exchanges, Lapthorne and Alcott earned three match points and they needed all three before Alcott wrapped up their successful title defence with an ace.

Despite making it four US Open doubles crowns in a row, having won the 2017 and 2018 titles partnering Wagner, world No 2 Lapthorne still rued his singles performance against Schroder earlier in the day, which saw the Dutchman win their pivotal round-robin match 6-2, 6-1 to earn his place in Sunday’s final. However, Lapthorne conceded that the doubles final had produced an entertaining match. He said: “I think today you saw some of the best quad doubles that you could wish to see. It’s been a tough week. I expected more, to be honest. I feel that the only player that beats me is me.

“It didn’t go my way today and I’m not happy with the way I played, but it’s not the end of my world. I go home with another doubles title and get ready to go again in another few weeks at Roland Garros.”

Like Hewett, Lapthorne ended the 2019 US Open as a singles and doubles champion. However, he had to recover from a below par singles performance on Saturday before partnering Australian Dylan Alcott to the quad doubles title.