Soaked but Successful: Ryan Dickerson sweats it out for a spot in the semifinals at the Neitzel Family Open


Ryan Dickerson prepares to serve against Kenta Miyoshi during their first-round tennis match
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Sweat pours from Ryan Dickerson’s face during his first-round match against Kenta Miyoshi on Wednesday. Dickerson said he typically changes footwear twice per match, but during the three-and-a-half-hour battle with the Fighting Illini’s top player, he changed his footwear kit four times.


CHAMPAIGN - By the end of Friday morning’s quarterfinal, Ryan Dickerson was soaked, down to his third pair of shoes, and one step closer to a title.

The 28-year-old New Jersey native advanced to the semifinals of the Neitzel Family Open at Atkins Tennis Center after opponent Matthew Forbes retired midway through the second set due to a leg injury. Dickerson led 6-1, 3-0 at the time, having worn down the young Michigan State standout with a steady dose of pressure and precision.

“I actually played Matt before,” Dickerson said, referencing a three-set loss to Forbes in February at the Palm Coast Open. “He's a young guy, upcoming talent. He's going to be good.”

This time, it was Dickerson who dictated. Knowing Forbes’ weapons—particularly his serve and athleticism—Dickerson entered the match with a clear strategy: neutralize the serve, extend rallies, and wait for the right moment to strike.

“I had to be sharp with my offense and patient aggressive,” he said. “I didn’t want him to be on offense. I did a good job today getting into a lot of rallies.”

The plan worked. Forbes called a medical timeout late in the first set to treat a nagging leg injury, but after brief attention from a trainer and playing three more games, he was unable to continue.

Ranked No. 185 in the ITF and No. 1120 in the ATP, Dickerson improved his career record to 95-66. Forbes, ranked 2143 in the ITF, fell to 6-10 on the year.

While Dickerson’s tactical edge helped him win the match, his real opponent might’ve been the oppressive Central Illinois heat.

A self-described “massive sweater,” Dickerson came prepared with no fewer than five full “shoe kits” laid out courtside—each containing dry socks, fresh shoes, and ankle braces. It’s a system born of necessity.

“I usually need, like, two per match on average,” he said. “But here, it’s been unique. I’m sweating through shoes. I’m leaking water through my shoes to the court and it’s slipping as if it has just rained.”

During his opening-round match against Kenta Miyoshi, the University of Illinois' top player, Dickerson used all five kits and his original pair in a marathon 5-7, 6-2, 6-4 win that stretched more than three and a half hours.

“The last couple of days, it has been brutally hot,” he said. “I’m physically fit so I can handle it, but the sweating is another thing. Changing grips, shoes—it's a little out of control.”


Ryan Dickerson's shoes waiting to be used
Three of Dickerson's five shoe kits, which includes a dry pair of socks, two ankle braces and dry shoes, waiting for their turn during his match against Forbes. Arriving in Chicago on Monday, the New Jersey native drove to a major tennis retailer in Ohio to pick three pairs of shoes before making his way to Champaign.

Despite the conditions, Dickerson’s game has held up. His veteran experience and ability to adapt—whether to a young opponent’s serve or the moisture underfoot—have him in position to challenge for the title.

That quest continues Saturday morning against top-seeded Paul Jubb, who defeated Kyle Kang 6-3, 6-4 to reach the semis. It will be their first career meeting.

The winner of that match will face either American Quinn Vandecasteele or No. 8 seed Blaise Bicknell of Jamaica, who play in the second semifinal following the men’s doubles final.

For Dickerson, the goal is simple: stay solid, stay aggressive—and stay dry enough to finish.



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Tags: Ryan Dickerson Neitzel Family Open 2025 performance, Matthew Forbes injury retirement tennis match, Champaign Illinois professional tennis tournament, Extreme heat impact on tennis players, Neitzel Family Open semifinal match preview

Quarterfinal field set for Neitzel Family Open in Champaign



Top seeds Jubb, Bicknell, and Kang headline Friday’s Neitzel Family Open quarterfinals in Champaign. Vandecasteele-Kuzuhara rematch highlights Friday's slate. Admission to the tournament is free.

Kyle Kang playing at Neitzel Family Open

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Kyle Kang attacks a weak ball during his match against Drew Fishback on Tuesday. Kang won the match in sweltering two set affair 6-1, 7-6 (6). The Stanford junior defeated Zeke Clark in two sets to advance to Friday's quarterfinals. Kang's resume includes leading Stanford to this year's ACC Championship and last year's PAC-12 conference title. He was also named ITA Northwest Rookie of the Year in 2024.

CHAMPAIGN — The 2024 Neitzel Family Open reaches a pivotal stage Friday morning as eight players remain in the singles draw, each vying for a spot in Saturday’s semifinals at the Atkins Tennis Center.

The day’s quarterfinal slate kicks off at 10 a.m. with a clash between 28-year-old American Ryan Dickerson and wildcard Matthew Forbes. Dickerson, who owns a career record of 94-66 and is currently ranked No. 185 in the ITF World Tennis Rankings, breezed through his second-round match Thursday with a 6-1, 6-2 win over Jon Gamble.

Forbes, whose ranking sits at No. 2,143, matched that scoreline in his upset over Leo Vithoontien. Despite the disparity in rankings, the two have history—Forbes outlasted Dickerson in a tight three-set match earlier this year on clay at the Palm Coast Open, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Friday’s contest, on hard court, offers a new dynamic.

Up next on the day’s schedule is a cross-continental showdown between Jamaican Blaise Bicknell and India’s Dhakshineswar Suresh. Bicknell, 131-86 in his professional career, advanced with a win over Keshav Chopra in the second round, his second victory over the American. Suresh battled through a pair of hard-fought matches to earn his quarterfinal berth. After a gritty three-set win Tuesday over Ryan Fishback, the Indian right-hander overcame soaring temperatures to defeat Evan Bynoe 6-3, 7-5 on Thursday.


Blaise Bicknell runs down a ball pulling him outside the duece court
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Blaise Bicknell hits a cross-court winner during his first-round match against Oliver Okonkwo on Tuesday. The Jamaican defeated Okonkwo 6-3, 6-2, and followed the victory up with another win over Keshav Chopra in the second round.

The third match on deck pits top-seeded Brit Paul Jubb against No. 6 seed Kyle Kang of the United States. Jubb, who holds an ATP singles ranking of No. 398, entered the quarterfinals by knocking off Maxwell Exsted 6-3, 6-3, following his opening-round triumph over ITF No. 1 Naoki Tajima.

Kang, ranked No. 584, comes in with confidence after ousting former Illini standout and assistant coach Zeke Clark in straight sets, 6-0, 6-4. The win served as payback for Kang, who suffered a straight-sets loss to Clark in 2022 at the Edwardsville Open.

In the final quarterfinal, two rising American prospects square off: Bruno Kuzuhara and Quinn Vandecasteele. The two met in January at the Cleveland Challenger, where Vandecasteele claimed a three-set win decided by a final-set tiebreaker.

Kuzuhara returns to the quarters after a gutsy comeback win over Antoine Ghibaudo, 5-7, 6-1, 6-3. He opened the tournament with a dominant 6-3, 6-1 win over Braden Shick. Vandecasteele, meanwhile, began his run by knocking off No. 3 seed Aidan McHugh and moved on when Cooper Woestendick retired following the first set of their second-round match.

Friday’s action will also feature the tournament’s doubles semifinals. In one matchup, Illinois alum Hunter Heck and Japan’s Kenta Miyoshi will take on British pair Giles Hussey and Aidan McHugh at 10 a.m.

Later in the day, top-seeded Japanese duo Naoki Tajima and Leo Vithoontien face Americans Zachary Fuchs and Wally Thayne. That semifinal is scheduled to follow the Bicknell-Suresh singles match on North Court #5.

The Neitzel Family Open, an annual staple of the ITF World Tennis Tour, continues to deliver competitive tennis under the summer sun in Champaign-Urbana. Admission for all rounds remains free and open to the public.



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Tags: Neitzel Family Open 2025 quarterfinals preview, Champaign Illinois professional tennis tournament, Paul Jubb vs Kyle Kang match analysis, ITF tennis events in Midwest USA, Free admission tennis matches in Champaign


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