2025 Virginia Spring Tennis Preview: Can Tennis Siblings be the answer to winning multiple titles? 

Spring is nearly here, and with it comes the highly anticipated 2025 VHSL Tennis Championships! Schools across Virginia are gearing up for what promises to be a thrilling season. Last year’s champions, like Langley, who took home both the boys’ and girls’ team titles in Class 6, and Broad Run, who dominated the Class 4 Girls Championship by claiming all three titles, have set the bar high. But with fresh faces and new rivalries, the stakes are higher than ever!

Could sibling power be the secret to success? Last year, the Rotaru sisters, Izzy and Lexi, stole the show in Class 4, taking the doubles title for Broad Run in a commanding 6-2, 6-3 win over E.C. Glass’s Tovia Carothers and Mary Kennedy. Will more sibling duos rise to the occasion this year and make their mark on the court?

As always, each season brings new challenges—seniors graduating, rookies stepping up, and coaches scrambling to find the perfect lineup. With the first matches kicking off in mid-March, the 2025 spring tennis season is already shaping up to be one for the books!

Boys Divisions

Langley took the Class 6 Team Bracket, while Deep Run’s Zach Fleishman took the Class 6 singles and doubles title with Grant Kroodsma.

In Class 5, Riverside claimed the team title against Frank Cox. Riverside’s Ricky Hota and Aarush Rajanala also defeated Neil Banga and Sam Dixon from Frank Cox to claim the doubles title. For the singles title, Matthew Onoff from Menchville defeated Neil Vanga from Frank Cox without dropping a game, 6-0, 6-0. 

Charlottesville won the Class 4 team title. Drew Perez took the singles title and Cole Lafors and Izaak Brown took the doubles title, 6-0, 6-3. 

Western Albemarle took the team title for Class 3. However, Graton’s Rainer Christiansen took the singles and doubles title with his partner, John Lee.

Finally, Bruton took the Class 2 Boys Team Bracket with Christoph Scweitzer and Max De Winter taking home the doubles title. Jack Clem from Richlands took home the single title. 

Girls Divisions

In Class 6, Langley took home the team title. In addition to the team title, Arakal Henryson Gibbs and Zosia Henryson Gibbs also took home the doubles title for Langley. Marianna Primatova from Fairfax took home the singles title. 

Douglas Freeman secured the Class 5 Girls Team Bracket. Ana Maria Rincon from Patrick Henry claimed the singles title while Maddie Tran and Mariana Tan Li from Riverside secured the doubles title. 

Broad Run secured all three championship titles for Class 4 Girls Championships. Lexi Rotaru secured the singles title and the doubles title with Izzy Rotaru. 

For Class 3, Maggie Walker claimed the team title. They also secured the doubles title thanks to Martina Ribera and Ella Wiatt. Blythe Sturman from Western Albemarle won the singles title. 

Marion Senior won two titles during the Class 2 championships. They won the team title, and Parker White won the singles title. Radford’s Lydia Pratt and Claire Fender secured the doubles title. 

In Class 1 action, Rappahannock secured all three titles. Sadie Packett won the singles title in straight sets against Addy bays from Twin Springs. Laney Williams and Maggie Wonderling secured the doubles title for Rappahannock. 

What to Expect This Year

The 2025 VHSL Tennis Championships promise to be an action-packed event full of intense rivalries, breakout performances, and unforgettable moments. With a mix of returning champions, hungry challengers, and fresh talent, the road to victory will be more thrilling than ever. Stay tuned—this is one season you won’t want to miss!

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This is Mid-Atlantic Tennis: Rebekah Noll

This post is part of a series that tell the stories of how tennis has influenced people’s lives in the Mid-Atlantic Section. Meet Rebekah Noll, a USPTA Tennis Professional, Net Generation verified coach and director of tennis at the Crosswhite Athletic Club in Lynchburg, Va. Rebekah was honored by the USPTA with the U30 Award. Read on and you’ll know why. 

In August, at the 2018 United States Professional Teaching Association’s (USPTA) Annual Awards, local Mid-Atlantic teaching professional Rebekah Noll received the U30 USPTA Award. Noll, Director of Tennis at the Crosswhite Athletic Club in Lynchburg, Va., traveled to New York to be awarded this prestigious honor for her accomplishments as a tennis teaching professional. TTC_2018_Noll_resize

Noll, became a director of tennis at the age of 23, and is part of the USPTA Under 30 Initiative. She has dedicated herself to building and maintaining the tennis community at the Crosswhite Athletic Club.

“I was speechless when Gary Trost, the president of USPTA, called to tell me I won this award,” Noll said. “I could not believe a small town coach in Central Virginia even had a chance up against big time tennis professionals in Texas, Florida and California.”

Noll, in addition to successfully creating a Club League program and the first ever (part-time) tennis academy in Lynchburg, has expanded the youth program to include the USTA youth progression pathway. Youth at Crosswhite can now participate in a USTA entry level tournament each month, run by Noll and her team, to earn youth progression points so that each player is able to “level up.” Noll and her fellow teaching professionals also have the Net Generation app on hand to plan their practices and do progress evaluations on each player to keep them engaged.

“Every coach needs to have a youth progression training funnel. Different sessions for different levels of player, so that they get quality practice, while also encouraging new players to work hard to get to that next level,” she said. Net Generation is a really great way to get your program information out there for potential clients looking for a certified coach.”

Noll grew up in Sarasota, Florida, competing alongside her sister, Jordan Jenkins, as they trained at various tennis academies in Florida and became nationally ranked juniors. Her weekends were filled with traveling to tennis tournaments in the family minivan like many youth participating in USTA tournaments. As a college student and member of the Liberty University women’s tennis team, Noll studied Psychology focusing on Human Development – a major that has proved helpful in her work with youth.

“Tennis is a tool that can help form a child’s perspective on the world – developing mental fortitude in a match or just pushing through hard drills,” Noll shared.

Her background in tennis has led her to an opportunity to help other families navigate the world of tennis, learning and growing along the way. Outside of Crosswhite Athletic Club, she hopes that her outreach program in the community, volunteering at public tennis courts, and giving free clinics will help inspire others to give back to the sport as well.

“I would highly recommend to any collegiate tennis player who is graduating to earn a coaching certification and enter the tennis industry – it’s a great career,” Noll added. The USPTA created the Under 30 initiative to create opportunities through leadership and education for fellow Under 30 teaching professional. Through this initiative, Under 30 teaching professionals can access funding to attend conferences, join USPTA committees and be an active resource for others worldwide.  Fellow USPTA pro and former USPTA Mid-Atlantic President, Patrick Kearns, added “the U30 tennis professionals are the future of the USPTA. Having Rebekah Noll win this National Award is great not only for our [Mid-Atlantic] division but for her personally.  Rebekah is a talented Professional and it’s wonderful to have her as one of our U30 leaders.”


Interview and article by Shell Wood, events manager for USTA Mid-Atlantic.