Seven of the final 16 competitors at the 2014 USTA Boys’ 18 National Championships in Kalamazoo were in the same place at the beginning of this week—the main draw of the Australian Open.
Many of those names—such as Taylor Fritz, Frances Tiafoe and Reilly Opelka—have been labeled the future of American men’s tennis for some time now. Yet Ernesto Escobedo, who made the quarterfinals in Kalamazoo that year, has flown well under the radar.
But the California resident is making it hard for it to stay that way, as only he and Tiafoe of that group are still alive in the year’s first Grand Slam. On Tuesday, the No. 131-ranked Escobedo beat fellow 20-year-old and world No. 63 Danill Medvedev after fighting through three qualifying matches last week.
The 7-5 4-6 7-6(5) 6-1 win marks Escobedo's second Grand Slam win in as many major main draw apperances, and sets up a showdown with No. 21 seed David Ferrer on Thursday.
Should Escobedo be more prominently in the conversation with the rest of the up-and-coming Americans? The 6'1" right-hander certainly has the firepower to belong, and slowly but surely, the results.