NCAA champion Alexa Noel's debut as a professional tennis player arrives next week at
the U.S. Open — a decade after she went to Flushing Meadows with a racket in hand for the first time.
When she was about 11, the now-21-year-old American recalled, she was invited to a camp run by the U.S. Tennis Association at the site of the year's last Grand Slam tournament.
"They let us stand on (the court in Arthur) Ashe (Stadium)," Noel said in a video interview with The Associated Press. "And I was like, ‘This is so cool. I want to be here one day.'"
Noel earned this trip to New York, and a spot in her first Slam singles bracket, by winning a title for the University of Miami as a redshirt junior in May, the same month she graduated with a degree in sociology. She is giving up her final year of NCAA eligibility to go pro; Thursday's draw will determine her first opponent.
"She's ready. She's a pretty confident player and she likes challenges," said her coach, Lorenzo Cava, who used to work with 2020 Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin. "To be thrown into such an important event, there can be a question mark: How will she react? To the environment? To the big stage? To the pressure?"