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Adam Walton
Australian tennis player (born 1999) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Adam Walton (born 17 April 1999) is an Australian professional tennis player. Walton has a career high ATP singles ranking of world No. 84 achieved on 21 July 2025. He also has a career high doubles ranking of No. 136 achieved on 4 March 2024.[1] He has won four singles and four doubles titles on the ATP Challenger Tour.

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College career
Walton played college tennis at the University of Tennessee,[2] where he won the 2021 NCAA doubles title with Patrick Harper.[3]
Professional career
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2023: First Challenger title
Walton won his maiden ATP Challenger doubles title at the 2023 San Luis Open Challenger with Colin Sinclair. He won his first singles Challenger in August at the Atlantic Tire Championships in Cary, North Carolina.[4]
2024: Masters, Major debut and first win, top 100
For his Grand Slam debut, he received a wildcard for the 2024 Australian Open.[5] Ranked No. 150, he qualified for the 2024 Miami Open making his Masters debut.[6][7]
Following his third singles title at the 2024 Taipei Challenger, with a win over Illya Marchenko he reached the top 100 at world No. 95 on 20 May 2024.[8][9]
He also received a wildcard for the 2024 French Open.[10] He recorded his first ATP main draw win at the 2024 Mallorca Championships defeating Yannick Hanfmann.[11] He qualified for the 2024 Wimbledon Championships making his debut and recorded his first Major win over Federico Coria,[12] before losing to Francisco Comesaña in the second round.[13]
2025: Masters first wins and fourth round, first ATP semifinal
In Indian Wells he defeated Giulio Zeppieri for his first tour-level win of the 2025 season and first at the Masters 1000-level. In Miami where he entered the main draw as a lucky loser directly into the second round replacing Hubert Hurkacz after his late withdrawal,[14] Walton defeated Luciano Darderi[15] and wildcard Coleman Wong to reach his first Masters fourth round.[16][17][18]
In July, Walton reached his first ATP Tour semifinal at the Los Cabos Open.[19] He lost to third seed Denis Shapovalov in the semifinal.[20]
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ATP Challenger and ITF Tour finals
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Singles: 17 (9 titles, 8 runner-ups)
Doubles: 14 (5 titles, 9 runner-ups)
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Performance timelines
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W | F | SF | QF | #R | RR | Q# | DNQ | A | NH |
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
To avoid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.
Singles
Current through the 2025 French Open.
Doubles
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References
External links
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