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McCartney Kessler
American tennis player (born 1999) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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McCartney Kessler (born July 8, 1999) is an American tennis player. She has career-high WTA rankings of No. 30 in singles, and No. 136 in doubles, achieved in June and July 2025.[1][2] Kessler has won three titles in singles and one in doubles on the WTA Tour.
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Early life, college education
From Calhoun, Georgia, her parents, Carl Kessler and Julie Kessler (Driggers), played collegiate tennis at University of Central Florida. She has an older sister Mackenzie, who played club tennis at the University of Central Florida, and an older brother McClain Kessler, who played collegiate tennis at Florida.[3][4]
Kessler attended Calhoun High School.[5]
Kessler signed on to the University of Florida on a tennis scholarship to play collegiate tennis for the Florida Gators in November 2017.[6][7] At Florida, she was a three-time All-American and three-time First Team All-SEC player. She also earned the 2022 SEC Player of the Year Award, becoming the ninth player from University of Florida to earn the award.[8]
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Career
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2015: Juniors
Kessler won the U16 doubles title at the Orange Bowl with Emma Kurtz in 2015.[9]
2024: Major & WTA Tour debuts and first title
Kessler made her WTA Tour debut at the Auckland Open after qualifying.[10] She lost in the first round to Lulu Sun.[11]
For her major debut, she received a wildcard for the Australian Open,[12][13] after winning the USTA's Wild Card Challenge, and reached the second round, recording her first major match win over qualifier Fiona Ferro. She lost in the second round to Linda Nosková.[14] In February, she won the biggest title of her career to that date at the WTA 125 in Puerto Vallarta, defeating Taylah Preston in the final.[15]
In March, she received a wildcard from the Indian Wells Open making her WTA 1000 debut there,[16] losing to Nuria Párrizas Díaz in the first round.[17] In April, she entered the main draw of the WTA 500 Charleston Open as a lucky loser, making her debut at this level. She lost in the first round to Caroline Wozniacki.[18]
Kessler qualified for the Wimbledon, making her debut at this Grand Slam tournament,[19] losing to ninth seed Maria Sakkari in the first round.[20]
Following winning a W100 title in Landisville, Pennsylvania, she reached the top 100 on August 12, 2024.[21][22][23]
At the Tennis in Cleveland, she reached her first WTA Tour quarterfinal by defeating fellow wildcard Katrina Scott[24][25] and fourth seed Wang Xinyu for her first top 50 win.[26][27] Next, she defeated Arantxa Rus in straight sets.[28][29] Kessler reached her first final with a come-from-behind three set victory over fifth seed Anastasia Potapova, for her second top 50 win,[30][31] and won her maiden Tour title defeating top seed Beatriz Haddad Maia.[32][33]
She also received a wildcard for the US Open making her debut at her home slam,[34] losing in the first round to 19th seed Marta Kostyuk.[35]
2025: Top 30, Top 5 wins, WTA 1000 singles fourth round & doubles title
Kessler started her season at the Brisbane International, where she defeated Magda Linette,[36] before losing to 15th seed Yulia Putintseva in the second round.[37] The following week, she reached the final at the Hobart International with wins over seventh seed Rebecca Šramková,[38] María Lourdes Carlé[39] top seed Dayana Yastremska[40] and sixth seed Elina Avanesyan.[41][42] In the championship match, Kessler defeated second seed Elise Mertens in three sets to secure her second career title.[43][44] As a result, she reached the top 50 at world No. 47 in the WTA singles rankings on 13 January.[45][46]
In February, at the Dubai Open, Kessler defeated Amanda Anisimova in the first round[47] and then overcame world No. 3, Coco Gauff, to record her first win against a top-5 ranked player.[48][49] She lost in the third round to Karolína Muchová in a match which went to a deciding set tiebreak.[50]
Kessler reached the final at the ATX Open and despite losing to top seed Jessica Pegula, she returned to the top 50, at world No. 48.[51] Alongside Zhang Shuai, she was also runner-up in the doubles at the same tournament, losing the championship match to Anna Blinkova and Yuan Yue.[52]
In June at the Nottingham Open, Kessler defeated top seed Beatriz Haddad Maia,[53] Zhu Lin,[54] two-time defending champion Katie Boulter[55] and Rebecca Šramková to make it through to the final.[56] She also won the championship match against Yastremska, in straight sets, to claim her third career title. As a result, she reached the top 30 on 30 June 2025.[57]
Ranked No. 32 at the Canadian Open, she reached a WTA 1000 fourth round for the first time in her career upsetting world No. 5 and fourth seed, Mirra Andreeva, en route, her second top 5 win.[58][59] At the same tournament she lifted her first doubles title and first at the WTA 1000 level with Coco Gauff, defeating world doubles No. 1 Taylor Townsend and Zhang Shuai.[60]
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Significant finals
WTA 1000 tournaments
Doubles: 1 (title)
WTA Tour finals
Singles: 4 (3 titles, 1 runner-up)
Doubles: 2 (1 title, 1 runner-up)
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WTA Challenger finals
Singles: 1 (title)
ITF Circuit finals
Singles: 4 (3 titles, 1 runner-up)
Doubles: 4 (2 titles, 2 runner-ups)
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Wins against top 10 players
- Kessler has a 2–4 record against players who were, at the time the match was played, ranked in the top 10
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References
External links
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