They are ranked 344th, down from 148th the week before.
Their 1,185 points playing doubles equal 15 percent of their total score, added to 100 percent of their singles points.
Players earn points per round in tournaments, winning higher points the further into a tournament they advance.
Jarett Cascino of New York Tennis Magazine says tennis is one of the most competitive youth sports.
“There is always someone better than you on any given day, even if you are the number one player in the world!” he said.
Weekly standings collected on Nov. 9 from the USTA.
Junior Boys' 18 doubles rankings in week ending Sept. 11
Name | Doubles Points | Total Points |
---|---|---|
Brett Keeling | 2,232 | 2,941 |
Cooper Knutsen | 1,566 | 1,431 |
Aiden Robinson | 1,185 | 1,649 |
Will Pellegrini | 945 | 1,612 |
Kale Mize | 630 | 1,291 |
Logan Mahan | 597 | 550 |
Porter Arens | 537 | 471 |
Alec Rule | 531 | 600 |
Jesper Ohlson | 528 | 1,401 |
James Benien III | 495 | 800 |
Jacob Cameron | 348 | 359 |
Julian Aaronson | 254 | 217 |
Mario Pacilio | 240 | 496 |
Jue Rui Law | 233 | 351 |
Hunter Henry | 150 | 433 |
Lawson Prather | 144 | 620 |
Ty Taylor | 80 | 41 |
Vaibhav Aggarwal | 50 | 67 |
Jake Craft | 38 | 104 |
Otis Hillock | 30 | 371 |
Jonathan Hillock | 30 | 273 |
Krish Kumar | 30 | 59 |
Bennett Broermann | 30 | 30 |
Justin Pacilio | 30 | 15 |
Landon Wong | 6 | 92 |
Landon Nickel | 6 | 26 |
Nolan Hance | 6 | 16 |