Grant Solomon

Grant Steven Solomon
Residence Dallas, Texas
Born (1995-04-03) April 3, 1995
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
College Harvard University

Grant Solomon (born April 3, 1995) is a tennis player from the United States playing on the ATP Challenger Tour.

Early life and personal

Solomon was born April 3, 1995, and is half-Jewish.

His parents Mark and Kathleen Solomon are both attorneys.[1] He attended Greenhill School from first grade on through high school, and graduated high school in 2014.[2]

Tennis career

He is coached by Rodrigo Cerdera.[3]

In high school, he was a four-time All-Southwest Preparatory Conference pick, and a two-time All-American.[4][5] Solomon won three SPC championship titles in his Greenhill career, second only to Greenhill tennis legends Sahil Mittal and Michael Kerner who won four SPC titles for Greenhill. He finished his Greenhill Hornets career with a 48–0 record, never dropping a set.[6]

In February 2014, he had his biggest career victory over Kaichi Uchida of Japan (ITF Junior #3 and ATP #579) in the USTA Pro Circuit futures in Sunrise, Florida. Through Solomon's junior career, he tallied victories over Canadian Brayden Schnur (ATP #456), Chilean Bastian Malla (ATP #646), Noah Rubin (ATP #532), and Jared Donaldson (ATP #170). Four of these five victories came on clay courts.

He has made two main draw ITF Pro Circuit appearances against Daniel Smethurst[7] (ATP #230) and Evan King. He took Smethurst to three sets and dropped a 5–7, 6–2, 6–1 match.

Solomon reached the quarterfinals of the ITF Pro Circuit event in Harlingen, Texas, partnering University of Texas tennis player, John Mee. He has also made two appearances at the ATP Challenger events at the 2014 Challenger of Dallas and at the event in Cali, Colombia.

Solomon was featured in Sports Illustrated Magazine in Faces in the Crowd published in stores on May 14, 2014, for an undefeated high school career.[5] He was one of the few tennis players to do so since the piece began. He joined the company of former and current professional athletes such as John McEnroe, Althea Gibson, Jack Nicklaus, Arthur Ashe, Billie Jean King, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Greg LeMond, Emmitt Smith, Spud Webb, Tiger Woods, Tim Tebow, Andy Roddick, and Marion Jones.

Solomon started playing for Harvard University as a freshman in the Fall of 2014.[8]

References

External links


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