Men's Tennis

2024 ACC Tennis Championship Tickets on Sale Now

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (theACC.com) – Tickets are now on sale for the 2024 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's and Women's Tennis Championships, set for Wednesday, April 17, through Sunday, April 21, at the Cary Tennis Park in Cary, North Carolina.
 
Single day tickets are priced at $10 for adults (ages 18 and older) and $7 for youth ages 17 and under. Admission is free for children 9 and under. ACC college students get in free with school ID.
 
A full championship pass for all five days is priced at $25. 
 
Tickets may be purchased online at https://theacc.co/24ACCtennischamptix.

All seating for the tournament is General Admission.
 
First-round action at this year’s ACC Men's and Women's Tennis Championships will begin on Wednesday at 10 a.m. (men's) as well as noon and 3:30 p.m. (women's). Matches will continue through Sunday's championship matches, set for 10 a.m. (men's) and 2 p.m. (women's). 

Thirteen ACC teams are ranked across the latest men's and women's Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) Top 25 rankings.

On the men's side, Virginia is No. 2 in the nation, followed by No. 6 Wake Forest, No. 14 Duke, No. 15 Florida State, No. 16 NC State and No. 24 North Carolina. With six teams in the top 25, the ACC has the second-most of any conference.

On the women's side, Virginia is No. 6, North Carolina is No. 8 and NC State is No. 10. The three teams in the top 10 give the ACC the most of any conference. Additionally, Duke ranks No. 19, Georgia Tech is No. 20 and Miami is No. 21. Six teams in the top 25 is also the second-most of any conference.
 
ACC women’s tennis is coming off a successful 2023 season that saw North Carolina and NC State battle for both the ACC Championship and NCAA Championship titles. NC State defeated North Carolina, 4-1, to claim its first ACC Championship in program history in Cary, before the Tar Heels claimed the 2023 National Championship over the Wolfpack, 4-1, in the first-ever All-ACC NCAA Women’s Tennis Final in Orlando, Florida. It marked the league’s third national championship in women’s tennis and the first since Duke in 2009. Georgia Tech holds the conference’s only other NCAA women’s tennis team championship from 2007.  

Six ACC players - the second-most of any conference - are among the ITA top 25 women's individual singles rankings, including two in the top five with North Carolina's Reese Brantmeier at No. 2 and NC State’s Amelia Jajecki at No. 5.  
 
North Carolina’s Elizabeth Scotty and Reese Brantmeier hold the No. 1 women’s doubles ranking to highlight nine ACC doubles teams in the top 25 of the ITA rankings, the most of any conference, with five in the top 15. The UNC duo is followed by NC State’s Sophie Abrams and Anna Zyryanova at No. 10, Georgia Tech’s Carol Lee and Kate Sharabura at No. 12, the Wolfpack’s Amelia Rajecki and Maddy Zampardo at No. 13 and Virginia’s Melodie Collard and Elaine Chervinsky at No. 14.
 
Virginia men’s tennis shared in the ACC’s 2023 success as the program earned its sixth NCAA Championship title and the league’s seventh men’s tennis national championship after claiming its third-straight ACC Championship title.

Six ACC men's tennis singles players are in the top 30 of the ITA Rankings – tied for the most of any conference - led by No. 4 Antoine Cornut-Chauvinc of Florida State and No. 10 Chris Rodesch of Virginia.
 
Wake Forest’s DK Suresh Ekambaram and Holden Koons are the top-ranked men’s doubles pair in the nation and lead nine ACC doubles teams in the ITA Top 25 Rankings, with seven in the top 15, the most of any conference. Duke’s Garrett Johns and Pedro Rodenas are ranked No. 6 and are followed by Louisville’s No. 9 Etienne Donnet and Natan Rodrigues, Boston College’s No. 10 JJ Bianchi and Jake Vassel, Virginia’s No. 11 Iñaki Montes and James Hopper, Notre Dame’s No. 13 Sebastian Dominko and Jean Marc Malkowski and Florida State’s No. 14 Antoine Cornut-Chauvinc and Joshua Dous Karpenschif.