Skip to Content
Features

Postcard From Orlando: Adaptive Nationals

By Bryan Hudson

1:18 PM EDT on October 27, 2025

I primarily work with wheelchair and adaptive athletes, and I'm writing from the USTA's National Campus in Orlando for the country's latest adaptive tournament. This one is particularly exciting as it features both the traditional Unified Doubles Competition and, for the first time, an inaugural singles invitational for athletes with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities (IDD).

In the Unified Doubles format, the adaptive athlete is the central focus of the match play. The unified partner's role is to maintain rallies and support their partner, ensuring the adaptive athlete is at the forefront of the competition, rather than dominating play or hitting winners. Despite this collaborative approach, the level of competition is truly exceptional. We have 25 Unified Doubles teams representing 10 of the 17 USTA Sections competing here.

As a proud member of USTA SoCal, our Unified Doubles tournament in Palos Verdes, CA, in September gave us the top three finishers to qualify for this one in Florida, along with Emily Werman, one of our talented SoCal athletes, received an invitation to participate in the inaugural singles invitational this Friday. Our SoCal athletes are proudly affiliated with "Serving Advantage" and "Aceing Autism," both programs bringing tennis to more people.

Bryan Hudson is a native Angeleno and longtime tennis enthusiast. He picked up the sport at 7 and still currently plays in some adult leagues—on the Northridge Quakes 4.0 team, among others—as well as coaches juniors and adults.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Racquet

A Rammed-Earth Sanctuary in Accra

A new tennis project in the city's Osu neighborhood blends cutting-edge architecture with ancient building methods to create a harmonious space for tennis.

November 11, 2025

The Greatest Thing I’ve Ever Seen on a Tennis Court, by Tim Wojcik

Ok, fine, listen, if you twist my arm, here’s an answer: Dane Sweeny—one of those brave souls grinding it out week in week out on the Challenger tour for net negative earnings—gritting out the wildest point you or I will ever see.  

November 11, 2025

Lo Espejo Escape

A tennis academy in a rough area of Santiago, Chile, has transformed its kids—along with the man who started it all

November 6, 2025

How Do I Deal with an Opponent Full of Excuses?

One day, not so long after implementing my methods, your hitting partner will realize God gives his most minor inconveniences to his weakest soldiers.

November 4, 2025

Anyone for Tennis? A CT Fall Classic

On a crisp late-October afternoon, a crew of 40 New Yorkers descended upon Old Greenwich Tennis Academy, a family-run tennis club quietly sitting on one of the best party hacks of all time: rent the whole place, bring your friends, and call it a “tennis party.”

October 27, 2025

Back on the Ranch

In 1957, John Gardiner raised the bar at a tennis resort in Carmel. There's no one left who can reach it.

October 22, 2025
See all posts