At the time, Spizzirri was ranked 128th—the number of spots in the main draw of a major, though not the number of direct entries into it. While the Greenwich, Connecticut native said he doesn’t set ranking goals, he nonetheless acknowledged the magical number every tennis player straddling the Challenger and main tours has in mind.
“It would be amazing to get Top 100 by US Open,” Spizzirri said after a victory in Newport, “but who knows, I could get further than that.”
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Spizzirri would go on to reach four consecutive Challengers semifinals (in Newport, Granby, Bloomfield Hills and Lexington). How much did that streak boost his ATP ranking?
One single spot.
His US Open hopes seemed dashed, but it turned out Spizzirri was only one spot away from some good fortune. When Matteo Berrettini withdrew from the tournament with an injury, bumping Brandon Holt into the main draw, a wild card from the USTA opened up. Spizzirri was the recipient. There are Lucky Winners in tennis, too.
Spizzirri made the most of it, defeating Stefan Dostanic for 50 ranking points, $154,000 in prize money—and his very first Grand Slam main-draw win.