2024 Biofreeze USA PICKLEBALL

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

Daily Recaps

Highlights from Day 7

Follow @usapickleball on Instagram for reels, highlights and more!

Championship Sunday did not disappoint at the 2024 Biofreeze USA Pickleball National Championships! Thank you to everyone who made this event a success, especially our USA Pickleball members.

There’s more to come! Be sure to stay connected — update your email preferences in your member profile and follow us on social media — for news about the 2025 National Championships.

And stay tuned for our post-event survey; we want to hear your thoughts!

Sunday, November 17th

Pro Mixed Doubles
Gold: Bobbi Oshiro & Will Howells
Silver: Amanda Hendry & William Sobek
Bronze: Eric Oncins & Jillian Braverman

Pro Women’s Doubles
Gold: Megan Fudge & Jill Braverman
Silver: Mari Humberg & Allison Harris
Bronze: Emily Cederquist & Yana Newell

Pro Men’s Doubles
Gold: Will Howells & Jack Munro
Silver: Erik Lange & Purple Jesus Manthou
Bronze: Richard Livornese & Tanner Tomassi

Women’s Singles 5.0 (19-49)
Gold: Suzanne Fischer
Silver: Jenn Joy
Bronze: Brooke  

Men’s Singles 5.5 (19-49)
Gold: Brett Warner
Silver: Leon Ojalvo
Bronze: Jerry Worsham

Men’s Singles 4.5 (40-49)
Gold: Justin Hellinger
Silver: Farzad Adib
Bronze: Dave Pogge

Women’s Singles 4.5 (30-49)
Gold: Marcela Truxal
Silver: Melissa Ferger
Bronze: Anna Dyachenko

Men’s Singles 4.5 (19-29)
Gold: Logan Luc
Silver: Alec Overett
Bronze: Nicholas Hodges

Men’s Singles 4.5 (30-39)
Gold: Dylan Vo
Silver: Kenny Keating
Bronze: Grant Poole

Men’s Singles 5.0 (40-49)
Gold: Ryan Nielson
Silver: Scott Watters
Bronze: Dr. Leslie Danjou

Women’s Singles 4.0 (40-49)
Gold: Diana Hughes
Silver: Elizabeth Solander
Bronze: Amy Powell

Men’s Singles 4.0 (40-49)
Gold: Jeff Tsao
Silver: Nicholas Wehbe
Bronze: Anthony Gonzales

Men’s Singles 5.0 (30-39)
Gold: Andy Lum
Silver: Matthew Ouano
Bronze: Christopher Duarte

Men’s Singles 4.0 (19-29)
Gold: Jayden Tsao
Silver: Chris Meyers
Bronze: Jr Deheart

Men’s Singles 6.0 (40-49)
Gold: Stefan Pongratz
Silver: Arjun Thyagarajan
Bronze: Alec Fischer

Men’s Singles 5.0 (19-29)
Gold: Jake Sandler
Silver: Michael Campbell
Bronze: Max Fusselman

Women’s Singles 5.5/6.0 (19-39)
Gold: Jalina Ingram
Silver: Keilly Ulery
Bronze: Alexis Stein

Men’s Singles 6.0 (19-39)
Gold: Vova Zverkovsky
Silver: Indigo Dagnall
Bronze: David Zuckerman

Men’s Singles 4.0 (30-39)
Gold: Diogo Buccellato
Silver: Jon Oakley
Bronze: John Ferlazzo

Women’s Singles 4.0 (30-39)
Gold: Stephanie Alliev
Silver: Neha Khurana
Bronze: Alex Lynch

Saturday, November 16th

Mixed Doubles 5.0 (40-49)
Gold: Abigail Brandenberger & Matt Brandenberger
Silver: Eric Amend & Suzanne Fischer
Bronze: Andrew Jones & Christie Lammi

Pro Champions (50+) Mixed Doubles
Gold: Jaime Oncins & Lee Whitwell
Silver: Jose Derisi & Sheri Courter
Bronze: Dayne Gingrich & Jennifer Dawson

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (40-49)
Gold: Ivy Bewley & Paul Bewley
Silver: Joe Schmitz & Adrienne Conklin
Bronze: Gail Shriner & Terry Shoemaker

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (30-39)
Gold: Seth Kirby & Elida Shilts
Silver: Cathy Din & James Heldridge
Bronze: Peter Curry & Adriann Gin

Mixed Doubles 5.0 (30-39)
Gold: Christopher Duarte & Laura Jude
Silver: Jenn Joy & Troy Fuerte
Bronze: Christina Barker & Waymon Peet

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (19-29)
Gold: Huey Trinh & Janaye Sakkas
Silver: Eli Stein & Alexis Stein
Bronze: Allie Overett & Alec Overett

Mixed Doubles 6.0 (19-39)
Gold: Kelly Chen & Mark Wei
Silver: Jalina Ingram & Andy Lum
Bronze: Anderson Ju & Chloe Pham

Mixed Doubles 4.0 (19-49)
Gold: Jaclyn Keller & Austin Hall
Silver: Lily Deheart & Jr Deheart
Bronze: Thom Myers & Myndee Myers

Mixed Doubles 5.0 (19-29)
Gold: Meghan Hart & Thunder Shaffer
Silver: Geoff Watson & Becca Bender
Bronze: Dale Gutierrez & Jenna Gallanosa

Mixed Doubles 5.5 (40-49)
Gold: Chase Distefano & Melissa Ferger
Silver: Lynn Syler & Joedon Terry
Bronze: Michael Givens & Susie Lawler

Mixed Doubles 5.5 (19-29)
Gold: Jessica Simeri & Joseph Roeder
Silver: Jacquelyn Campbell & Conner Edlebeck
Bronze: Chad Hart & Ashley Robinson

Mixed Doubles 6.0 (40-49)
Gold: Chase Carman & Caroline Mulloy
Silver: Courtney Shuster & Dale Zwack
Bronze: Arjun Thyagarajan & Jennifer Osur Douglas

Mixed Doubles 5.5 (30-39)
Gold: Tadd Fujikawa & Adrienne Elsberry
Silver: Chris Bauerle & Jo Ann (Jo) Gries
Bronze: Cameron Martin & Kimberlee Nelson

Friday, November 15th

Pro Women’s Singles
Gold: Bobbi Oshiro
Silver: Alexa Schull
Bronze: Megan Fudge

Pro Men’s Singles
Gold: Chris Haworth
Silver: Patrick Kawka
Bronze: Grayson Goldin

QVC Pro Champions (50+) Women’s Doubles
Gold: Nathalie Bagby & Elizabeth Bellamy
Silver: Cammy Macgregor & Jennifer Dawson
Bronze: Natalija Todorovic-Shaw & Aila Main

Pro Champions (50+) Men’s Doubles
Gold: Mircea Morariu & David Weinbach
Silver: Jaime Oncins & Rick Witsken
Bronze: Altaf Merchant & Dayne Gingrich

Women’s Doubles 4.5 (40-49)
Gold: Katherine Zuk & Amy Powell
Silver: Rachel Campagnolo & Cee Torkaman
Bronze: Candice Crane & Natalie Hardesty

Women’s Doubles 5.0 (40-49)
Gold: Julie Haddock & Camille Westover
Silver: Jacquelyn Campbell & Melissa Suchomel
Bronze: Reine Steel & Marcela Truxal

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (30-39)
Gold: Nicholas Hodges & Joseph Wells
Silver: Huey Trinh & Kenny Keating
Bronze: Jason Haycock & Nick Haycock

Men’s Doubles 5.0 (30-39)
Gold: Justin Lui & Waymon Peet
Silver: Michael Hamberg & Armando Ocando
Bronze: Josh Walker & Matt Brandenberger

Women’s Doubles 4.5 (30-39)
Gold: Heather Sullivan & Samantha Thompson
Silver: Stacy Hedrick & Hayden Dillard
Bronze: Leslie Teruel & Veronica Hernandez

Men’s Doubles 5.5 (19-39)
Gold: Ryan Trefry & Bret Bucher
Silver: Dustin Tessendorf & Dano Dayton
Bronze: Dale Gutierrez & Jose Hernandez

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (40-49)
Gold: Shawn Lam & Michael Adams
Silver: Greg Campagnolo & Daniel Velez
Bronze: Farzad Adib & Stephen Pirt

Men’s Doubles 5.0 (40-49)
Gold: Vishal Talreja & Rob Hagmann
Silver: Jonathan Clark & Joshua Saylor
Bronze: Nevin Langdon & Andrew Jones

Men’s Doubles 4.0 (30-49)
Gold: Michael Yee & Aaron Wu
Silver: Joseph Mcdaniel & Jeff Tsao
Bronze: Jackson Guan & John Nguyen

 

Women’s Doubles 5.0 (30-39)
Gold: Laura Madison & Jenna Chan
Silver: Monica Lemons & Jessica Simeri
Bronze: Elysia Price & Robyn Himelstein

Women’s Doubles 5.5 (40-49)
Gold: Courtney Shuster & Caroline Mulloy
Silver: Joylyn Bronson & Bobette Carpenter
Bronze: Cori Perry & Alison Bruggeman

Men’s Doubles 5.0 (19-29)
Gold: Ben Herrick & Caleb Herrick
Silver: Troy Wieland & Max Fusselman
Bronze: Gavin Manders & Benjamin Jones

Women’s Doubles 4.5 (19-29)
Gold: Dawn Stein & Alexis Stein
Silver: Jessica Pil & Lorin Lee
Bronze: Katie Dunaway & Margaret Dodd

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (19-29)
Gold: Grant Poole & Alec Overett
Silver: Derek Thompson & Logan Luc
Bronze: Brady Porter & Tyler Denbo

Men’s Doubles 4.0 (19-29)
Gold: Jayden Tsao & Jr Deheart
Silver: Henry Lin & Derek Lin
Bronze: Joshua Spencer & Dylan Luke

Men’s Doubles 6.0 (19-49)
Gold: Chase Carman & Dale Zwack
Silver: Mark Wei & Barry Ko
Bronze: Ted Holway & Ryan Carty

Women’s Doubles 5.0 (19-29)
Gold: Sarah Daly & Malia Bolko
Silver: Gail Shriner & Jessica Hajjar
Bronze: Nikisha Patel & Becca Hsu

Women’s Doubles 5.5 (19-39)
Gold: Kelly Chen & Janaye Sakkas
Silver: Susie Lawler & Anna Dyachenko
Bronze: Ashley Robinson & Kari Evans

Men’s Doubles 5.5 (40-49)
Gold: Mike McGregor & Nick Patterson
Silver: Nathan Reeve & Matt Garcia
Bronze: Brett Warner & Chase Distefano

Women’s Doubles 6.0 (19-49)
Gold: Tia Elpusan & Chloe Pham
Silver: Jalina Ingram & Melissa Ferger
Bronze: Mary Ann Benack & Julie Heitman

Women’s Doubles 4.0 (19-39)
Gold: Lucy Gambescia & Alex Lynch
Silver: Heidi Davies & Abby Davies
Bronze: Lindsay Rutter & Jaclyn Kramer

Women’s Doubles 4.0 (40-49)
Gold: Tiffany Campbell & Nicole Young
Silver: Lynsey Templeton & Jessica Edstrom
Bronze: Ladawn Ramsey & Heather Carrigg

Thrusday, November 14th

Pro Champions (50+) Men’s Singles
Gold: Mattias Johansson
Silver: Paul Olin
Bronze: Morgan Shepherd

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (60-64)
Gold: Yolanda Yoyo Monroe & Flash Wisner
Silver: Mark Gordon & Ann Morrical
Bronze: Beth Brause & Jeff Morse

Pro Masters(60+) Men’s Doubles
Gold: John Moorin & Jeffrey Cohen
Silver: David Spearman & Stephen Cole
Bronze: Howard Mendel & Mike Toolson

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (50-54)
Gold: Eric Falk & Joy Rodriguez
Silver: Jared Levy & Marisa Epstein
Bronze: Allan Chang & Tisha Cosby

Mixed Doubles 5.0 (60-64)
Gold: Melissa Washam & Lee Washam
Silver: Sheila Farny & Tony Greenberg
Bronze: Beverly Boozer & Ron Cortese

Men’s Pro Singles – MAIN
First: Christopher Haworth
Second: Patrick Kawka
Third: Grayson Goldin

Mixed Doubles 4.0 (50-59)
Gold: Jacklyn Beck & Marek Beck
Silver: Tami Dokter & Randy Seevers
Bronze: Henry Lin & Lauren Hoang

Mixed Doubles 5.0 (50-54)
Gold: Ryan Keirns & Mary Kozak
Silver: Vincent Riccabona & Angela Fink
Bronze: Paul Cordes & Janet Martelli

Women’s Pro Singles – Main
First: Bobbi Oshiro
Second: Alexa Schull
Third: Megan Fudge

Mixed Doubles 5.0 (55-59)
Gold: Patricia Jordan & Duc Nguyen
Silver: Albert Lee & Taryn Lamm
Bronze: Kristen Nagrani & James Gerson

 

Men’s Pro Singles – 9th place
First: Matthew Barlow
Second: Eduardo Irizarry
Third: Frank Anthony Davis

Women’s Pro Singles 9th Place
First: Shannon Pretorius
Second: Madalina Grigoriu
Third: Brooke Revuelta

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (55-59)
Gold: Angie May & Jim Connor
Silver: Linda Routch & Robert Lavery
Bronze: Amy Farabow & Kevin Stieper

QVC Pro Masters (60+) Women’s Doubles
Gold: Roberta Mccallum Russo & Kristen Hickman
Silver: Kim Jagd & Lisa Naumu
Bronze: Yvonne Ting & Jasna Stefanovic

QVC Pro Champions (50+) Women’s Singles
Gold: Jennifer Dawson (Q50 Ambassador)
Silver: Lee Whitwell
Bronze: Julene James

Mixed Doubles 5.5 (55-59)
Gold: Shawn Plowman & Ame Sessions
Silver: Adam Mackinnon & Julie Heitman
Bronze: Jennifer Osur Douglas & Tomas Yeh

Mixed Doubles 5.5 (60-64)
Gold: John Cassens & Mary Sigmen
Silver: Ricky P Stephens & Marylouise Millar
Bronze: David Uhl & Joellen Uhl

Mixed Doubles 4.0 (60-64)
Gold: Robert Kessler & Leigh Hutchins
Silver: Stephen Diemoz & Nancy Diemoz
Bronze: Marita Sullivan & Lewis Bassford

Mixed Doubles 6.0 (50-64)
Gold: Miok Lee & Jeffrey Tanaka
Silver: Don Happ & Marianne Maher
Bronze: Liby Saigal & Daniel Chernin

Mixed Doubles 5.5 (50-54)
Gold: Mary Ann Benack & Oto Hlincik
Silver: Tammi Harker & Eric Garcia
Bronze: Hui (Lisa) Gan & Chris Cervera

Wednesday, November 13th

Women’s Doubles 5.0 (60-64)
Gold: Lisa Spiegelman & Lynn Salo
Silver: Mary Witthans & Lisa Chen
Bronze: Marylouise Millar & Marilyn Joostema

Men’s Doubles 5.0 (55-59)
Gold: Vincent Riccabona & Jp Christen
Silver: Carter Turner & Kevin Reading
Bronze: Thomas Dalessandro & Darryl Revenew

Women’s Doubles 5.0 (50-54)
Gold: Angela Fink & Katherine Gillis
Silver: Kim Perritt & Ashly Farrior
Bronze: Cherie Nabeta & Melissa Suchomel

Pro Masters (60+) Mixed Doubles
Gold: David Spearman & Kristin Hickman
Silver: Mike Pazourek & Cynthia Dardis
Bronze: Lisa Naumu & Mark Malott

Women’s Doubles 4.5 (60-64)
Gold: Suzanne Deardorff & Juliet Peters
Silver: Sandra Mann-Hawkins & Val Ogawa
Bronze: Carolyn Jenkins & Sheila Farny

Pro Men’s Singles QUALIFIER
First: Ali Amiri
Second: Joey Farias
Third: Matthew Barlow

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (60-64)
Gold: Damon Turner & Bruce Phillips
Silver: Don Happ & Franc Happ
Bronze: Russell Roach & Mark Wilbur

Men’s Doubles 5.0 (60-64)
Gold: Lance Fors & Gregory Unger
Silver: Dean Nihart & Paul Cawley
Bronze: Duc Nguyen & Mark Henrickson

Men’s Doubles 4.0 (50-59)
Gold: Christopher Fujikado & Jules Cannon
Silver: Troy Ostrander & Brad Wood
Bronze: Dean Drake & John Grgurina Jr

Pro Men’s Singles Points Draw
First: Erik Josephs
Second: Jace Howard
Third: Wil Shaffer

Women’s Doubles 5.0 (55-59)
Gold: Julie Shapiro & Jennifer Lyons
Silver: Jane Meneely & Ronda Gangelhoff
Bronze: Taiche Rudee & Melinda Murray

Women’s Doubles 5.5 (55-59)
Gold: Nicole Idalski & Jennifer Osur Douglas
Silver: Lisa Taylor & Beth Parsons
Bronze: Pamela Cooke & Julie Heitman

Women’s Doubles 4.5 (55-59)
Gold: Susan Sorel & Cheryl Nitahara
Silver: Gwyn Hime & Julie Klinger
Bronze: Amy Farabow & Dani Mackey

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (55-59)
Gold: Chris Tsai & Mike Blair
Silver: Ernie Medina, Jr. & Richard Blackey
Bronze: Rich Harris & Rupender Lokareedy

Men’s Doubles 6.0 (50-64)
Gold: Adam Mackinnon & Mike Wilson
Silver: Michael Gates & Jeffrey Tanaka
Bronze: Nate Stgelais & Christopher Kraght

Women’s Doubles 5.5 (60-64)
Gold: Cynthia Johnson & Ellen Dawson
Silver: Lucie Denault & Cassandra Rollins
Bronze: Donna Holick & Tammy Wright

Men’s Doubles 5.5 (60-64)
Gold: Barry Mah & Peter Brix
Silver: David Uhl & Steve Cable
Bronze: Christopher Grenzer & Todd Woodhouse

Women’s Doubles 4.5 (50-54)
Gold: Angela Fink & Katherine Gillis
Silver: Kim Perritt & Ashly Farrior
Bronze: Cherie Nabeta & Melissa Suchomel

Women’s Doubles 4.0 (50-54)
Gold: Katherine Ursini & Alin Barak
Silver: Tami Dokter & Sandy Gomez
Bronze: Sharon Martin & Pam Espinoza

Men’s Doubles 4.0 (60-64)
Gold: David Vann & C Mike Jones
Silver: Mark Markelz & Steve Shabansky
Bronze: Robert Kessler & Bruce Mckenney

Women’s Doubles 5.5 (50-54)
Gold: Loan Bui & Lynn Syler
Silver: Jacquelyn Campbell & Trina Ritchie
Bronze: Dawn Stein & Jenika Cook

Men’s Doubles 5.5 (55-59)
Gold: Paul Cordes & Shawn Plowman
Silver: Rich Pearson & Peter Diepenbrock
Bronze: Barry Pelts & Ricky P Stephens

Women’s Doubles 4.0 (60-64)
Gold: Lucy Gambescia & Christine Bayless
Silver: Lanetta Duede & Linda Bodine
Bronze: Cathy Rohaly & Kathy Sebaharmorris

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (50-54)
Gold: Robert Borden & Michael Druse
Silver: Keith O’Brien & David Nehdar
Bronze: Larry Rubin & Brent Hall

Men’s Doubles 5.5 (50-54)
Gold: Adam Butler & Dean Ayers
Silver: Chris Cervera & Kevin Deyo
Bronze: Dave Schlicht & Ted Macksam

Women’s Doubles 6.0 (50-64)
Gold: Jeaney Garcia & Karin Sobotta
Silver: Karen Kao & Tia Wood
Bronze: Kim Ragen & Wendie Mahan

Men’s Doubles 5.0 (50-54)
Gold: Lee Harper & Gaines Easterling
Silver: Matt Carpenter & Ricardo Coppel
Bronze: Andy Gray & Len Rosenblum

Tuesday, November 12th

HIGHLIGHTS FROM DAY 4
Day 4 of the 2024 Biofreeze USA Pickleball National Championships did not disappoint!

Triple Crown alert!
Congratulations to Ella Cosma, our first two-time Junior Female Triple Crown winner.

Women’s Singles 4.0 (70-74)
Gold: Kristin Jennings
Silver: Tenaya Asan
Bronze: Deborah De Mello

Women’s Singles 4.0/4.5 (65-69)
Gold: Denise Mendoza
Silver: Katherine Maruyama
Bronze: Kathy Mason

Men’s Singles 4.0 (70-74)
Gold: Stan Hardy
Silver: Dennis Poppe
Bronze: Cory Tarpenning

Men’s Singles 4.0 (75-79)
Gold: Kyle Craig
Silver: Steve Kasner
Bronze: Jim Carson

Women’s Singles 4.0/4.5 (75-79)
Gold: Susie Norsworthy
Silver: Margaret Daniels
Bronze: Deb Harrison

Women’s Singles 4.0 (60-64)
Gold: Marylouise Millar
Silver: Nancy Sjulin
Bronze: Beverly Boozer

Women’s Singles 4.0 (50-59)
Gold: Jennifer Walsh
Silver: Dani Mackey
Bronze: Christine Bayless

Men’s Singles 4.0 (50-64)
Gold: Graham Rogers
Silver: Nicco Warren
Bronze: Don Shires

Pro Masters (60+) Men’s Singles
Gold: Mark Bailey
Silver: Howard Mendel
Bronze: David Spearman

Men’s Singles 4.5 (70-74)
Gold: Gregg Whitfield
Silver: Terry Parrish
Bronze: Richard Randall

Men’s Singles 4.5 (65-69)
Gold: Tom Bramson
Silver: Neftali Irizarry
Bronze: Carl Ezell

Men’s Singles 4.0 (80+)
Gold: Kenji Nishioka
Silver: Paul Hawkes
Bronze: Charles Patti

Men’s Singles 5.5 (50-64)
Gold: Eric Amend
Silver: Gary Love
Bronze: James Krenis

Men’s Singles 5.0 (55-59)
Gold: John Kim
Silver: Tom Rosencrantz
Bronze: Michael Cao

Men’s Singles 4.0 (65-69)
Gold: Rick Lange
Silver: Edgar Palafox
Bronze: Ira Rosmarin

Men’s Singles 4.5 (60-64)
Gold: Craig Pendrys
Silver: Keith Woodward
Bronze: Ronnie Dargan

Men’s Singles 5.0 (50-54)
Gold: Darin Quiocho
Silver: Ung Phung
Bronze: Bruce Yeung

 

Women’s Singles 4.5 (50-59)
Gold: Taryn Lamm
Silver: Janet Martelli
Bronze: Arezoo Steele

Men’s Singles 5.0 (60-64)
Gold: Todd Manzo
Silver: Henry Matthiessen
Bronze: Mark Henrickson

Women’s Singles 4.5 (60-64)
Gold: Virginia Mckenna
Silver: Carol Braham
Bronze: Kerri Wethington

Men’s Singles 5.0/5.5/6.0 (65-69)
Gold: Marc Bondi
Silver: Ron Cortese
Bronze: Leroy Weighall

Women’s Singles 5.0/5.5 (50-59)
Gold: Julie Haddock
Silver: Josee Patenaude
Bronze: Terrie Robson

Women’s Singles 4.5 (70-74)
Gold: Hilary Marold
Silver: Laura Fuller
Bronze: Barbara Teagarden

Women’s Singles 4.0/4.5 (80+)
Gold: Susan Frieder
Silver: Diane Keller
Bronze: Sharon Klotz

Men’s Singles 5.0/5.5 (75-79)
Gold: Bob Costanza
Silver: Gayle Bradshaw
Bronze: Michael Cox

Men’s Singles 5.0/5.5/6.0 (70-74)
Gold: Rick Garth
Silver: Mark Mitchell
Bronze: Mark Dessy

Men’s Singles 4.5 (50-54)
Gold: Ricardo Coppel
Silver: Michael Givens
Bronze: Brian Schimelpfening

Men’s Singles 4.5 (55-59)
Gold: Ramin Erfanian
Silver: Carter Turner
Bronze: Stuart Reddell

Men’s Singles 4.5/5.0 (80+)
Gold: Rick Barry
Silver: Chuck White
Bronze: Robert Traul

Women’s Singles 5.0 (60-64)
Gold: Trish Hammer
Silver: Ellen Dawson
Bronze: Tia Cottey

Men’s Singles 4.5 (75-79)
Gold: Carl Tietze
Silver: Michael Hovan
Bronze: David Andrews

Women’s Singles 5.0/5.5 (65-69)
Gold: Cynthia Johnson
Silver: Marsha Wolak
Bronze: Kathleen Ferry

Men’s Singles 6.0 (50-59)
Gold: Dana Treister
Silver: Peter Azar
Bronze: Mike Wilson

QVC Pro Masters (60+) Women’s Singles
Gold: Kristin Hickman
Silver: Andrea Pusateri
Bronze: Sue Johnston

Monday, November 11th

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Lisa Sigaty & Thomas Warfel
Silver: Susan Chouinard & Barney “Captain Hook” Reed
Bronze: Curt Dommeyer & Susan Dommeyer

Mixed Doubles 5.0 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Katherine Maruyama & James Gerson
Silver: Marsha Wolak & Claude Peltz
Bronze: Keith West & Sue Brogaard

Mixed Doubles 4.0 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Jeanie Darnall and Ed Schecter
Silver: Mark Huggins and Linda Vordtriede
Bronze: Deborah Schrader and Donald Reid

Mixed Doubles 5.0 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Robert Hansen & Tina Kellogg
Silver: Gayle Bradshaw & Robin Crider
Bronze: Dahlia Hirsch & Terry Terrill

Mixed Doubles 4.0 (75-79)
Gold: Vincent Somaio & Buffie Race
Silver: Thomas Rutledge & Betty Gardner
Bronze: Nancy Popek & Dennis Webb

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (75-79)
Gold: Sherrie Farris & Don Simmons
Silver: Mardi Osborne & Norio Nishiguchi
Bronze: Barbara Wintroub & Jack Gard

Mixed Doubles 4.5 (65-69)
Gold: Anne Corsano & Doug Durst
Silver: Sandra Shippey & Dale Coffing
Bronze: Dave Mikalonis & Grace Jaworsky

Mixed Doubles 4.0/4.5/5.0 (80+)
Gold: Alice Tym & Rick Barry
Silver: Susan Frieder & Chuck White
Bronze: Diane Keller & Paul Hawkes

Wheelchair Hybrid Doubles 4.5/5.0
Gold: Jonathan Clark & Anthony Ryan
Silver: Zack Wentz & Maxwell Lee
Bronze: Ken Dumond & Tony Roig

Mixed Doubles 4.0 (65-69)
Gold: Bruce Hibma & Corinne Dinicola
Silver: David Vann & Tammie Vann
Bronze: George Barr & Robin Sickles

Mixed Doubles 5.5 (65-69)
Gold: Pamela Cooke & Barry Mah
Silver: Moira Roush & Lance Fors
Bronze: Sally Woodman & Gregory Leitzke

Mixed Doubles 5.0/5.5 (75-79)
Gold: Mark Friedenberg & Deb Harrison
Silver: James Hackenberg & Yvonne Hackenberg
Bronze: Betty Allcorn & Jerry Silverman

Mixed Doubles 5.5 (70-74)
Gold: Carolyn Bagley & Gregg Whitfield
Silver: Grant Wyborny & Hillary Marold
Bronze: Bev Jones & Edward Klarman

Sunday, November 10th

Men’s Doubles 4.0 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Patrick Foley and Bill McGinn
Silver: Richard Llones and Pete Felix
Bronze: Richard Yoshikawa and Edgar Palafox

Men’s Doubles 4.0 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Ted Hasama and David Linder
Silver: Jerry Armstrong and John Wilson
Bronze: Douglas Turley and Richard Breunich

Men’s Doubles 4.0 (75-79 age group)
Gold: Don Warkentin and Gary Edde
Silver: Robert Traul and Bob Thacker
Bronze: Jacques Racine and Walter Linn

Men’s Doubles 4.0 (80+ age group)
Gold: Paul Hawkes and Donald Tomb
Silver: James Strouse and Robert Adler
Bronze: Terrence Chatwin and David Hahn

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Michael Cookson and Barry Bowden
Silver: Barney “Captain Hook” Reed and Michael Nelson
Bronze: Jeffrey Lum and Doug Durst

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Doug Hartman and Kirby Bayerle
Silver: James Bailey and Paul Clifton
Bronze: Bob Romano and Ronald Garald

Men’s Doubles 4.5 (75-79 age group)
Gold: Don Cardone and Keith Peterson
Silver: Randall Ohare and Roger Dehay
Bronze: Don Simmons and Mark Runyan

Men’s Doubles 4.5/5.0 (80+ age group)
Gold: Frederick Shuey and Rick Barry
Silver: Albert Apo and Chuck White
Bronze: Bil Corso and Tom Snider

Men’s Doubles 5.0 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Michael Oransky and Egan Adams
Silver: Tony Greenberg and Mike Adams
Bronze: Reed Ferrick and Leroy Weighall

Men’s Doubles 5.0 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Jose Luis and Greg Jacobson
Silver: Dennis Poppe and Wiliam Wood
Bronze: Carl Tietze and Michael Cox

Men’s Doubles 5.0/5.5 (75-79 age group)
Gold: James Hackenberg and Mark Friedenberg
Silver: Denny Vincent and Edward Klarman
Bronze: Gayle Bradshaw and Gabriel Wong

Men’s Doubles 5.5 (65-69 age group)
Gold: James Gerson and Paul Davis
Silver: Jim Barbe and Barry Mah
Bronze: Kirk Dawson and Tom Ratzki

Men’s Doubles 5.5 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Gregg Whitfield and Seymour Rifkind
Silver: Donald Fyfe and Mark Mitchell
Bronze: Richard (Rick) Kent and Bob Ham

Men’s Doubles 6.0 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Anthony King and Ralph Rabago
Silver: Ron Cortese and Marc Bondi
Bronze: Yang Wang and Jonathan Z Lee

Wheelchair Co-ed Doubles 4.5/5.0
Gold: Anthony Ryan and Ryan Anthony
Silver: Rick Marion and Ken Dumond
Bronze: Marianne Orr and Corey White

Wheelchair Co-ed Singles 4.5/5.0
Gold: Anthony Ryan
Silver: Ryan Anthony
Bronze: Zack Wentz

Women’s Doubles 4.0 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Pauline Geraci and Consuelo Felix
Silver: Janet Hebeler and Karen Hoppe
Bronze: Sandra Shippey and Joan Houle

Women’s Doubles 4.0 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Betsy Skevington and Beth Perrow
Silver: Ginny Sher and Carie Strahorn
Bronze: Patricia Zuccaro and Glenna Lombardi

Women’s Doubles 4.0 (75-79 age group)
Gold: Bonnie Dandrea and Buffie Race
Silver: Patricia Sovay and Gloria Myers
Bronze: Joanne Ridenhour and Kathleen Gentry

Women’s Doubles 4.0/4.5 (80+ age group)
Gold: Maria Brooks and Sharon Klotz
Silver: Diane Keller and Alice Tym
Bronze: Camie Hildebrand and Susan Cole

Women’s Doubles 4.5 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Gayle Blake and Kathleen Brown
Silver: Deborah Crady and Sarah Aydt
Bronze: Roni Rayment and Eileen Finn

Women’s Doubles 4.5 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Tina Kellogg and Lisa Sigaty
Silver: Lynn Hyche and Cathleen Kaufman
Bronze: Robin J Paape and Nora Davis

Women’s Doubles 4.5/5.0 (75-79 age group)
Gold: Sherrie Farris and Susie Norsworthy
Silver: Yvonne Hackenberg and Deb Harrison
Bronze: C Susan Crossland and Margaret Daniels

Women’s Doubles 5.0 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Shelly Thigpen and Cynthia Polansky
Silver: Linda Kirkpatrick and Katherine Maruyama
Bronze: Lynee Withers and Irene Mah

Women’s Doubles 5.0/5.5 (70-74 age group)
Gold: Sandy Metzler and Carolyn Bagley
Silver: Robin Crider and Dahlia Hirsch
Bronze: Bev Jones and Susan Sullivan

Women’s Doubles 5.5 (65-69 age group)
Gold: Cynthia Johnson and Pamela Cooke
Silver: Moira Roush and Felicia Hutnick
Bronze: Marsha Wolak and Cassandra Rollins

Saturday, November 9th

Junior Boys Singles 12-14
Draw Medal Winners
Gold: Mackonner Dy
Silver: Kody Lam
Bronze: Gatlin Collins

Junior Boys Singles 15-16
Draw Medal Winners
Gold: Jack Sahid
Silver: Logan Luc
Bronze: Benjamin Lim

Junior Boys Singles 17-18
Draw Medal Winners
Gold: Yohance Badyal
Silver: Peyton Pham
Bronze: Connor Ngoy

Junior Girls Singles 12-18
Draw Medal Winners
Gold: Ella Cosma
Silver: Darcy Shore
Bronze: Karina Lam

Other Medal Winners
Silver: Kelly Goodnow
Bronze: Amelia Johnson

Wheelchair Co-ed Singles 4.5/5.0
Draw Medal Winners
Gold: Anthony Ryan
Silver: Ryan Anthony
Bronze: Zack Wentz

Other Medal Winners
Bronze: Joe Gavic
Gold: Taylor Nichols
Silver: Carl Cogdill

Please Note
Results for the 2024 Biofreeze USA Pickleball Nationals are published on the UTR website. Clicking the link below will take you to the UTR results site and you must be logged into your UTR account to view the results.
Click Here to Access Results

Sweepstake entries can only be made on the day of the contest. Please come back on the contest day to enter this sweepstakes

Eric Decker

Former NFL Wide Receiver

Eric Decker is an accomplished athlete, entrepreneur, TV personality, spokesperson, thought leader, and philanthropist.

A wide receiver for the NFL from 2010-2018, Decker played for the Denver Broncos, New York Jets, and Tennessee Titans. He played the Super Bowl in 2014, received the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award in 2015, and was honored as United Way’s Hometown Hero at the XXIII Gridiron Gala in 2016. A Minnesota native, he also set football records and made Big Ten Conference history while attending University of Minnesota and he competed on the Golden Gophers’ baseball team as an outfielder, getting selected twice in the Major League Baseball Draft.

While playing for the NFL, Decker also starred in the E! reality series Eric & Jessie: Game On with his wife, the top-performing country singer Jessie James Decker. Over three seasons, the show chronicled the couple as they juggled family, fame and football.

Since retiring from the NFL in 2018, Decker, who has bachelor’s degree in business and marketing from the University of Minnesota, has run Kittenish, the popular, Nashville-based fashion brand designed by wife Jessie James Decker. As president of the company, the brand has expanded as a successful online retailer with three brick-and-mortar stores located in Nashville, Dallas, and Tampa.

As a philanthropist, Decker is a longtime supporter of HopeKids, whose mission is to restore hope and transform the lives of children with life-threatening medical conditions, their families and communities. He is also a board member for Nashville Wine Auction, a self-sustaining, non-profit organization which exists solely to raise funds to support the fight against cancer.

In 2023, Decker received the Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Minnesota.

A thought leader and spokesperson, Decker is often tapped for his expertise in business, health and fitness, and sports.

He resides in Nashville with his wife and four children.

To learn more or to contact Decker, please visit decker87.com or follow him at @ericdecker.

Mayci J. Neeley

Reality TV Star and TikTok Influencer

Mayci J. Neeley, one of the stars of Hulu's #1 reality show "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives", is known for sharing heartwarming family content on her social media platforms. A former D1 tennis player, single mom, and survivor of abuse and assault, Mayci uses her personal experiences to inspire and educate women, helping them overcome life’s toughest obstacles through her social media and blog.

As a mother of two, she is currently undergoing IVF to expand her family while balancing her role as the CEO of Babymama, a natal nutrition company. Mayci’s journey resonates with many women, offering support and encouragement in areas such as motherhood, fertility, and personal growth. Her advocacy empowers women to face challenges with strength and resilience.

To keep up with Kyle, follow her on tiktok: @maycineele or instagram: @maycineeley

Kyle Unfug

iHeartRadio Personality

Kyle Unfug is the dynamic co-host of the wildly popular Johnjay & Rich Morning Show, where her infectious energy and positive outlook shine through daily. Known for seeing the bright side in any situation, Kyle brings a strong woman’s perspective and a vibrant presence that provides the perfect balance to the show—a trait this Libra absolutely loves.

Outside of the studio, Kyle is a devoted wife and mother of two young children. She’s passionate about creating new adventures for her family, whether it’s a fun outing or a spontaneous craft project at home. She also enjoys volunteering in her kids’ classrooms, discovering binge-worthy TV shows, and brunching with friends. Kyle’s joy for life and enthusiasm for new experiences keep her constantly seeking the next fun family adventure or creative endeavor.

 To keep up with Kyle, follow her socials: @unfug

Priscilla Ornelas

iHeartRadio Personality

Priscilla Ornelas is a proud first-generation bilingual Mexican American from Glendale, Arizona. She began her career as a radio intern and has since become one of the few Latinas hosting a morning show on a major station. Currently, she brings her vibrant personality to the airwaves as a morning host for iHeartMedia's Mix 96.9.

Outside of her career, Priscilla is devoted to her husband and two kids, but she also makes time for her favorite pastime—enjoying a good girls' happy hour. She is deeply passionate about empowering women in the Latina community and founded Community Comadres, an organization dedicated to uplifting and supporting women.

Priscilla’s passions extend beyond the radio mic. She thrives on creating memorable experiences with her loved ones, indulging in pop culture, skincare, video and content creation, and vacationing. Whether attending local events and concerts or connecting with her audience on a deeper level, Priscilla remains committed to bringing her authentic self to everything she does.

 To keep up with Priscilla follow her socials: @priscillaonair

Shane Doan

NHL Executive and Former Arizona Coyotes Winger

Shane Doan is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player and executive, renowned for his 21-season career in the NHL, primarily with the Arizona Coyotes. A powerful right-winger and respected leader, Doan served as the Coyotes’ captain for 13 seasons, solidifying his status as one of Arizona’s most iconic sports figures. Throughout his career, he earned a reputation for his toughness, scoring prowess, and exemplary sportsmanship, accumulating over 400 goals and 972 points. A two-time NHL All-Star, Doan also proudly represented Canada internationally, winning gold at the IIHF World Championships.

After retiring in 2017, Doan transitioned to hockey management, serving as the Arizona Coyotes’ Chief Hockey Development Officer before joining the Toronto Maple Leafs as an Assistant to the General Manager in 2023. In this role, he works closely with the Leafs’ front office, contributing his extensive hockey knowledge and leadership experience to the team’s player development and strategic planning.

Beyond the rink, Doan is celebrated for his philanthropic efforts and deep ties to the Arizona community, where he continues to inspire and give back.

Jake Plummer

Former NFL and ASU Quarterback

After a successful four years as an ASU Sun Devil, NFL pro-bowl quarterback Jake Plummer, spent 10 years in the NFL.

With six years leading the Arizona Cardinals and four with the Denver Broncos, the game left a toll on Jake's body, leaving him to search for ways to heal and maintain his health. After diving into natural remedies, Jake founded Umbo, a functional mushroom company alongside UFC hall of famer, Rashad Evans.

Speaking about the health benefits of mushrooms and living an active lifestyle, whether it be handball, yoga or pickleball, Jake has dedicated his life to learning and educating people on natural ways to health and wellness.

Follow him on social at @snakeplummer

Amy Van Dyken

6-Time Olympic Gold Medalist

Amy Van Dyken-Rouen is a 6-time Olympic gold medalist in swimming. She was born and raised in Colorado and won four (4) gold medals at the 1996 Summer Olympics making her the first American woman to accomplish that feat, it has only been tied never broken. She was the most decorated athlete, male or female, of the 1996 Olympics.

Amy went on to win two (2) more gold medals at the 2000 Summer Games and named by Swimming World Magazine as the Swimmer of the Year in 1995 and 1996. She is also in the International Swimming Hall of Fame and the United States Olympic Hall of Fame.

Van Dyken won the ESPY for outstanding female athlete of the year in 1997. That same year she was a Glamour Woman of the Year.

Since retiring from swimming, Van Dyken has cohosted a Nationally syndicated sports radio show and the only female voice on the network as a host, and has been an NFL sideline reporter for NFL on FOX.

She is married to former two-time Super Bowl champion, Tom Rouen, and they are proud dog parents to Dillion, a rescued mix breed puppy. In 2014, she was injured in an ATV accident that severed her spinal cord and caused a TBI.

Van Dyken is now competing in CrossFit as an adaptive athlete. She qualified for her first WheelWOD Games in 2019, where she placed second in the world. In 1996 she won the coveted “Most Kissable Lips” from Blistex.

She currently travels the country giving motivational speeches, as well as covering PAC-12 and ACC swimming. She has also been an analyst for NBC swimming in 2021 and 2024.

@amyvandyken

Gerry Turner

Reality TV Star

Gerry Turner, a reality TV star, is a 73-year young Girl Dad and Granddaughter Granddad..

As a retired business owner and operator of fast-food restaurants, Turner has had many hats in the restaurant industry. Serving as VP of Sales & Marketing for a major food service distributor in the Midwest, Turner retired at the age of 56..

Following a successful career, he started a second professional journey in Mediation, working on workplace conflict resolution, Civil Rights, Divorce and Small Claims..

Turner resides lakeside, calling Indiana home, and is eagerly looking forward to life post-the first Golden Bachelor on ABC.

Sophie Cunningham

Sophie Cunningham is a professional basketball player for the Phoenix Mercury of the Women’s National Basketball Association and an analyst for the Phoenix Suns. Sophie was drafted 13th overall in the 2019 WNBA Draft out of the University of Missouri, where she played four seasons for the Tigers. She became the eighth Missouri alum to be drafted into the WNBA.

In Sophie’s six-year career with the Mercury, she has appeared in 182 career games, starting in 92 of those contests. She ended the 2024 season averaging 8.4 ppg, 3.4 rpg, and 2.0 apg.

Off the court, Sophie is an active member of the Phoenix and Columbia, Missouri, communities. Her interests lie in building self-esteem and confidence in girls, veterans, and animals. Each January, she hosts the “Sophie Cunningham Classic” in Columbia, a girl’s youth basketball tournament for elite players in the state of Missouri. Back in Phoenix, she is actively involved with the Ronald McDonald House and families from the Luke Air Force Base.

@sophie_cham

Joey Fatone

Singer and Host

Joey Fatone first rose to fame as a member of the record-shattering, multiplatinum boyband *NSYNC; but his career as a global pop icon was just the beginning. Over the past decade he has gone on to find success as an actor, host, Broadway star, voiceover artist, dancer, and media personality with a number of hit television shows under his belt.

At age seven, Fatone kicked off his career starring alongside Robert DeNiro in the feature film Once Upon a Time in America. Growing up he was always drawn to entertainment and at 17 he landed a gig with Universal Studios in the Beetlejuice Graveyard Revue; which was the catalyst to stardom. He met another theme park performer named Chris Kirkpatrick which would lead to his joining *NSYNC—before long they were the hottest act in the U.S., Europe and beyond. They quickly became one of the most iconic pop groups in history.

Following *NSYNC’s incredible success with albums that sold over 10 million copies and countless awards; Joey proved to be a prominent performer and personality in his own right. With projects spanning from television, film and theater, his talent has no boundaries. He hosted the popular, long-running show My Family Recipe Rocks!, which aired on the Live Well Network. The show highlighted the stories of homegrown cooks and their homemade specialties from around the country. From there, he proceeded to host the cooking competition show, Rewrapped on The Food Network.

No stranger to the screen, Joey continued his success by competing in the hit reality TV show’s from; ABC’s Dancing With The Stars to hosting NBC’s hit series, The Singing Bee and Celebrity Circus. He earned his first producer credit for the cable television series TLC’s The Singing Office, which he co-hosted alongside famed Spice Girl, Melanie Brown. In 2016, Joey went back to his roots on the big screen in My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2, portraying "cousin Angelo"; becoming an instant fan-favorite. In 2019, Fatone continued to wear his hosting hat for Game Show Networks, Common Knowledge, which is nationally syndicated on FOX stations across the country. This outstanding partnership led him to become an ambassador for the network. He continued to surprise fans on FOX's cult-show The Masked Singer and landed in fourth-place as "The Rabbit". Joey's energetic spirit is unstoppable as he taps into his entrepreneurial side with Fat Ones, a hot dog business based in Orlando, FL. Having the gift-of-gab, he naturally created an eponymous podcast with his longtime manager Joe Mulvihill, titled Two Cups of Joe with Joey Fatone and Joe Mulvihill. In November of 2019, during Epcot's Food and Wine Festival Eat and Beat series, Joey performed three days of successful shows called, Joey Fatone and Friends. Fans packed the theater and were entertained by Joey along with Chris KirkPatrick, Ryan Cabrera, Nathan Morris of BOYZ II MEN, MC Search and more. He continues to do this concept currently at Epcot, Tampa and other cities in the US.

During the pandemic, he utilized his creative time and started a music trivia show on YouTube called What Does Joey Know?; co-hosted by Jason Logan and Joe Mulvihill. He managed to build an entertainment portal and a sense of community for his dedicated fans and celebrities during uncertain times.

In 2021, Joey continued his pop status as a panelist for the Irish singing competition show Last Singer Standing. In August of that year, Joey Fatone brought together some of the biggest pop superstars for a perfect, intimate evening of pop-culture classics and fun for a sold-out residency in Las Vegas. The AFTR PRTY featured Joey Fatone, Wanya Morris, Nick Carter and AJ McLean. Fatone recently became an ambassador of Hilton Grand Vacations. Last fall Fatone co-starred in Cursed Friends on Comedy Central.

For Winterfest Boat Parade 2022 in Fort Lauderdale, he was co-grand marshal with NSYNC alum Chris Kirkpatrick and pop-icon Taylor Dayne. The third installment of My Big Fat Greek Wedding 3, where Fatone reprises his role as "cousin Angelo" was released in September 2023.

At this year's MTV VMA’s, Fatone reunited with NSYNC as presenters, causing the reunion to go viral. The buzz created by the iconic boy band perfectly segued into their first song release in 22 years, called “Better Place” that is featured on The Trolls 3 soundtrack.

To keep up with Joey, follow his socials: @realjoeyfatone