On March 14th and March 15th, Platform 1440 (P1440) held a 2026 Futures Tour tournament in Pompano Beach, FL. There were a total of 56 teams in the class of 2026 and under category, and 48 teams in the class of 2028 and under category. Brooklyn Rosales (2028) and Sadie Stafford (2028) won the Class of 2026 competition, not dropping a set in tournament play. Meanwhile, Olivia LeDoyen and Ella Whiteside placed first in the Class of 2028 tournament, also without dropping a set in tournament play.
Class of 2026 and Under
After beating their opening-round opponents, Gracen Bach (2027) and Sadie Hancox (2027), in straight sets with set scores of 21-9 and 21-17, Rosales and Stafford continued their momentum in the second round by defeating Hawaii commit Adaleah Bassler (2027) and South Carolina commit Grace Lee (2026), again in straight sets. Their consistency carried into the quarterfinals, where they beat LMU commit Isabelle Izzy Ramos and ASU Commit Kennedy Spaid 21-15, 21-13, setting up a high-stakes semifinal clash.
In the semi-finas, Rosales and Stafford delivered one of the most decisive performances of the tournament, sweeping top-seeded TCU commit Clara Evans (2026) and FSU commit Brynn Hughbanks (2026) with set scores of 21-15 and 21-19 to punch their ticket to the final. They didn’t let up in the championship match, defeating future Sandy Tigs Christy Boulware (2027) and Madison Vega (2026) 21-18, 21-16 to secure first place.
Boulware and Vega, the tournament’s runner-up, put together a strong run of their own. After advancing through the early rounds, including a hard-fought 2–1 victory against Hannah Perez and Meadow Rosales in the quarterfinals, they looked sharp in the semifinals with a 2–0 win over Sarah Cowan (2028) and UCLA commit Janie McCanna (2027). However, they couldn’t match the consistency of Rosales and Stafford in the final, falling in straight sets to take second place.
Third place was shared by semifinalists Evans and Hughbanks and Cowan and McCanna, both of whom had impressive journeys before falling just short of the championship match.
Class of 2028 and Under
Olivia LeDoyen (2030) and Ella Whiteside (2029) delivered a commanding performance when the bracket narrowed, cruising through the quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals without dropping a set. In the quarterfinals, they beat Anabelle Bates (2028) and Chloe Ostrander (2028) in straight sets, 2–0, setting the tone for the remainder of their run. They carried that momentum into the semifinals with another decisive 2–0 victory over Carly Schilling (2028) and Maddie Schrand (2028). In the championship match, LeDoyen and Whiteside capped their run in dominant fashion, sweeping Mckenna Bjelic (2028) and Avea Casperson (2028) 2–0 to secure the title, completing a flawless playoff stretch without dropping a single set.
Bjelic and Casperson showed resilience throughout the playoff rounds, earning their spot in the finals with a pair of strong wins. They opened the quarterfinals with a convincing 2–0 victory over Sophie Katz (2028) and Payton Lotz (2028), then followed it up with a hard-fought semifinal win over Sterling Carlile (2028) and Alaina Scafidi (2028), taking the match 2–1 in the only three-set battle of the final rounds. That effort pushed them into the championship match, where they ultimately fell to LeDoyen and Whiteside in straight sets, 2–0, finishing as tournament runner-up.
Schilling & Schrand and Carlile & Scafidi each turned in strong performances, making it to the semifinals to earn a share of third place. Schilling and Schrand advanced with a narrow 2–1 quarterfinal win over Zander Anderson (2030) and Kini Varona (2030) before running into LeDoyen and Whiteside, where they were defeated 2–0. On the other side of the bracket, Carlile and Scafidi battled past Riley Scharver (2029) and Elsa Schroth (2028) in a competitive 2–1 quarterfinal match, but came up just short in the semifinals, falling to Bjelic and Casperson in three sets, 2–1.


