South Africa’s tennis stars delivered a remarkable weekend in Botswana — and a 20-year-old led the way
Marilouise van Zyl was selected for the South African national team five times across age groups from under-12 to under-18, competing at the African Junior Championships at each level. That kind of consistent national selection tells you everything about a player who was always on trajectory — even if the professional breakthrough took its time arriving.
At 16, she took the bold step of spending a year abroad in Tunisia, joining an ITF training centre — an experience that sharpened her game against different styles and surfaces, and gave her an early taste of what professional tennis would demand. She is currently a rising sophomore at the University of Notre Dame in the United States, balancing one of America’s most prestigious academic environments with a professional career that is only just finding its full expression.
That expression arrived in Gaborone, Botswana, in late May 2026. Van Zyl captured her first professional women’s singles title at the ITF tournament after an incredible run through the competition — made even more impressive by the fact that she started her campaign in the qualifying rounds. Starting from qualifying and winning a title is not a footnote. It means she played more matches than almost anyone in the draw, faced elimination from the very first round, and still found a way to the top of the podium.

Along the way, she defeated opponents from the USA, Luxembourg, Italy, India, Poland and Denmark in a week packed with tough battles and standout performances. Six different nations. Seven rounds. One unblemished path to the title.
In the final, she defeated sixth seed Elena Jamshidi of Denmark in straight sets, winning 7-6(5), 6-1 — a scoreline that flatters neither the difficulty of the opening set nor the authority with which she closed it out. A tiebreak won at 7-5 is not a comfortable win. It is a test of nerve, and she passed it decisively. The second set, taken 6-1, told you everything about where the momentum had shifted.
South Africa’s good news from Gaborone did not begin and end with Van Zyl. Alec Beckley lifted the men’s singles title after his opponent retired in the final while trailing 4-1 — but the result should not overshadow what came before it. His semifinal win over French second seed Constantin Bittoun Kouzmine in a three-set battle was the match of the tournament, a performance that showed Beckley belongs at this level. Ethan Terblanche, alongside his Australian partner, pushed all the way to the men’s doubles final — another strong result in a weekend South African tennis will remember fondly.
Van Zyl currently holds a WTA ranking of around 1,259, with a career high of 1,104 — numbers that will move in the right direction after this result. She is 20 years old, already has five national junior selections to her name, trained internationally as a teenager, and now holds a professional singles title earned the hard way. The trajectory is pointing firmly upward.
📸 Images via Tennis South Africa




































