There is something special brewing in Pretoria, and the Rise Centurion Open is giving South African tennis fans every reason to believe.
Five local players stormed into the second round of the ATP Challenger event on Tuesday, turning the Irene Country Club into a cauldron of home support and delivering results that will reverberate well beyond the tournament itself.
It was Kholo Montsi who grabbed the headlines.

A set down and facing an uncomfortable evening, the young South African refused to fold — digging deep, raising his level, and eventually outlasting third seed Calvin Hemery in three hard-fought sets.
It was the kind of win that changes how a player sees himself. More importantly, it was the kind of win that changes how others see South African tennis.
Philip Henning needed no such drama…

The sixth seed was clinical and composed, barely breaking a sweat as he moved through his opening match in straight sets to announce himself as a genuine title contender.
Devin Badenhorst and Alec Beckley added their names to the second-round lineup with similarly convincing performances, both winning in straight sets and both looking entirely at home against international opposition.

Beckley’s achievement carries extra weight — he came through qualifying just to earn his place in the main draw, then backed it up with a result that justified every step of that journey.

Connor van Schalkwyk completed the five-man South African contingent advancing, and he had more celebrating to do before the day was out.
Pairing up with Montsi in the doubles, the two wildcards toppled the fourth seeds in a pulsating three-set thriller — a result that spoke volumes about the competitive instinct running through this group of players.

What makes this week significant is the context. This is not a one-off. Last week, at the Rise Irene Open, four South Africans also reached the second round. A pattern is forming. A standard is being set.
The Rise Centurion Open is one of four ATP Challenger events being staged in South Africa in 2026 — all at the Irene Country Club — and the local tennis community is seizing the opportunity with both hands.
South African tennis has long spoken about its potential. Right now, in Centurion, that potential is becoming something far more concrete.
📸 Images via Rise Centurion Open / Barco Greeff















































