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The National Tennis Centre, located within the historic Accra Sports Stadium complex, is undergoing restoration. Long regarded as the cathedral of Ghanaian tennis, the center has served as the breeding ground for the nation's finest court talents and the primary host for high-profile international fixtures, including Davis Cup ties and ITF World Tennis Tour events.
The upcoming MT100 event is part of the ITF's global circuit for players aged 30 to 90+. Unlike the high-pressure junior or pro circuits, the Masters Tour emphasizes competitive longevity.
The Tennis Africa Junior Invitational has wrapped up here in Accra, bringing together elite juniors from all over Ghana.
The courts of the Accra Sports Stadium crackled with energy this past weekend as the Accra Social Tennis Club (ASTC) hosted the second annual May Day Tennis Championship. While the rest of the nation observed the traditional statutory holiday honoring the labor force, the ASTC redefined "work" through a display of competitive stamina and social cohesion that has quickly become a highlight of the Ghanaian sporting calendar.
Kenya Wins Bid to host Davis Cup Group IV ties in June 2026
The latest edition of the Accra Professional Ladies (APL) Tennis Tournament has successfully concluded in Accra, delivering several days of exciting clay-court tennis while celebrating the growth of women's tennis in Ghana. The competition brought together some of the country's top female players alongside international participants, creating a competitive and vibrant atmosphere on court.
The story of tennis in Ghana is a tale of two eras: a legendary past where the nation stood as a global giant, and a present-day struggle to rebuild from the ground up. In the 1990s, the Ghanaian national team, famously known as the Golden Rackets, achieved heights that seem almost mythical by today's standards.
The 2026 Davis Cup qualifying rounds just wrapped up, and if you were following the action across the continent, you know it was a weekend defined by high drama and some seriously gritty performances. Six African nations stepped onto the court with a lot more than just a trophy on the line; they were playing for respect and a spot on the global stage. While the final scores were a bit of a mixed bag, the story beneath the surface is one of a continent that is slowly but surely finding its footing in a sport that has historically been dominated by Europe and the Americas.
This weekend, the heart of global tennis beats with a distinctly African rhythm. From the humid courts of Lagos to the grass fields of Islamabad, six African nations are locked in fierce Davis Cup World Group II Play-off battles. These ties aren't just about winning a match; they represent a crucial stepping stone for a continent striving to make its mark on the international tennis stage.
