James Kent Trotter (born 29 July 1999) is a Japanese tennis player.
He has a career high ATP singles ranking of world No. 170 achieved on 21 April 2025 and a doubles ranking of No. 142 achieved on 9 September 2024.[1]
Trotter has won two singles and six ATP Challenger doubles titles.
Professional career
He won the Challenger doubles titles at the 2023 Columbus Challenger with Robert Cash, at the 2024 Cleveland Open with George Goldhoff, and at the 2024 Tyler Tennis Championships with Hans Hach Verdugo.
At the same tournament in Tyler, Texas, he also won his first ATP Challenger singles title defeating Brandon Holt in the final.[2]
College career
Trotter played college tennis at Ohio State,[3] where he won the NCAA Division I tennis men's doubles championship in 2023.[4]
ATP Challenger Tour finals
Singles: 3 (2 titles, 1 runner-up)
Legend
|
ATP Challenger Tour (2–1)
|
|
|
Doubles: 8 (6 titles, 2 runner-ups)
Legend
|
ATP Challenger Tour (6–2)
|
|
|
Result
|
W–L
|
Date
|
Tournament
|
Tier
|
Surface
|
Partner
|
Opponents
|
Score
|
Loss
|
0–1
|
Sep 2021
|
Columbus, USA
|
Challenger
|
Hard (i)
|
Andrew Lutschaunig
|
Stefan Kozlov
Peter Polansky
|
5–7, 6–7(5–7)
|
Win
|
1–1
|
Sep 2023
|
Columbus, USA
|
Challenger
|
Hard (i)
|
Robert Cash
|
Guido Andreozzi
Hans Hach Verdugo
|
6–4, 2–6, [10–7]
|
Win
|
2–1
|
Jan 2024
|
Cleveland, USA
|
Challenger
|
Hard (i)
|
George Goldhoff
|
William Blumberg
Alex Lawson
|
6–7(0–7), 6–3, [10–8]
|
Win
|
3–1
|
Feb 2024
|
Cherbourg, France
|
Challenger
|
Hard (i)
|
George Goldhoff
|
Ryan Nijboer
Niklas Schell
|
6–2, 6–3
|
Win
|
4–1
|
Apr 2024
|
Shenzhen, China
|
Challenger
|
Hard
|
Yuta Shimizu
|
Wang Aoran
Zhou Yi
|
7–6(7–5), 7–6(7–4)
|
Win
|
5–1
|
Jun 2024
|
Tyler, USA
|
Challenger
|
Hard
|
Hans Hach Verdugo
|
Andrés Andrade
Abdullah Shelbayh
|
7–6(7–3), 6–4
|
Loss
|
5–2
|
Jul 2024
|
Lexington, USA
|
Challenger
|
Hard
|
Yuta Shimizu
|
André Göransson
Sem Verbeek
|
4–6, 3–6
|
Win
|
6–2
|
Sep 2024
|
Columbus, USA (2)
|
Challenger
|
Hard (i)
|
Hans Hach Verdugo
|
Christian Harrison
Ethan Quinn
|
6–4, 6–7(6–8), [11–9]
|
References
External links