Austin USPA 2000 Results: SNH Capital Open Champions in All 9 Divisions

Austin USPA 2000 Results: SNH Capital Open Champions in All 9 Divisions

Austin USPA 2000 Results: SNH Capital Open Champions in All 9 Divisions

Diaz and Sánchez Serrano defended their Vegas title, the Women's D1 16-match streak fell in the semis, and Gerardo Penchyna stormed to a final — every champion from Padel39 East Austin, May 22–24, 2026.

May 29, 2026·4 min read·Henri P

The SNH Capital Open is in the books, and Padel39 East Austin gave us one of the most action-packed USPA 2000 weekends of the spring. With nine divisions over three days (May 22–24, 2026), players from all over the country brought their best to Texas. I'm Henri, Padel Browser's community manager, and this is your complete results guide to the Austin USPA 2000: every champion, the matches that decided each division, and a link straight to the full draw for all nine.

Want to jump to a bracket? Every section below links to the full Austin USPA 2000 draw and predictions. Let's hand out some trophies.

Men's D1: Diaz and Sánchez Serrano defend, Vegas rematch and all

Champions: Daniel Diaz and José David Sánchez Serrano. The top seeds beat Vinny Di Francesco and Ivo Andenmatten 6-3, 7-5 in the final — a rematch of the Las Vegas USPA 2000 final two weeks earlier, which Diaz and Sánchez Serrano had won 6-1, 6-4. That makes it back-to-back USPA 2000 titles, and the most important men's trophy on the US calendar this spring.

They never dropped a set all weekend. Their toughest test came in the semifinals, a two-tiebreak grind past Res and Marchesani, 7-6(4), 7-6(4). Di Francesco and Andenmatten booked the other final slot by handling Agritelley and Conde 6-2, 7-6(4). The USPA covered the win too: Diaz and Sánchez Serrano claim their second USPA 2000 title this year.

View the full Men's D1 draw →

Men's D2: Finkelstein and Ayguavives close it out

Champions: Jared Finkelstein and David Ayguavives. The steadiest pair in the division all season backed it up, taking the final 6-2, 6-3 over Pablo Sánchez and Gerardo Penchyna Cárdenas.

The weekend's best individual run belonged to Gerardo Penchyna, who bulldozed out of the bottom of the draw and into the final, coming through a three-set semifinal against Juarez and Burkhardt 3-6, 6-2, 10-7.

View the full Men's D2 draw →

Men's D3: Guerra and Quintero survive the longest final

Champions: Jesus Guerra and Hector Quintero. The tightest title match of the men's bracket went the distance — Guerra and Quintero edged Leonardo Mendez and Jose Luis Ojeda 7-6(5), 5-7, 10-5. Mendez and Ojeda had earned their spot with a survival story of their own, outlasting Murrill and Grabisch 3-6, 6-3, 15-13 in the quarterfinals.

View the full Men's D3 draw →

Men's D4: the top seeds hold serve

Champions: Patricio Pena and Jose Ronquillo. The #1 seeds played like it, closing out Daniel Lasso and Jose Castrejon 6-1, 6-3 in the final. Lasso and Castrejon had to grind through a 7-5, 6-7(7), 10-8 semifinal to reach the finals.

View the full Men's D4 draw →

Men's D5: Montalvo and Alanis run it down

Champions: Andres Montalvo and Ruben Alanis. The lowest men's division is always the wildest, and this one delivered. Montalvo and Alanis were the steady hand — they took the final 6-2, 6-1 over Gerry Ruffino and Luis Campos, who won in a 2-6, 7-5, 10-4 three-setter in the semifinals.

View the full Men's D5 draw →

Women's D1: the 16-match streak falls in the semis

Champions: Brittany Dubins and Camila Ramme Coellar. The biggest story of the women's draw was who didn't make the final. Anna Cortiles and Luicelena Perez arrived in Austin a perfect 16-0 as a pair — and went out in the semifinals, where Alba Perez and Carla Rodriguez Sanchez ended the streak 6-3, 6-2 in two clean sets.

Dubins and Ramme Coellar, who'd rolled through the other half of the draw, beat Alba Perez and Rodriguez Sanchez 6-3, 6-4 in the final to take the Women's D1 title — the marquee win of the weekend on the women's side.

View the full Women's D1 draw →

Women's D2: a clean #1-versus-#2 final

Champions: Ana Magrini and Lisa Teer. Exactly the final the bracket promised — the top seeds beat the #2 seeds Amela Hadziosmanovic and Andi Neugarten-Maio 6-2, 6-4. It was fun to watch the two best pairs settle it head-to-head.

View the full Women's D2 draw →

Women's D3: Cardenas and Petrosini dig one out

Champions: Veronica Cardenas and Cristina Petrosini. They closed the deal 6-1, 6-4 over Gabriela Martinez and Romina Mendoza Gonzalez in the final — but had to come from behind in the semis first, dropping the opening set before taking it 1-6, 6-3, 10-5.

View the full Women's D3 draw →

Women's D4: Carabaza and Rodriguez finish the weekend strong

Champions: Carla Carabaza and Alicia Rodriguez. The last trophy of the SNH Capital Open went to Carabaza and Rodriguez, 6-1, 7-5 over Anapaulina Anda and Stephaniel Saracho in the final.

View the full Women's D4 draw →

How the predictions held up

Before the first ball, I posted a full bracket — every match, every pick. Across the matches where both of my picked pairs actually reached that point in the draw, I went 83-for-122, about 68%. My predictions were strongest in the top divisions, where the verified WPR match data runs deepest. I was humbled in the lower ones, where it's thin and the upsets come fast. Every pick is now shown against the actual result on the Austin predictions page — a green check where I called it, the real winner in bold where I didn't — and the pre-tournament preview is still up if you want to see exactly what I said going in.

That's the SNH Capital Open. For more US padel coverage, previews, and post-tournament recaps, keep an eye on the Padel Browser blog. On to the next USPA 2000. Vamos.

Frequently Asked Questions