January 28, 2026

Queensland Trio Shares Court In Australian Open Doubles Showdown

By Jacob Casha

Home Hill's own Adam Walton teamed up with Rockhampton's Patrick Harper in the opening round of the Australian Open Men's Doubles, facing Townsville local John Patrick Smith and Czech international Adam Pavlasek in what was a strong attestation of Queensland's tennis talent pipeline.

Walton and Harper showed strong teamwork—a synergy that helped them win the NCAA Doubles National Championship during their Tennessee Tech days—but ultimately fell in straight sets to Smith and Pavlasek, 7-6, 6-3.

Fellow Queenslander and Tennessee Tech alumnus Smith put in a solid performance on the other side of the net, advancing to the second round alongside Pavlasek, where they will face the ninth-seeded duo of Francisco Cabral and Lucas Miedler.

The opening set was tightly contested, with both pairs holding serve throughout, leading to a tense tiebreak that Smith and Pavlasek narrowly edged 11-9. In the second set, the Czech Australian duo secured an early break and maintained their lead, closing out 6-3 to take the straight-sets victory.

Home Hill Tennis Association Secretary, Kate Casswell, said the match-up proved a strong advertisement for Queensland tennis, noting a clear influx of interest in the tennis club following both Walton's duel with world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz and the triple-Queensland doubles showdown.

"The Facebook post on Adam [Walton's] match got 9,300 views—more than three times the population of Home Hill," she said.

Regional Queenslanders are no strangers to success in the sport, with Casswell pointing to a determination forced upon young athletes in remote areas as a potential reason.

"You look at Pat Rafter from Mount Isa, Rocket Rod Laver from Rockhampton… Historically, people from regional Queensland have done really well," she said.

"When you have to drive seven hours to get to tournaments… it definitely makes you more determined."

Although Casswell hopes regional towns can continue to nurture talent, she said the sport is for everyone to enjoy.

"It doesn't matter whether you're going to become the next Adam Walton," she said.

"It helps to develop hand-eye coordination, pick up social skills. It's a really fun sport to play."

Casswell encouraged anyone interested in trying tennis to inquire about the Home Hill Tennis Association’s coaching sessions, 24/7 court hire, or to join the Monday night fixtures starting 2nd February, or the Friday social sessions beginning at the end of March.

Adam Walton began playing tennis in Home Hill at five-years-old and is currently ranked 81st in the world. Photo source: Tennis Australia