Tag: alfie hewett

Gordon Reid and Alfie Hewett with their gold medals on the podium. Gordon is kissing his.

Doubles Delight as Gordon Reid Becomes a Paralympic Champion Again 

Scotland’s wheelchair tennis hero completes a coveted golden career slam in Paris with Alfie Hewett  

By Paul Morrison


The unbridled joy was hard to hide for ParalympicsGB’s Gordon Reid and Alfie Hewett as the pair fulfilled a career-long dream of winning the Paralympic title in the men’s wheelchair tennis doubles event on Friday (6th), day nine of the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games.  

Gordon and Alfie defeated the Japanese duo of Tokito Oda and Takuya Miki to achieve doubles gold at the third time of asking. 

As well as Paralympics champions, the Brits’ win also completes their remarkable career golden slam to establish their status as one of the greatest doubles partnerships of all time. 

The win gives Gordon his second Paralympic gold medal, adding to his singles title in Rio eight years ago, while Alfie added a silver medal in the singles as he was defeated by Oda in Saturday’s final. 

Undoubtedly the top match in wheelchair tennis doubles at the moment, Gordon and Alfie would have been confident in their chances as they defeated Oda and Miki in all three major finals this year. 

Once again, the Brits took no time to get going as they broke the Japanese pair to open the match, thanks to some astonishing winners at the net from Gordon, something that would become one of the match’s key points. 

As Oda and Miki then got themselves on the board after breaking Gordon’s serve, the Brits would hold their own in many highly competitive points to manage to give them the chance of securing the first set and completing the first step to winning gold. 

Taking the first set 6-2, Gordon and Alfie would only get stronger as they tallied off the first three games of the second set as the Japanese pair struggled to find any answer to get the upper hand. 

While Oda and Miki weren’t completely out of the match after breaking Alfie’s serve, the instant response was there for the Brits who broke straight back. Gordon then held his service game to make it 5-1, finding themselves one game away from the gold medal. 

A strong return game was produced from the Brits and an excellent drop shot from Alfie gave them the gold as the Roland Garros crowd at Phillippe-Chatrier witnessed a historic moment as the pair couldn’t stop the emotions getting the better of them. 

Gordon and Alfie’s win also saw the ParalympicsGB team surpass the 40 mark for gold medals won at the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games. 

Shortly after the win, Gordon and Alfie would find themselves atop the podium as the medal ceremony began, with the British and Japanese pairs being joined by Spain’s Martin De La Puente and Daniel Caverzaschi, who won the bronze medal match on Suzanne-Lenglen. 

The prizing moment of receiving their gold medals and hearing the British national anthem saw the duo sport some wide and joyous smiles that spoke a thousand words of how they felt in this moment. 

Speaking after the match, Gordon tried to make some sense of the incredible moment, saying: “We finally did it, it’s ours. It feels amazing, even if it’s not fully sunk in yet, the emotions and adrenaline are still high.” 

Knowing that the win has banished the devastation of losing out in the gold medal matches from Tokyo (2020) and Rio (2026), he added: “We’ve been desperate for this for a long time, we’ve come close twice and felt that heartbreak and pain.” 

“Those matches have been some of the toughest moments of my career so to sit here with the gold around our necks is one of the best feelings.” 

Beginning to come to terms with the title they just achieved, he finally said: “Sometimes you need to feel some pain to enjoy the highs when they come, we need to really savour this moment.” 

For Alfie, he could only add a silver medal in the singles to his doubles gold with Gordon when he was pipped to the title by an inspired Oda 2-6, 6-4, 5-7 in a dramatic final to round off the brilliant wheelchair tennis events in Paris. 

The pair will take this victory into the last major tournament of the year as they look to add the Wheelchair Doubles Masters to their winnings this year in November. 

Well done Gordon and Alfie!

Photo of Gordon Reid stretching to hit the tennis ball.

Gordon Reid Makes Strong Start to Wheelchair Tennis Events in Paris 

The four-time Paralympic medallist won twice today to begin his quest for more success in impressive fashion 

By Paul Morrison 


Day 4 of the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games saw Scotland star Gordon Reid take to the courts at Roland Garros to begin his events in wheelchair tennis. On a busy Sunday on the clay, the ParalympicsGB athlete was in action twice as he started both his singles and doubles tournaments. 

Up first for Gordon was a match in the singles against Sri Lanka’s Suresh Dharmasena. With this Paralympic match-up being the first time the two players would face off, it could have been a tricky contest for Gordon after Dharmasena enjoyed a comfortable straight-set win in the opening round against Austria’s Josef Riegler. 

Gordon was locked in from the first point as he was straight off the block with breaking the Sri Lankan’s serve in the opening game and despite facing a break point on his first service game, Gordon held to take an early lead. 

A second and third break came quicky after as Gordon quickly wrapped up the first set 6-0, with Dharmasena’s many unforced errors and double faults proving costly. 

The same story followed for the second set when Gordon once again cruised through each service and return game as his opponent’s error count only increased. The Scot would go on to claim victory with another set to love as the match finished 6-0, 6-0 in 50 minutes. 

Gordon was pleased with his performance and of the conditions at Roland Garros, saying: “For the first match, to get used to the conditions, courts, match play, I’m happy with the start.” 

He added: “I love the heat and a bit of humidity, get a sweat on. It’s nice conditions so hopefully it stays like this for the rest of the week. It’s going to get harder from here but I’m looking forward to the challenge.” 

In the afternoon, Gordon turned to doubles action with teammate Alfie Hewitt as the top seeds looked to start their campaign strong in the hope of achieving gold together for the first time. 

They were up against the Chilean pair of Alexander Cataldo and Brayan Tapia which proved to be a much more difficult match for Gordon. Serving first, the Scot experienced a shaky start as his serve was broken, handing the Chileans the lead. 

It wouldn’t take long before the Brits settled into the match as while it wasn’t all comfortable for them and were forced to save some more break points, Gordon and Alfie won six consecutive games to take the first set 6-1. 

After breaking serve again to lead 2-1 in the second set, Gordon was unable to hold his serve for a second time. The advantage was immediately restored afterwards when the Brits broke to love to lead 3-2 after a third straight break of serve in the set. 

A long and gruelling game tested Alfie’s serving skills as they took the game after several cagey moments at deuce. 

A collection of unforced errors saw the Chileans throw away a service game to hand Gordon the chance to serve for the match. For a third time though, the Scot was broken to hand Cataldo and Tapia a lifeline. 

The British pair followed this up by showing how well they can bounce back from a hiccup, firing home three forehand winners to seal the win at 6-1, 6-3. 

Along with the strong performance, Gordon was delighted with the atmosphere that was seen throughout the day of action at Roland Garros. 

“It’s amazing to see the whole place and every stadium and every court so busy and to know that everybody is here purely for wheelchair tennis is an incredible feeling and incredible for us to be part of it,” he said. 

“Hopefully we’ve entertained a few people and we’ll have the chance to do that again as the week goes on.” 

The pair will now face the Netherlands’ Ruben Spaargaren and Maarten Ter Hofte (7) on Tuesday (3rd September) in the quarter finals. 

On Monday (2nd), he will be back on court to face Japan’s Takuyo Mika in the third round of the singles after the 9th seed defeated the People’s republic of China’s, Jinhui Ding, earlier today. 

The Paris 2024 Paralympics runs from the 28th August – 8th September. You can follow all the action and find out how the 21 Scottish Para athletes get on by following Scottish Disability Sport on Facebook, X and Instagram, as well as on the SDS website. You can catch all the action on Channel 4. More information here.