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Chamberlain tops Wiedenfeld to win Fort Worth Pro Singles title

Chamberlain beat 19-year-old Ryan Wiedenfeld in Fort Worth to claim $8,000, as the final replay puts a top-five player and a fast-rising challenger back under the spotlight.

Tanya Okafor··2 min read
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Chamberlain tops Wiedenfeld to win Fort Worth Pro Singles title
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Logan Chamberlain beat Ryan Wiedenfeld in the Fort Worth Pro Singles final and left Will Rogers Memorial Center with the title, $8,000 and another marker for the top of the ACL pecking order. Wiedenfeld, the 19-year-old Nebraska standout ranked No. 31 in the world, finished second at $6,000 after pushing the Texas favorite all the way to the championship match.

The replay now circulating around the Fort Worth Signature Open frame shows why the final drew the league’s attention in the first place. Chamberlain entered as Texas’s own, ranked No. 5 in the world, and was chasing his 17th career title and a second singles major of the season on home turf. Wiedenfeld walked in as one of the tour’s youngest headline players, and the matchup gave the ACL a clean contrast between an established title threat and a player still climbing fast through the pro singles bracket.

Fort Worth’s payout sheet underlined how deep the field was behind the final. Gabriel Clauson and Jacob Trzcienski tied for third and took home $4,000 apiece, while names such as Mark Richards, Jamie Graham, Gage Landis, Zack Aiken, Mason Traiteur, Ethan Walker, Jimmy Youmans and Tony Forbes all made the bracket part of a weekend that ran far beyond one match. Chamberlain’s win fits into a larger summer push, while Wiedenfeld’s runner-up finish gives him a result that carries real weight in the current singles hierarchy.

The Fort Worth Signature Open ran June 5-7, 2026, and the ACL promoted the stop as a weekend of competitions for amateurs and pros with more than $100,000 guaranteed in prizes and cash payouts. The pro slate was built around the kind of structure that makes a final like Chamberlain-Wiedenfeld matter: the ACL Pro Guide says the 2025-2026 Pro Tour includes six Signature Opens, with Top 100 players getting automatic entry into seeded Pro Singles and Pro Doubles brackets at each stop. It also sets ACL-funded Pro Division payouts at $104,000 per Signature and $280,000 at the World Championships.

The Fort Worth bracket schedule showed how much of the sport the event packed into one venue. Friday included Pro Qualifier, Pro Women’s Rounders, Pro Senior Rounders, Pro Junior Rounders, college singles, amateur crew cup, USA Forces doubles and pro doubles. Saturday added open doubles and pro singles bracket play, while Sunday closed with multiple singles and doubles divisions across women’s, senior, junior and blind-draw events. With Signature events getting priority for televised broadcasts and livestream coverage, Chamberlain’s win over Wiedenfeld lands as both a final result and a clear snapshot of where the pro singles race stands right now.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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Chamberlain tops Wiedenfeld to win Fort Worth Pro Singles title | Prism News