This extraordinary run of wins started in 2023 when the core of the team came together around London Academy’s Sienna Jetha. Their first order of business was to dethrone the previous champions Wensum TTC.

In 2024 the team returned to the Derby Arena to face off against the emerging power of Grantham College. And both teams took it right down to the wire, remaining unbeaten for the entire competition.

The final match was a head-to-head between London Academy and Grantham with the Capital's team only needing a draw to win the title. In the end the tie ended 3-3 and London Academy had retained their title by a single point.

This year the team headed to Derby on the 15th & 16th of February to try and clinch an extraordinary third title in a row. Once again they were chased to the line by Grantham who went into their head-to-head needing a win to level the table.

However, this time there would be no doubt as to who the winners were going to be, as London Academy took the tie 4-2 and clinched an amazing triple.

Remarkably, this wasn’t the only triple victory on the day, as the girls Second and Third teams also won to give London Academy complete control over the top three divisions in the Youth British Clubs League. Even more impressively this was all achieved despite the loss of two regular squad members.

In Division One, Soraya Rahmani-Walentynska and Gianna Pang stepped up to fill the missing gaps, and found themselves in the middle of a street fight. Back in October, seven out of the first nine ties in this division had ended in a draw, which shows just how tough the competition was. However, due to a perfect record of 8 wins out of 8 for Alisha Dutta, London Academy went into the final weekend with a narrow lead.

That lead looked to be in serious threat when London Academy lost their first match to London rivals Greenhouse. But the girls were spurred on by this and won the next four matches in a row to finally pull away from the pack and take the trophy.

In many ways the third team had the hardest job of all. In October they had posted five wins and a draw to take firm control of the division. However, with the departure of two of their strongest players, it fell to Assil Sarri to carry on with the addition of Serene Rahmani-Walentynska, Ruby Gandi Bamidele, and Alexia Ciobanica.

This relatively inexperienced quartet had the difficult task of protecting their fragile lead in a highly competitive division. The weekend started well with two wins over Brighton and Graham Spicer. However, a loss to to second placed Woodford Wells in the final match on Saturday left them going into the final day with everything still to play for.

Ignoring the pressure, the girls held their nerve to beat Draycott 4-2 on Sunday morning, which clinched the title with a match to spare. This could have easily gone the other way if not for Ruby Gandi Bamidele’s two wins, both of them in the 5th set, which swung the tie and the whole division in their favour.

With her sister Soraya and Assil Sarri moving up to try their luck in the Seniors, Serene took up the mantle of favourite in the under 19 Girls.

Facing a strong field of eight players from London Academy and Greenhouse, Serene completed a clean sweep of seven straight wins to take the title.

Her biggest challenge came from club-mate Alexia-Bianca Ciobanica, who led their match 2 set to 1 before Serene came from behind to secure the win and the Gold medal. Alexia Beat Ruby Gandi Bamidele to decide silver and bronze.

The following day the three girls met again in the Under 13 Girls competition where Serene ran out the winner again. However, this time Ruby managed to take silver by reversing the result when she beat Alexia in a tough 5-set match.

Under 11 Mixed

Nicholas Andrei continued London Academy’s success by winning the Under 11 Mixed Championship Division with 4 victories out of 4. The tone was set with a fifth set victory over top seed and favourite Cindy Xiao, who managed to take second over Isabella Xiao Xu, after a three way countback.

The consolation division was won by Jacob Vogl, with Daniyal Janmohamed sealing Silver with a win over Hattie Xiao.

Under 13 Boys

In the Under 13 Boys, second seed Nikolas Karavas beat top seed Joshua Freeman in a high quality final. In the semi-finals both players had to beat London Academy opposition with Nikolas beating Rafi Hanzel Wacker in 4 sets while Joshua needed all five to see off Dominic Rimmy.

Under 15 Girls

Local player Maahi Malde from Stanmore TTC, overcame a host of competition from Greenhouse to take the top spot in the Under 15 Girls competition. Nylah Fernandez beat her Greenhouse club-mate Isabelly Lorrana in 5 sets to take the silver.

Under 15 Boys

An extended field in the Under 15 Boys saw six London Academy boys reach the knockout stage. By the semi-final stage only Yacoub Rahmani-Walentynski and Adam Riadi remained, and they faced each other two see who would reach the final, with Yacoub coming though in straight sets.

In the final Yacoub faced the top seed, Oscar Nikolli and despite fighting hard he went down in four sets. Overall, this was a good result for the London Academy player as he missed Saturday's competitions due to illness.

Under 19 Boys

The Under 19 boys saw the return of London Academy's Parsa Yamin from injury as the top seed. However, despite reaching the final, he lost in 3 sets to eBaTT’s Ben Levi, who took his second title in a row.

Senior Mixed

With the late withdrawal of the top 2 seeds, and all of our previous winners absent, third seed Daniel Broner looked to be the favourite going into the competition.

In the final he faced late entrant Jack Sandler. With a rivalry going back to their college days, the two players knew each other well, and as a result the match was a tight cagey affair that swung both ways several times. In the end, despite losing a two set lead, Sandler took the match in the 5th (13-11, 11-9. 10-12, 7-11, 11-5). Jaycee Chan and Rajiv Padman took the Bronze medals as losing Semi-finalists.


RESULTS

Soraya became the first ever Under 15 Girls National series Champion when she defeated Hannah Saunders to take the trophy at St Neots TTC .

The score was 3-1 (11-4, 11-5, 8-11, 11-3) in favour of the London Academy player, who completed an unbeaten weekend.

In the boys Division 4, Soraya's brother Yacoub won all six of his matches in take top spot, with Ibrahim Hussain second and Harry Tomlinson third

In the U13 Girls Assil Sarri had to work hard for second place, including a comeback 3-2 (9-11, 11-8, 11-13, 11-8, 11-5) over Ffion Evans.

Third went to Soraya's sister, Serene Rahmani-Walentynska, thanks in part to coming from 2-0 down to beat Maisha Patel 3-2 (9-11, 9-11, 11-8, 11-7, 11-6). She also won 11-6 in the fifth against Ruby Gandi Bamidele.

In Division 2, second place went to Alexia-Bianca Ciobanica. Alexia was involved in the closest match, finally prevailing 19-17 in the fifth against Evie Turner-Samuels. She also won 12-10 in a decider against Ahluwalia, while in division 3, Naomi Adeji came third.

in the Under-13 Boys, Zach Sarri came third in Division 2, despite an impressive win against the eventual divisional winner, Saisurya Prasanna, coming back from 2-0 down to win 3-2 (7-11, 9-11, 11-8, 11-8, 11-9).

Taking the top spot

There was more good news for Soraya when the latest rankings were published. She had finally reach the Number 1 spot, taking over from Hannah Saunders. This was a fantastic achievement for Soraya, who had lost only 1 of 29 matches in the previous ranking period.