Le P1000 du Clermont Padel Club knows its first winners. Clermont-l'Herault, Thomas Seux et Arthur Hugounenq did not tremble to impose themselves.
A fully controlled tournament
The tournament's second seed, a contender for the final victory following the withdrawal of the ts1, Yoan Boronad / Nicolas Molinero, won the title without conceding a single set. Even more, Thomas et Arthur conceded only 14 games over the entire tournament. A complete domination over their opponents, crushing them at the end of lightning matches, like the final and the semi-final won in less than 1h20.
Their tournament started in the best possible way, winning 6-0, 6-1 against the pair Mattis Perrot/ Theo Suzanna , pair 10A meeting which showed the solidity of the future winners. Thomas Seux, 26th French player, during the quarter-final, delighted the public with his shots from elsewhere to get rid of the pair Julien Datcharry / Perdi Diaz Torregrosa, ts8. For its part, Arthur Hugounenq, 27th French player, showed his full range of solid play to secure a place in the final after a controlled semi-final (6-3, 6-3) against the pair Remy Gourre / Jerome Ferrandez, number 6 seed, who fell a little earlier from the ts4 Baptiste Delvienne / Vincent Ferrara.
A one-way finish
For the Clermont final Padel Club, Seux / Hugonenq found the young pair Olivier Guy De Chamisso / Thomas Basso (ts7), winner of the P1000 Padel House Bordeaux early December. The two young players, aged 16 and 17, arrived solidly in the final after a great performance in the semi-final against ts3 Timéo Fonteny / Louis Jover (6-4, 7-5).
After two one-sided sets, Seux et Hugounenq took the lead by dominating this final from start to finish. On the other side, the ts7 failed to enter its final, lacking accuracy throughout the match. The last step was too high this Sunday. It was under a one-sided score (6-2; 6-2) that Thomas Seux et Arthur Hugounenq win the first P1000 on the Clermont-l'Hérault side.
I took a bubble in my first tournament Padel. Since then, it has become a passion,
with one goal: to never again finish a game without scoring a goal. This sport is
now an integral part of my life, to the point of leaving feathers there. I often burn myself
elbows trying to catch all the balls. "A true love story."