Logan Lewis
Logan Lewis
Logan Lewis is a 13-year-old NSW tennis player who has competed at state-level events. Seeking support for coaching, travel, equipment and tournament costs.
Current Campaigns
ABOUT Logan Lewis
To support Logan, please click through to the campaign link below where all donations contribute to his total. Or visit the campaign section above
asf.org.au/campaigns/logan-lewis/support-logan-lewis
Logan Lewis – Junior Tennis Development (Quick Highlights)
13-year-old Logan Lewis began tennis at age 10 and a half and has rapidly progressed to competing at state-level events, showing strong commitment, development, and results.
Key Achievements:
School No. 1 player in the Todd Woodbridge Cup
Reached regional level in one year and state level in two consecutive years
Finished #1 ranked player overall at state-level Todd Woodbridge Cup tournament
Awarded Alex de Minaur Passion Award for effort, attitude, and sportsmanship
Regional Champion of Champions – top 8 in region two years running
One of only three regional players to progress to State Champion of Champions 2025
Selected for Tennis NSW Regional Development Squad
Represented region in Hunter PSSA team, competing at NSW State Finals
Chosen as one of three students for selective sports high school tennis program 2026
Training multiple times per week and competing regularly in strong regional and state-level events
Why Support Matters:
Competing more broadly across NSW and interstate is essential for Logan’s development, but it comes with real costs. Travel, accommodation, coaching, tournament fees, and ongoing equipment expenses add up quickly.
As Logan progresses, the requirements to stay competitive also increase. At this stage, it is not just about entering more tournaments, but also improving the quality and frequency of his preparation, including more regular private coaching and targeted development work.
Many of the players he is now competing against have had years of structured training and exposure to higher-level competition, which Logan is still building towards. Closing that gap requires increased time on court in stronger events, along with more consistent technical and tactical coaching between competitions.
Regular gear costs also remain part of his development, including shoes, restringing, and replacement equipment as he trains and competes more frequently. Additional tools such as a ball machine would further support his ability to train independently and build repetition outside of formal sessions.
Right now, the biggest barrier to Logan’s progress is not effort or commitment, but access to the same level of preparation and opportunity that many of his peers already have.
Support through the Australian Sports Foundation helps bridge that gap, whether through one-off contributions or ongoing sponsorship from those who see long-term potential in Logan’s development. Longer-term support allows for more consistent planning across coaching, competition schedules, and development goals.
With the right support network in place, Logan can continue increasing his competition exposure, strengthening his training environment, and developing at the pace his results already show is possible.
Every contribution, no matter the size, helps him stay on court, keep improving, and continue chasing his goals in the sport he is fully committed to.
LOGAN'S STORY:
Logan didn’t grow up on a tennis court. He picked up a racquet at just 10 and a half years old with no expectations, just curiosity.
In a short time, he’s gone from casual hits to competing at state level.
What stands out isn’t just his results, but the way he approaches the game. He trains consistently, competes hard, and handles both wins and losses with a level of maturity well beyond his age.
He’s the kid who stays back after training to work on one more thing. The one who listens, applies feedback, and just keeps turning up.
That mindset has driven his rapid progress and earned him recognition such as the Alex de Minaur Passion Award.
Most of Logan’s matches so far have been within local and regional competitions, where he has consistently performed strongly.
The next step is gaining more exposure to deeper, more competitive tournaments and regularly facing stronger opponents.
This is where the next stage of development lies, not in effort or commitment, but in access to higher-level competition.
Many players at this level have already had years of exposure to those environments, and Logan is working to close that gap as quickly as possible.
Tennis is now a major part of Logan’s life, both in and out of school.
He is part of a specialised school tennis program, trains multiple times per week, and regularly gets up early for extra strength and conditioning before school.
Between squad training, private coaching, and regular tournaments, he is fully committed to improving and seeing how far he can take it.