AFTER three months of matches, the Totally Tennis Mini-Tennis Masters has reached its final stage.

In the end, 19 young tennis players qualified for the final, all keen to claim the top spot for their level of mini-tennis.

The youngest competitors went into battle first, in the Red Mini-Tennis final.

Each entrant played each other in a round-robin format to decide the new champion.

Matthew Pawley came first after winning all four of his matches. Rebecca Green came second by winning three matches and she was followed by William Joyce, who finished third.

In the Orange Mini-Tennis final, the competition was played with competitors grouped into two boxes.

Billy Roberts won his box by clinching all three of his matches, with Daniel Hutton finishing second in the box by winning two.

In the second Orange box, Lewis Cooper came first after winning both his matches, with Fraser Roskilly finishing runner-up.

In the play-off for the title of Orange Mini Tennis champion, Cooper and Roberts battled it out with Cooper finishing triumphant to take the well-earned title.

The Green mini-tennis competition was also played with entrants shared between two boxes. Rachel Whiteside won her box, pipping Jamie Collins to first place.

In the second box, Liam Church took the top spot, after winning all three of his matches, closely followed by Michael Cheng, who won two.

In a play-off to see who would qualify for the grand final, it was an unpredictable result with Michael Cheng beating Rachel Whiteside and Jamie Collins narrowly beating Liam Church.

In a nail-biting last match, featuring two players who managed to come back from second place in their box to earn their place in the final, there was everything to play for.

After hard-fought games, Michael Cheng managed to overcome Jamie Collins 11-9 to take the Green Mini Tennis championship title.

Totally Tennis' Adam Chadwick, who organised the event, said: "All the players worked really hard to reach this last stage and it has motivated them all term to put a great deal of effort in their lessons.

"It was particularly great to see some of our youngest players enjoy playing competitive tennis in such a fun environment."