Nicolai Budkov Kjaer
Budkov Kjaer, the 2024 Wimbledon boys’ champion, has quietly assembled one of the most dominant Challenger seasons in recent memory after winning in Glasgow, Tampere, Astana and Mouilleron le Captif. The 19-year-old didn’t drop a set during his entire Astana run, and in Mouilleron, he dismantled Patrick Kypson 6-0, 6-3 in just 54 minutes—the shortest final in tournament history. As a result, he’s rocketed up the rankings from outside the Top 300 at the start of the year to a career-high No. 136.
Read More: Nicolai Budkov Kjaer makes history in winning junior boys’ Wimbledon title
Budkov Kjaer already has elite-level weapons in his arsenal. At 6’3″, his serve generates significant pace, and Jannik Sinner’s coach, Darren Cahill, described his forehand as a “hammer.” That big swing can overpower opponents at any level, and he’s shown the maturity to close out matches at crucial moments. He just needs to improve his consistency on the backhand wing and build up his rally tolerance a bit more. Once he does, look out.
Budkov Kjaer’s success before turning 20 suggests a talent level that should translate to ATP success sooner rather than later. He’s also managed by his father, Alexander Kjaer, the former CEO of the Norwegian Tennis Federeration—he has the weapons, work ethic, and pedigree to become Scandinavia’s next elite talent.
With his powerful serve, massive forehand, and experience training alongside Sinner and the world’s best, Budkov Kjaer isn’t just ready to break into the Top 100 by early 2026—he might already have Top 10 potential.
