James Duckworth is the Sydney-born grinder who refused to let a butchered body end his career. He came up through Sydney Church of England Grammar and an Australian Institute of Sport scholarship, and as a junior enjoyed a successful career which included winning three titles and reaching the semifinals of the 2010 French Open before turning pro in 2010. The bloodline is genuine: his grandmother, Beryl Penrose, swept the singles and doubles titles at the 1955 Australian Championships.
Stylistically he's a flat, forward-pressing right-hander with a two-handed backhand, raised on grass — according to the ATP website, Duckworth's favorite surface is grass, and his favorite tournament is the Australian Open. The headline of his bio isn't a ranking, it's the operating table: he underwent nine surgeries — right elbow three times, right foot three times, right shoulder twice, and a hip in January 2022. That he built a tour-level career on top of that is the whole story.
The breakthrough arrived late. He reached career-high No. 46 in January 2022 after a personal-best 22 tour-level wins in 2021, highlighted by his first ATP final at Astana and his biggest career win over No. 13 Goffin at Miami, plus a first Grand Slam third round at Wimbledon and a first Masters 1000 quarterfinal in Paris. That Paris run included scalps of Roberto Bautista Agut and Lorenzo Musetti. The next year he added another marquee name: at the Canadian Open, he qualified and defeated world No. 15 Jannik Sinner to reach the third round, the second top-20 win of his career. He's also a Challenger institution — the Australian singles player with the most titles in ATP Challenger Tour history.
Now 34 and ranked No. 79, Duckworth is again doing what he's always done: mining Challenger points and qualifying draws to hang around the top 80. After multiple top-100 round trips, the current beat is maintenance — staying healthy and relevant deep into a career nobody scripted to last this long.