Posts tagged tennis
Monday’s roundup of high school boys’ tennis matches
Mar 22nd
Following are the high school boys’ tennis results from Monday:
BIGLERVILLE 7, SPRING GROVE 0: At Spring Grove, defending York-Adams League Division II champion Biglerville got its 2011 season off to an impressive start by taking four of the five singles matches in straight sets. Jordan Rogers, Mike Rice, Cole Herzing, Justin Kelly and Nick Redding earned the singles points for the Canners. Rogers earned a 6-0, 6-0 victory.
HANOVER 6, NEW OXFORD 1: At New Oxford, Hanover won every match but No. 4 singles in the cross-over clash. Alex Daubert, Joel Garrett, Steven Osladil and Tommy Link gained singles points for the Nighthawks. Osladil outlasted Dan Popov, 6-4, 3-6, 6-2, at No. 3. Dwight Kessler supplied New Oxford’s point.
MANHEIM TOWNSHIP 4, DALLASTOWN 1: At Dallastown, the Wildcats picked up a victory in doubles play with Aaron Inkrote and teammate Michael Klahold combining for a win at the No. 2 match. With the loss, Dallastown fell to 1-1 overall.
From www.yorkdispatch.com
Women’s Tennis Edged by UT Martin
Mar 21st
MOREHEAD, Ky. – In an extremely tight OVC women’s tennis match, Morehead State dropped a 4-3 decision to visiting UT Martin Sunday.
The Eagles fell to 7-9 overall and 1-2 in the league, while the Skyhawks moved to 6-7 overall and 2-0 in the OVC.
UTM claimed two of the three doubles matches to take a 1-0 lead, and that proved to be a difference maker as the teams split the six singles matches.
At number two doubles, Alexandra Rydberg and Alix Young slid past Alice Laing and Anna Winkelmann 8-6. On court one, Madeleinne Antero and Brooke Helms were topped by Jodie Tilley and Anna Marie Herbold 8-2. UTM won court three’s battle 8-5 as Jessica Montemayor and Lauren Delaney were bested by Johanie Van Zyl and Katie McCall.
In singles, MSU won in the middle of the lineup at nos. 2-4, while the Skyhawks won on courts one, five and six.
At number two, Rydberg topped Laing 6-2 6-2. On court three Antero rallied to beat Winkelmann 4-6, 6-3, 6-3. At number four Montemayor got past Ivon Simic 7-6 (2), 6-3.
At number one Tilley bettered Young 6-2, 3-6, 6-0, and at number five Van Zyl handled Delaney 6-1, 6-1. Herbold shut out Helms 6-0, 6-0 on court six.
MSU will be on the road this weekend, taking on Murray State Saturday and Eastern Illinois Sunday.
From www.msueagles.com
Mt. Prospect Tennis Club Tournament Results
Mar 21st
The Mt. Prospect Tennis Club played a tennis tournament on March 12th at River Trails Tennis Center. Afterward, we dined on delicious Polish food that was comfortable and abundent. The results of the tournament are as follows:
A Division: 1st Place: Lou Preradovic from Mt. Prospect won 27 games
2nd Place: Lloyd Passley from Long Grove won 25 games
A- Division: 1st Place: Karl Faulstich from Mt. Prospect won 31 games
2nd Place: Marcin Januszkiewicz from Mt. Prospect won 29 games
B Division: 1st Place: Edward Walsh from Mt. Prospect won 24 games
2nd Place: Terry Lukasik from Mundelein won 21 games
Lou Preradovic won the Lion’s Cup Men’s Singles A Division last season so his win is not surprising. This concludes our indoor tennis season play, The next tournament will be our first outdoor tournament at Lion’s Park in Mt. Prospect on Saturday, May 14th with a barbeque afterward and Bocce Ball playing. The Mt. Prospect Tennis Club wants to be recognized as the best tennis club in the Northwest suburbs. For more information see our website at www.mptennisclub.wordpress.com.
From triblocal.com
Tennis sweeps Sunday matches
Mar 21st
Sports > Men’s Tennis March 21, 2011 Tennis sweeps Sunday matches
For the second weekend in a row the Penn State men’s tennis team (8-8, 0-1 Big Ten) swept its doubleheader.
The team competed against Youngstown State (2-5) for the first time in program history in the first match on Sunday. Then the Nittany Lions took on Bloomsburg, which was rescheduled after being postponed on Feb. 5.
“We got two good wins here,” freshman Russell Bader said. “I think we’re definitely going to have a little confidence and momentum going into the next couple weeks.”
All three doubles teams came away with wins, led by Bader and senior Eddie Bourchier, won 8-3. Freshman Harry Seaborn and sophomore Bryan Welnetz won 8-2, and junior Jason Lee and sophomore C.J. Griffin won 8-0.
Bader, Welnetz, Lee, Bourchier and freshman Chris Young all came away with wins in their singles matches.
Griffin was the only one who was defeated in singles by Rodrigo Campos of Youngstown State.
The team was originally scheduled to take on Dayton in its second match of the doubleheader, but on Saturday, Dayton had to cancel for unknown reasons.
Instead, Penn State made up its match against Bloomsburg, which, just down the road on Interstate 80, was able to arrive on short notice.
Once again all three of Penn State’s doubles teams won its matches.
Bader and Bourchier won 8-3, while Young and Welnetz won 8-1, and Griffin and Lee won 8-2.
The team also defeated all their Bloomsburg opponents in their singles matches with Bourchier, Young, Seaborn, Bader, Christopher Hasyn and Guanhua Chen all competing.
“All and all it was a good day,” coach Todd Doebler said. “It was a good chance to get everyone to play again.”
Doebler said the team was not affected by the quick change in opponents from Dayton to Bloomsburg.
“We prepare pretty hard and come out and compete no matter who we’re playing,” Doebler said.
“We were prepared to play two matches either way. Dayton couldn’t make it but we were just ready for it,” Lee said.
The next five weekends will consist of Big Ten play for the team.
Doebler said the team will need to work on a few things and get its level of intensity up, not only in practice, but on match day as well. But this will be the most important stretch of the season and the team should be excited.
“It’s good that the Big Ten matches are at the end of the season because we’ve learned from all our mistakes, we’ve learned what our strengths and weaknesses are. We know what we have to do to win,” Lee said.
From www.collegian.psu.edu
Novak Djokovic finds a secret to tennis success and a dent in Rafael Nadal’s armor
Mar 21st
The No. 1 men’s tennis player in the world has a weakness, it was learned Sunday at Indian Wells.
Rumors of the actual existence of flesh and blood in the tennis machine known as Rafael Nadal were confirmed in front of a crowd of 16,754, in a stadium that has a listed capacity of 16,100.
That made as much sense as the irrepressible Nadal going out with a whimper, which is what he did at the end of his 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 loss in the final of the BNP Paribas Open.
On this cool, overcast day of tennis magic, the instructor/architect of what took place was a Serb named Novak Djokovic, whose game has recently gone from super to sensational. Djokovic earned this title with the kind of performance that will keep them talking around the Southern California desert for years to come.
It wasn’t just that Djokovic won. Nor that he beat the almost-never-beatable Nadal.
It was that, by beating him as he did, he showed the rest of the tennis world how.
The match, and the show-and-tell, basically came down to the ninth game of the second set. Nadal had been his usual rock-solid self from the start, hitting hard and deep off both sides, his shots heavy and penetrating. That got him the 6-4 first set.
When Djokovic stepped to the service line for Game 9 of the second set, he led, 5-3. He had been broken in his previous service game and had also had his serve broken twice in the first set. So there were no guarantees. Quickly, he got to set point at 40-15, but the battle had just begun.
What a battle it was. The Serb squandered five set points before winning the sixth, and squaring the match. He also kept the game at deuce five times while facing only one break point.
His strategy at deuce was not only effective, but quite revealing. Almost without fail, the right-handed Djokovic spun his serve wide to the corner of the service box right of Nadal, to the left-hander’s backhand. Each time, Nadal either failed to return or did so weakly enough to allow Djokovic to dictate the point.
And when Nadal returned, Djokovic mostly pounded away on the same side, Nadal’s backhand, until he got an error.
There is a science to this, much deeper than the usual rule of thumb in club players’ strategy, which is to hit to the other person’s backhand. On the pro tours, the backhand is often a player’s strongest weapon. Nadal’s is excellent, but it is a two-hander, which shortens his reach to his right. In this sequence, Djokovic’s serves were not big boomers, even his first serves. Most were about 115 mph, kicking high and spinning to Nadal’s right.
Soon, Nadal was not Nadal. The ninth game of the second set had drained him, as well as everybody in the place. Except perhaps Djokovic. He won the first four games of the final set, running his streak to six straight, and said later, “I was on a roll.”
He also said, “In the third set, I was mostly trying to convince myself to take it one point at a time.”
There is really no confirmation of the existence of Djokovic’s tactics, other than observation. If Nadal admitted he had been taken to school on his backhand side, he would see 20,000 more in the next tournament in Miami, and every tournament after that. Other players certainly sense this is one usable tactic, but few have been able to exploit is as Djokovic did Sunday.
Nadal’s admitting it worked would open the floodgates. Djokovic’s admitting it would be giving away a strategy usable for years to come.
Nadal pointed to his serve’s crumbling in the second set as the reason for his loss.
“I think I was too worried about my serve to play my best level from the baseline,” he said. “My serve didn’t work.”
Everything worked for Djokovic, and has been working since he won two matches late last year for Serbia in the Davis Cup. Since then, he has won 18 more matches without a defeat, including the Australian Open title. Sunday, he pocketed $611,000 for winning, and Monday, he officially becomes No. 2 in the rankings, replacing Roger Federer, whom he beat in the semifinals.
“I want to keep on going and keep on playing good tennis,” said Djokovic, who says that he is playing the best tennis of his life.
Hard to argue. If it spoke, Nadal’s backhand could testify to that.
bill.dwyre@latimes.com
From www.latimes.com
Men’s Tennis Earns Second SEC Victory Over Vanderbilt, 4-3
Mar 21st
March 20, 2011
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NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The No. 26 Auburn men’s tennis team defeated the No. 24 Vanderbilt Commodores, 4-3, at the Currey Tennis Center in Nashville, Tenn. With the win, Auburn is now 10-6 overall and 2-3 in the Southeastern Conference.
“It was a tough match, and they have a tough team,” head coach Eric Shore said. “They are ranked ahead of us, and it was nice to get that doubles point. That gave us some momentum going into singles.
“We got off to a good start, went up 4-0, and the last three we weren’t able to bring home, but they have a good team I thought we played well. It was a nice end to a long trip.”
Auburn started off the doubles action with a win from Alex Stamchev and Andreas Mies. The 46th-ranked duo defeated Charlie Jones and Alex Zotov, 8-5.
The Commodores quickly responded with a win on court number one as Vanderbilt’s No. 49 Adam Baker and Ryan Lipman topped Tim Puetz and Daniel Cochrane, 8-6. The Tigers would clinch the doubles point as Lucas Lopasso and Rafael Rondino came away with 8-6 win over Bryant Salcedo and Blake Barzarnik on court three.
In singles, Rondino defeated Vanderbilt’s Zotov, 6-2, 6-4. Auburn took a 3-0 lead over the Commodores as No. 121 Mies continued his stellar season with a win over Barzarnik, 6-1, 7-5.
Auburn’s No. 31 Puetz clinched the second SEC win for the Tigers with an upset victory over No. 28 Lipman, 6-4, 6-3. However, the Commodores would earn the last three points of the match.
On court two, the Tigers’ Tim Hewitt lost to Vanderbilt’s Charlie Jones, 6-4, 7-5. In the No. 4 position, Auburn’s No. 105 Cochrane was defeated by the Commodores’ Salcedo, 6-4, 7-5.
On court three, Vanderbilt’s Baker finished off the match with a three-set victory over Auburn’s No. 104 Stamchev, 4-6, 7-6, 1-0.
The Tigers will return to action on Saturday, March 26, against Kentucky at the Yarbrough Tennis Center. The match is slated for 1 p.m. and admission is free.
Against Vanderbilt Singles
1. No. 31 Tim Puetz (AU) def. No. 28 Ryan Lipman (VU); 6-4, 6-3
2. Charlie Jones (VU) def. Tim Hewitt (AU); 6-4, 7-5
3. Adam Baker (VU) def. No. 104 Alex Stamchev (AU); 4-6, 7-6, 1-0
4. Bryant Salcedo (VU) def. No. 105 Daniel Cochrane (AU); 6-4, 7-5
5. No. 121 Andreas Mies (AU) def. Blake Barzarnik (VU); 6-1, 7-5
6. Rafael Rondino (AU) def. Alex Zotov (VU); 6-2, 6-4
Doubles
1. No. 49 Adam Baker/Ryan Lipman (VU) def. Tim Puetz/Daniel Cochrane (AU); 8-6
2. No. 46 Alex Stamchev/Andreas Mies (AU) def. Charlie Jones/Alex Zotov (VU); 8-5
3. Lucas Lopasso/Rafael Rondino (AU) def. Bryant Salcedo/Blake Barzarnik (VU); 8-6
Match Notes
Auburn University 10-6 (2-3 SEC); National ranking #26
Auburn University 9-7 (0-5 SEC); National ranking #24
Order of finish: Doubles (2,1,3); Singles (6,5,1,2,4,3)
From auburntigers.cstv.com
Men’s Tennis Falls in Conference Opener to No. 16 Michigan, 1-6
Mar 20th
March 20, 2011
EAST LANSING, Mich. – The Michigan State men’s tennis team suffered its second loss of the season this afternoon, falling to in-state rival Michigan, 6-1, in its conference opener. The Spartans fell in two of the doubles matches, and earned a point in singles play as freshman Aaron Pfister defeated Chris Madden in the No. 5 slot, 6-2, 6-4, to stay undefeated in dual singles matches.
MSU earned a victory in doubles play in the No. 1 spot as the senior tandem of Jason Norville and John Stratton defeated Jung and Bernstein, 9-7, to move to 7-3 in dual matches this season. Pfister and senior Austin Brooks fell to King and Buzzi at No. 2 doubles, 8-6, while senior Clark Richardson and junior Mat Nelson were defeated by Franks and Madden, 9-8 (5), in the No. 3 position.
In singles play, sophomore Denis Bogatov fell to Evan King, 6-2, 6-1, in the No. 1 spot, while junior Ronnie Hulewicz was defeated by Jason Jung, 1-6, 7-6 (6), 1-0. Brooks fell to Bernstein at No. 3, 6-3, 6-2, and Stratton was defeated in the No. 4 spot by Franks, 6-4, 7-6 (5). In the sixth position, freshman Drew Lied fell 6-3, 6-4 to Rossi.
The Spartans continue conference action next weekend when they travel to face the Hoosiers of Indiana on Friday, March 25 at 2 p.m. before traveling to West Lafayette to face Purdue on Sunday, March 27 at 12 p.m.
From www.msuspartans.com
NATIONALLY-RANKED MEN’S TENNIS WINS EIGHTH STRAIGHT
Mar 20th
RESULTS (Coming Soon)
ASHEVILLE, N.C. – No. 73 Radford extended its winning streak to eight straight with a 5-2 victory over UNC Asheville Sunday afternoon in Big South men’s tennis action at the Crowne Plaza Tennis Center.
Winners of 11 of their last 12 matches, the Highlanders improved to 12-3 overall and 2-1 in the league, while UNCA fell to 6-6 and 0-1.
Ranked nationally for the fourth straight season, Radford claimed the doubles point with wins on courts one and two.
The Highlanders opened singles play with convincing straight-set wins from Ivan Salec (Oroslavje, Croatia / Oroslavje Secondary School), Thomas Dehaen (Zwevegem, Belgium / Middenjury) and Stijn Meulemans (Belgium / KA2 sportschool Hasselt) to clinch the dual.
Radford’s final singles victory came at the fourth position from Igor Ogrizek (Daruvar, Croatia / Birotechnika Grammar School), who rallied from a set down.
The Highlanders will return to the court Tuesday with a 3:30 p.m. match at Davidson.
From www.ruhighlanders.com
Notre Dame tennis: Irish women trip Vols
Mar 20th
The 17th-ranked University of Notre Dame women’s tennis team ended its spring break trip on a high note, claiming a 5-2 win over 18th-ranked Tennessee on Saturday at Tampa, Fla.
The Irish finish the trip with a 1-2 record and are now 9-7 overall.
“I thought as a team we played really well today,” said Irish head coach Jay Louderback. “It was really important for us to get a win against a top-20 opponent, and we responded to that very well.”
NOTRE DAME 5, TENNESSEE 2
At Tampa, Fla.
SINGLES: No. 1 Kristy Frilling (ND) d. #42 Natalie Pluskota, 6-1, 6-0; No. 2 Shannon Mathews (ND) d. Rosalia Alda, 6-4, 6-4; No. 3 Brynn Boren (UT) d. Kristen Rafael, 1-6, 6-4, 6-1; No. 4 Jennifer Kellner (ND) d. Kata Szekely, 6-4, 5-7, 1-0 (13-11); No. 5 Chrissie McGaffigan (ND) d. Maria Sorbello, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2; No. 6 Millie Nichols (UT) d. Julie Sabacinski, 7-5, 6-1
DOUBLES: No. 1 Kristy Frilling/Shannon Mathews (ND) d. Natalie Pluskota/Millie Nichols, 8-5; No. 2 Chrissie McGaffigan/Kristen Rafael (ND) d. Rosalia Alda/Maria Sorbello, 8-6; No. 3 Jennifer Meredith/Kata Szekely (UT) d. Jennifer Kellner/Julie Sabacinski, 9-7.
From www.southbendtribune.com
