Girls tennis: Sailors, Sea Kings shoot for CIF titles
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Tony Altobelli
CLAREMONT - Two local teams, two different divisions, two CIF
Southern Section titles at stake.
That’s what awaits the Newport Harbor High and Corona del Mar girls
tennis teams with finals’ action today at the Claremont Tennis Club.
The Sailors will take on Palm Desert for the Division III title at
10:30 a.m., while the Sea Kings go up against Calabasas for the Division
IV crown at 11:30.
Corona del Mar, the top-seed in Division IV, is steamrolling through
its opponents like a bully taking lunch money in school.
The Sea Kings (24-2) have won 50 out of the 54 sets played in the
playoffs, including 18-0 wins over Pacifica in the second round and
Chaminade in the semifinals.
“We’re healthy and we’re all playing well at the same time,” Sea Kings
Coach Andy Stewart said. “I don’t know much about Calabasas, but if we
continue to play the type of tennis we’re playing, there’s not too many
teams that can beat us.”
Especially in Division IV, where a 14-4 decision over San Marino has
been the hardest CdM has been pushed in these playoffs.
In the shutout win over Chaminade, sophomore Anne Yelsey won 18 of 19
games played in her three-set win, as did the No. 1 doubles team of
Brittany Holland and Leslie Damion.
“Our doubles have really been playing well lately,” Stewart said.
“Actually, everyone on the team has been very successful, but our doubles
teams have really picked up their game.”
In Saturday’s CIF Individual individual championships at Old Ranch
Club in Seal Beach, Yelsey and Reitz eased into the Round of 16, as well
as the Holland-Damion doubles combination.
Yelsey blanked Mater Dei’s Michelle Van Oppen, 6-0, 6-0, and won by
default over Troy’s Aya Sakoda.
Reitz punished Joyce Kim of Cypress and Esperanza’s Kelly Six with
identical 6-0, 6-0 lessons.
Holland and Damion, top-seeded in doubles, eliminated Michelle Dinh
and Karen Eitan of Troy, 6-2, 6-3.
The Sailors’ road to the Division III finals has been a little
trickier, but just as rewarding.
After breezing past Savanna (18-0), La Serna (17-1) and St. Lucy’s
(14-4) in the first three rounds, Newport, seeded No. 3 in the division,
outlasted second-seeded Mater Dei, 10-8, to advance to the finals.
It was a solid first round of play and an early 5-1 lead that proved
to be the difference for the Sailors over the Monarchs.
The lead stretched to 7-1, before Mater Dei fought back and won four
straight sets.
But Newport hung tough and came up with the close sets, as well as the
match.
Newport Coach Fletcher Olson sees the Palm Desert matchup to mirror
the intensity of the Mater Dei clash.
“I think it’s going to come down to which team can stay more focused,”
Olson said. “For us to win, it will have to take all nine players to play
their best tennis. We’re young, but they’ve earned the right to be in the
finals.”
A pleasant surprise for Olson’s squad has been the play of Carmen and
Diana Khoury.
“Carmen is a junior and she had never played tennis on a team before
this year,” Olson said. “Diana started this year on our doubles teams,
but I’ve moved her to singles and she keeps playing better and better.”
Palm Desert, the top seed in the division, lost in the finals last
year to Laguna Hills and according to Olson, has talent from top to
bottom.
“From what I’ve seen, they’ve got a couple of solid players in
singles, as well as a couple of real good doubles teams, so it should be
a battle out there,” Olson said.
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