Boys tennis: CdM’s Morton, Snyder catch fire
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Steve Virgen
HUNTINGTON BEACH - After dominating their opponents, Corona del Mar
High’s Brian Morton and Garrett Snyder cradled their CIF Southern Section
doubles championship plaques, stood side by side and posed for a
snapshot.
It was easy to smile.
Without a serve broken in the title match and without surrendering a
set the entire tournament, Morton and Snyder won the CIF doubles title
with a 6-4, 6-2 victory over Phil Sheng and Andrew Lieu from Thousand
Oaks, Saturday at SeaCliff Country Club.
“(Morton and Snyder) played at a high level and just stayed there,”
CdM Coach Tim Mang said. “In high school tennis, you’re not going to see
that type of playing anywhere, except for here.”
In less than an hour, Morton and Snyder controlled Lieu and Chang,
never allowing the Thousand Oaks tandem to gain any type of rhythm or
momentum.
The top-seeded Sea King duo seized the momentum in the third game of
the first set, then from the first game of the second set to charge on
for the win.
“That’s what set the tone,” Snyder said of breaking Lieu’s serve in
the third game. “All along, we knew if we gave them any type of
advantage, they would take control.”
The Sea Kings were on game-point, before the Lancers battled back for
deuce. But then Snyder struck for two winners, the 2-1 lead and
possession of the momentum.
If Game 3 of the first set was an indication of whose match it was,
Game 1 of the second set revealed the title belonged to CdM.
Sheng, a senior who won the CIF singles title two years ago and was
runner-up last year, served for Thousand Oaks to begin the second set.
Again, CdM reached game point as Morton challenged Sheng with solid
returns to lead, 30-0. Snyder then set up Lieu with a baseline lob shot
and the CdM sophomore smashed his return. The Lancers, however, struck
back to gain deuce.
But, Snyder came up with a return that found a sweet spot along the
sideline, just behind Lieu. Sheng then committed a rare error, giving CdM
a 1-0 lead.
“We just got off to a bad start,” said Sheng, who is bound for
Stanford. “We weren’t able to pick it up. It was tough to find their weak
spot when you’re busy being so cautious not to break again. They are
obviously a great doubles team.”
Said Morton, “I can’t say that (Snyder and I) were surprised (to win
the CIF title). We played well. We’re good friends and we flow together
on the court.”
The Sea Kings later broke Lieu’s serve again for a 3-0 lead, as the
Lancers committed a string of errors and double faulted for the loss.
With Snyder serving at 30-all, he put away a shot after the longest
rally of the day. Morton, who is bound for UC Irvine, then deceived with
a near-perfect drop shot on match point.
“This was just a great win,” Mang said. “We took care of one of the
top (singles) players in the nation (Sheng) and one of the best in
Southern California (Lieu).”
The Sea Kings entered the final match brimming with confidence as
Morton playfully teased Sheng while warming up.
Morton told Sheng: “Even if you play as well as you did then (in the
Easter Bowl), you’ll be lucky to beat us today.”
Sheng teamed with K.C. Corkery in the Easter Bowl and defeated Morton,
who was paired with Derrick Bower. Sheng enjoyed a hot streak and took
care of Morton’s team as well as the pairing of Snyder and Peter Farkas.
Morton and Snyder reached the finals with a 6-4, 6-1 victory over
Damien’s Emil and Thomas Novack, in the morning. The Novacks managed to
break Morton’s serve, but that was about the only bright spot for the
Spartans, Mang said.
Morton and Snyder have suffered just one loss this season as they
conclude their doubles duty. They fell to Peninsula’s Teige Sullivan and
Jeff Kazarian in the doubles final of the Ojai Valley Tennis Tournament.
They are expected to return to singles when the Sea Kings battle
Brentwood in the CIF Division V team championship match Wednesday at
11:30 a.m. at the Claremont Club.
Snyder, who won his first CIF title, is a combined 48-1 in singles and doubles matches this year.
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