Snyder falls in CIF final
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Richard Dunn
There was morning magic in Garrett Snyder’s racket Saturday morning,
but once it turned to afternoon, the Corona del Mar High senior
standout played a different wand and came up short in the CIF
Southern Section singles championships Saturday at SeaCliff Country
Club.
After knocking off top-seeded Jeffrey Das of Troy in the
semifinals, 6-3, 6-4, Snyder squared off against Calabasas sophomore
Gary Sacks in the finals.
Sacks, relatively unknown heading into the CIF championships,
continued his breakthrough season with a 6-1, 6-3 victory over Snyder
in the title match.
“Maybe I left some of [my game in the semifinal match]. I didn’t
have the magic in this [final] match,” said the University of
Texas-bound Snyder, whose prep career includes one more match -- the
CIF Division I team championship against Santa Barbara on Wednesday
at the Claremont Club, where the Sea Kings will try to win their
third section title in five years.
“It’s been a great individual career, I guess. I’m looking forward
to Wednesday’s team championship match, and hopefully we’ll bring
home the bacon,” added Snyder, who won Southern Section doubles
titles the last two seasons.
Snyder, the No. 4 seed, eliminated Stanley Sarapanich from
Crescenta Valley, 6-4, 6-4, in the Round of 16, then swept
Brentwood’s Eric McKean, 6-3, 7-6 (3) in the quarterfinals.
Snyder, who lost to Das in a third-set tiebreaker at the Ojai
Valley Tennis Tournament, upset the top seed in the semifinals in
convincing fashion.
“It was a great semifinal,” CdM Coach Tim Mang said. “Garrett was
really into it. It was a fantastic win for him.”
In the championship match, Sacks used a powerful forehand to
dominate matters early, while Snyder was still trying to adjust to
his new opponent. “That’s another thing. I didn’t know what to
expect, because I had never played [Sacks] before,” Snyder said.
“Garrett didn’t have time to figure out a game plan,” Mang said.
Earlier this year, Sacks, 16, won the boys 18s national title at
the Muterspaw championships in Las Vegas, qualified for a pro
challenger tournament and finished third at the Easter Bowl in the
16s.
“My goal at the beginning of the year was to win CIF,” Sacks said.
“I knew it was a tournament I’d like to win, but as a sophomore you
can’t really expect that. There are a lot of good players who are in
it.”
Snyder, who was proud of his semifinal win, broke Sacks’ serve for
the first time at 2-5 in the second set, coming to the net on an
overhead smash for a 40-30 edge, then winning on Sacks’ long volley.
Sacks, however, broke Snyder in the next game, which included an
exchange of drop shots, to secure the championship.
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