Ball tops rival for 16s title
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Barry Faulkner
After nearly two dozen meetings, spanning the last six years, Carsten
Ball’s rivalry with Shan Sondhu has become more than competitive.
It’s personal.
So it was with extra elation that Ball, who will be a junior at
Corona del Mar High next fall, savored his 5-7, 7-5, 6-3 victory over
the Laguna Niguel resident in the boys 16s singles final of the 101st
annual Southern California Tennis Association junior sectional
championships Sunday at Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club.
“This is the best,” said Ball, the No. 6 seed, who staved off two
match points in the second set to win his first sectionals crown.
“This is my biggest win.”
Ball, who helped CdM post an unbeaten season that included the
2003 CIF Southern Section Division I team title, said the victory
also helped cut into Sondhu’s advantage in head-to-head meetings,
which he estimated at 20.
“Shan and I have a big history and he has been on top,” Ball said.
“But all the stuff he has done over the years to a lot of people, may
be catching up to him.”
Ball said Sondhu, who attends Aliso Niguel High, has earned a
reputation for cutting corners during competition.
“Cheating, anything he can do to win,” was how Ball put it, when
pressed for specifics. “Luckily, today I had a line judge [one match
referee who presided from an elevated chair at one side of the net].
She overruled [Sondhu] twice on line calls early in the match and he
stopped [calling balls out] after that.”
Ball appeared to need more than luck to overcome Sondhu’s strong
serve and ground strokes, especially after Sondhu erased a 4-1
first-set deficit to take control of the match.
Sondhu, the No. 5 seed, won the final five games of the first set,
prompting increasing frustration from Ball, who finally lost a point
for racquet abuse by hurling it into the fence after dropping set
point.
Ball’s frustration was typified by a sequence in the ninth game of
the opening set. Leading, 5-3, Ball was up, 30-15, and stationed at
the net for what appeared to be an easy overhead putaway. But Ball
hit the shot wide, prompting a groan from Ball’s supporters in the
crowd and repeated shouts of regret from Ball on the court.
Seemingly still miffed by his missed overhead, Ball double faulted
and made two additional errors to allow Sondhu to pull within 5-4.
Ball rallied for a 2-1 second-set lead, but Sondhu, relying on
Ball miscues and his own powerful serve, won three straight games.
Sondhu smashed two aces and another service winner during the
three-game surge.
Ball closed within 4-3, but Sondhu won the next game, which
featured another missed overhead by Ball and a Ball forehand that
kicked off the tape and veered sharply outside the sideline on game
point.
“I think it shook me out of my rhythm,” Ball said of the critical
errors.
A Ball backhand drop volley averted the first match point in the
ninth game, when a deep approach shot forced Sondhu to hit wide on
the second match point. Ironically, Ball won the game on a difficult
overhead from about 10 feet inside his own baseline.
The overhead was the start of nine straight points for Ball. With
renewed momentum, he proceeded to win the second set, as well as the
first game of the deciding third set.
“I felt [the momentum change],” Ball said of his second-set surge.
“All my strokes were starting to fall into place and I thought he was
getting tired. I knew if I just kept playing hard, it would pay off
in the end.”
Ball broke serve to earn a 3-1 lead, as Sondhu appeared to be
stretching to work out a lower-back problem and also began limping
slightly and massaging his left thigh.
Sondhu, however, remained effective, claiming the fifth game, then
closing again to within 4-3 as Ball double faulted on game point.
After a service winner and an ace put Sondhu ahead in the eighth
game, however, he self-destructed, dropping the final two games and
the match.
“We’ve been playing against each other since the 10s,” Ball said.
“I guess today was my day.”
Ball’s victory Sunday capped a five-match run to the title. He
defeated Trevor Dobson of Redondo Beach, 7-5, 6-2, in the first
round, then dispatched Alex Krueger-Wyman of Pasadena, 6-1, 6-0.
In the quarterfinals, he topped Stefan Hardy of Santa Maria, 6-4,
6-2, before defeating Mike Gurman of Los Angeles, 6-2, 6-4, in
Saturday’s semifinals.
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