Sea Kings stunned in quarters
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Steve Virgen
If ever the Corona del Mar High boys tennis team loses, it is usually
an upset and it usually causes the Sea Kings to analyze what went
wrong.
Visiting Loyola of Los Angeles shocked Corona del Mar, the CIF
Southern Section Division I defending champion, with an 11-7 victory
in the CIF Division I quarterfinals Tuesday.
The top-seeded Sea Kings lost seven doubles sets, including four
tightly contested ones, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 and 7-5. Sea King Coach Tim
Mang said Corona del Mar (20-2) failed in coming up with the key
shots in the close sets.
But what if Carsten Ball was here?
“It definitely would have been a different match,” Mang said.
Wesley Miller, the Sea Kings’ No. 1 singles player who swept his
sets, 6-1, 6-0, 6-2, did not put it as mildly.
“We would have won,” Miller said. “We’re frustrated about losing.
I expect to not lose again in high school. Our team will beat them
next year.”
Ball, the Sea Kings’ top singles player, did not compete for the
Sea Kings Tuesday. He was coming home from El Paso, Texas, where he
won the United States Tennis Association national opens. He overcame
a 3-1 deficit in the first set and defeated Conor Pollock, 7-5, 6-2,
in the title match, which ended about 1:15 p.m. mountain time
Tuesday.
Ball, who is ranked 35th in the national boys 18s singles, chose
to play in the USTA event because it would boost his standing in the
national poll, which is generally used by college recruiters.
Ball and his father, Syd, traveled back home by car after the
championship final. Ball did not know of the Sea Kings loss until
reached by cellular phone.
“I’m disappointed,” said Ball, who was in Tucson, Ariz., at about
6:30 p.m. “I wish I could have been there. I wish I could have helped
somehow. But I was in El Paso. I can’t be in two places at once. I
thought the guys could have held their own ... I needed El Paso for
my ranking nationally. It helped a lot to win it. I wanted to win
CIF, too. But it’s a give-or-take [situation].”
Mang had been hoping to have Ball in the quarterfinal match. He
shuffled his lineup Monday, expecting Ball would still be playing in
El Paso Tuesday. He was not pleased with the situation.
“There’s a lot of frustration there, but decisions were made,”
Mang said. “It would have been a close match either way. I’m sure
[Ball] would have loved to be here.”
Ball would have most likely won three sets, just as Miller did,
Mang said. Under that scenario, the final score would have been, CdM
10, Loyola 8.
“It would have been a lot closer [if Ball played],” Loyola Coach
Mike Denison said. “We were aware he was in Texas. If he showed up we
were ready to try our hardest. If he didn’t show up we were ready to
take advantage of the situation.”
After the first round of sets, the Cubs (19-3) won all three
points in doubles and one in singles to take a 7-5 lead, putting
pressure on the Sea Kings. Miller and junior Spencer Reitz won in
singles in the third round. That meant, Corona del Mar needed to
sweep in doubles in the final round to win the match, but it lost all
three, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4.
The Sea Kings had a chance to win with the help of what was
thought to be a momentum-changing victory by Jonathan Kroopf and Nick
Gingold. The CdM duo defeated Will Schigian and Rey Alvarez, 7-6
(8-6), to close out the second round.
Kroopf and Gingold were up, 5-4, but Schigian and Alvarez fought
off four match points. The Loyola tandem later forced a tiebreaker
and went up, 5-1, but the Sea Kings rallied to win it. Alex Nguyen
and Sean Pham also won one doubles set for CdM.
*--*
CIF Division I
Quarterfinals
Loyola 11, Corona del Mar 7
Singles -- Miller (CdM) def. Ross, 6-1, def. Ecung, 6-0, def. Curtius, 6-2; Reitz (CdM) lost, 3-6, won, 7-5, 6-0; Tat (CdM) lost, 0-6, 0-6, 2-6. Doubles -- Kroopf-Gingold (CdM) lost to Ortiz-Niedermeyer, 4-6, lost to Del Moral-King, 4-6, def.
Schigian-Alvarez, 7-6 (8-6); Roberts-Caughren (CdM) lost, 3-6, 0-6, 3-6; Nguyen-Pham (CdM) lost, 4-6, 5-7, won, 6-3.
*--*
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