Dent sets sights on Olympic bronze
- Share via
Taylor Dent, a former Corona del Mar High tennis standout, will hope
to win a bronze medal in the men’s singles competition at the Olympic
Games in Athens, Greece, after falling to Chilean Nicolas Massu, 7-6,
6-1, in a semifinal.
Dent, ranked 59th on the Association of Tennis Professionals Tour,
faced Fernando Gonzalez of Chile, who upset U.S. Open champion Andy
Roddick in the third round, late Friday night.
Massu and Dent battled through a 69-minute first set, where each
held serve until the tiebreak.
Massu, the 10th seed, seemed to gain momentum after taking the
tiebreak, claiming five straight games before Dent got on the
scoreboard.
Dent took one more game before Massu served out for the victory,
quashing the chances of an all-American final after the United
States’ Mardy Fish downed Gonzalez, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.
Fish will hand the U.S. its 32nd medal in Olympic tennis, while
Dent has the chance to claim his country’s 33rd.
* In other Olympic action:
Newport Harbor High alum Aaron Peirsol, who has already won two
golds -- in the men’s 100- and 200-meter backstroke races -- in these
Games, was put in position to collect his third after the U.S. 400
medley relay team, the defending Olympic champion and world record
holder, posted the fastest time in Friday’s preliminaries.
Peirsol did not compete in the preliminary but is expected to
handle the backstroke leg in today’s final for Team USA, which topped
all qualifiers with a time of 3 minutes, 35.10 seconds in the second
of two qualifying heats.
In an upset, the Australian team failed to qualify, finishing
ninth in 3:39.14.
Germany clocked a 3:36.65 to post the second-fastest qualifying
time while Great Britain was third among qualifiers (3:36.94).
Japan, Hungary, France, Russia and Ukraine will round out the
eight-team final, scheduled for 9 a.m. Pacific time.
Orange Coast College student and Newport Beach resident Jennifer
Parilla, the only American in the women’s trampoline competition,
finished 14th, failing to make it out of the qualifying round after
tumbling out of bounds during her second routine.
On the eighth of a possible 10 skills, a twisting somersault 15
feet in the air, Parilla, who finished ninth in the 2000 Games in
Sydney, Australia, got off-center and landed at the very edge of the
canvas. She bounced up, but had nowhere to go but onto the cushion
behind the trampoline, automatically ending her routine.
Parilla said she was thrown out of her rhythm when her name was
announced earlier than she expected before the second qualifying
routine.
Parilla had been ninth after the compulsories, still in position
to qualify for the final.
German Anna Dogonadze took the gold while 2000 gold medalist Irina
Karavaeva of Russia also failed to advance after a fall and placed
15th.
UC Irvine product Lanee Butler-Beashel finished 14th in the
women’s windsurfing race but improved her standing to 17th place
overall with 69 points. The women have five more races in an 11-race
series.
Newport Beach resident Peter Wells, a former UCI standout, dropped
one position to 25th in the men’s windsurfing competition following
his two races Friday. He has earned 103 points through six races with
five remaining.
Both Butler-Beashel and Wells will continue their competitions
today while locals in women’s beach volleyball and men’s water polo
take to the stage.
Former Newport Harbor standout Misty May, Dent’s cousin, and
partner Kerri Walsh, will attempt to add to their unbeaten record in
the women’s beach volleyball competition when they face Jia Tian and
Fei Wang from China at 10 a.m. Pacific time today in the round of 16.
The U.S. men’s water polo team (2-1), which features five former
UCI players, faces Russia at 12:15 p.m. Pacific time today.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.