Dent continues steady climb up ATP ladder
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BRYCE ALDERTON
The Australian Open couldn’t have come at a better time for former
Corona del Mar High standout and current tennis professional Taylor
Dent.
The 23-year-old has started 2005 off in torrid fashion, reaching
the final of the Australian men’s hardcourt championships in
Adelaide, Australia, Jan. 8, which shot him to fifth place in the
current Association of Tennis Professionals points race.
Dent, off to a 4-1 start this year, earned 24 points for his
performance in Adelaide, which included a straight-set victory over
top-seeded Lleyton Hewitt in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open
tuneup.
The year’s first Grand Slam kicks off today in Melbourne,
Australia, with Dent and defending champion Roger Federer, who won
the Australian Open, Wimbledon and U.S. Open last year, on the same
side of the draw.
Dent comes off an impressive 2004 even though he didn’t win any
singles tournaments. He still was victorious in 32 matches, the most
since turning pro in 1998, and reached the bronze medal match at the
Olympics.
The 1996 CIF Southern Section singles champion has four career
professional titles to his credit, the last coming in 2003.
But the list could swell judging by his fast start this season.
His father, Phil Dent, a former Australian Open finalist and top
20 player, has served as both coach and, now, more so a fan to his
son, since the younger Dent picked up a racket at age 10.
“He’s doing very well,” Phil Dent said of his son. “His game has
taken awhile to mature and people are overanxious about him doing
better, but he is one of the only guys in the world who plays that
way.”
“That way” is a serve-and-volley game, in stark contrast to the
litany of players pounding ground strokes from the baseline.
“There’s a few guys like [Max] Myrni and [Greg] Rusedski, but
[Taylor Dent] is the last of an honorable breed,” Phil Dent said. “He
has had to learn more difficult shots than most guys. For every
900,000 forehands, he has had to learn to hit half volleys, short
angles and a lot more stuff. He has put a lot more [effort] into it
and those things take awhile to learn.”
That could be the reason why more players shy away from the
serve-and-volley style, but not Taylor Dent.
“I understand how difficult the [serve-and-volley] game is,”
Taylor Dent told reporters. “[Tournament officials] are slowing down
the courts, so the players have longer rallies, the balls are getting
heavier and the players just return and pass so well. It’s so
difficult to play this kind of game. I guess that’s why were seeing
so much less of it.”
Phil Dent, contacted last weekend before flying to Australia, said
he speaks with Taylor Dent frequently and watches as many matches as
he can either in person or on television.
But he prefers to let his son handle and chart his own progress.
“It’s better to be a father than a coach all the time,” Phil Dent
said.
Former ATP pro Francisco Montoya has traveled with Taylor Dent
since last March.
Taylor Dent reached the third round of last year’s Australian Open
and, if he prevails in his first two matches, four-time winner Andre
Agassi could await in the third round.
A potential victory there would add to Taylor Dent’s already
burgeoning status.
*
Newport Beach Tennis Club and the Costa Mesa Tennis Center will
each host qualifying events in men’s and women’s amateur doubles.
Players ages 19 and older will compete for berths into the club
championships during the 30th Pacific Life Open at the Indian Wells
Tennis Garden in Indian Wells, Calif., March 7-20.
Costa Mesa Tennis Center will host qualifying Jan. 29-30 while
Newport Beach Tennis Club welcomes players Feb. 5-6.
The cost is $50 per person or $100 per team.
Men’s and women’s teams whose individual ratings are no more than
4.0 will play in a best-of-three-set format with one duo from each
division advancing to the final weekend.
Event winners will receive invitations for the club championships
and a dinner, tournament credentials, tickets to each session of the
pro event March 18-20 and one complimentary hotel room for the
evenings of March 18-19.
All winners will be honored on stadium court following the men’s
singles final on March 20.
The tournament features 250 of the top-ranked men’s and women’s
players in the world.
For information or to enter, visit pacificlifeopen.com, call
Newport Beach Tennis Club at (949) 644-0050, Costa Mesa Tennis Center
at (714) 557-0211, or contact Tom Fey at (760) 200-8448.
All proceeds benefit the Prostate Cancer Foundation.
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