Ex-Sailor excelling as Wave
Barry Faulkner
Indecision has proved invaluable for Pepperdine junior women’s tennis
standout Natalie Braverman, who has embraced her instinct to act at
the last instant.
Braverman’s penchant for procrastination has nothing to do with
waffling on things such as work ethic, or devotion to improving her
game. Rather, it is merely a preference for avoiding premeditation on
the court, a technique she has developed over years of trial and
error.
“I play horribly if I try to plan and strategize on the court,”
the former Newport Harbor High standout said. “If I think when I’m on
the court, it’s the worst thing I can do. I never decide until the
last minute where I’m going to hit the ball.”
However rushed, those decisions usually work out for Braverman,
who is in her second season at the Waves’ primary No. 1singles
player. As a sophomore, Braverman, who will turn 21 in about a month,
went 18-6 at No.1 singles, finished the season ranked No. 29 by the
Intercollegiate Tennis Assiciation and was the lone Wave to compete
in the NCAA championships.
This season, she has helped the Malibu-based school to a 6-4 start
and the No. 35 national ranking as a team.
Braverman is considered among the top two singles players in the
West Coast Conference. Her primary rival is University of San Diego
junior Emma Murphy, who recently defeated Braverman for the first
time in their five meetings.
“She was my first collegiate opponent ever,” Braverman said of
Murphy, a native of Ireland.
Braverman’s willingness to shoot from the hip on the baseline --
she uses two hands on both her forehand and backhand and is most
comfortable rocketing winners from distance -- also belies the
forethought that went into her collegiate success.
“I think my senior year in high school I made a big jump,”
Braverman said of a season in which she won the Sea View League
singles crown and polished a 43-5 career prep singles record that
also included a league crown as a sophomore. “I gained a lot of
confidence and I became more motivated and more serious. I decided I
really wanted to work to make my next four [college] years the best
they could be.”
Braverman, a former Prep All-American, said she has been somewhat
surprised at the level of success she has achieved at Pepperdine. But
she believes there is more good times ahead.
“I don’t think I’ve peaked yet,” she said. “I work really, really
hard and, since I don’t plan on playing after college, I want my last
year and a half to be special.”
Braverman said the biggest improvement since arriving in Malibu is
her ability to finish off matches.
She said one of her goals is to earn All-American status,
something afforded those who either finish in the top 20 of the
national rankings or reach the NCAA quarterfinals.
A business administration major who will intern this summer for
Leigh Steinberg’s Newport Beach sports management company, Braverman
is on schedule to graduate in May of 2006. She said she would like to
somehow combine sports and business into a career.
She said she enjoys the picturesque Pepperdine campus and believes
her athletic experience has prepared her well to succeed after
graduation.
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