Daily Pilot Athletes of the Week, Leslie Damion and Kristen
Griffith: Together again
Barry Faulkner
Unbeaten but still unheralded, Corona del Mar High doubles partners
Leslie Damion and Kristen Griffith didn’t let a low profile subdue high
expectations heading into last week’s Pacific Coast League girls tennis
tournament.
Despite a No. 5 seeding, obtained due to their limited partnership during
the PCL regular season, they swept all four matches to earn the league
doubles title.
“They didn’t get the seeding they deserved,” said CdM Coach Andy Stewart,
who estimated the duo played no more than two league matches together.
“We definitely thought we were the best team in the tournament,” Damion
said. “(Stewart) explained to us why we were seeded so low, and we just
said ‘OK, whatever.’ We used it as motivation to prove them wrong. We
wanted to prove we were better than the No. 5 seed.”
Damion, a sophomore, and Griffith, a junior, did just that. They swept a
first-round foe from Costa Mesa, then dispatched teammates Nicole Charney
and Ashley Jacobson, 6-0, 6-3, in the quarterfinals.
The next day, they handled top-seeded Laguna Beach tandem Danielle
Schulman and Rory Steinle, 6-1, 6-2, before meeting up with
seventh-seeded teammates Laura Claster and Katie Tenerelli for the title.
Claster and Tenerelli kept things close, before falling, 6-4, in the
first set. Then, Damion and Griffith turned up the heat and closed them
out, 6-0.
“It was no fun to take out our teammates,” Damion said of the title
match.
Stewart took Damion and Griffith out of their routine of playing together
-- which they did all of last season -- but it didn’t seem to hinder
their cohesiveness last week.
“They seem to know each other’s games, since they played together last
year,” said Stewart, in his first season coaching the Sea Kings. “They do
a lot of things well, they move together at the net and they like each
other.”
Both players said they were happy to perform in whatever roles Stewart
asked during the regular season. But both were intent on pairing up, once
again, for the postseason.
“(Damion) was the only person I played with last year and the only person
I wanted to play with this year,” Griffith said. “We have this thing
where we can play well together. She’s a little better than I am, but
we’re the same kind of players.”
Damion agreed.
“(Griffith) has a very consistent serve and ground strokes and we both
like to volley,” Damion said. “We do the basics well. She keeps the ball
alive and I like to end points.”
Their on-court chemistry also stems from contrasting personalities,
according to Stewart.
“Kristen is very aggressive and when she gets upset, Leslie calms her
down.”
Damion said Griffith’s more blatant show of emotion can be inspiring.
“Kristen gets very feisty,” Damion said. “She usually keeps me
motivated.”
Said Griffith: “I might be a little more competitive than she is. I
always try to pump her up and not let her get down. And she’s a calming
influence on me.”
Though such exchanges could trigger conflict, Damion said their mutual
respect always helps keep things in context.
“Because we can talk to each other, I can tell her things and not hurt
her feelings,” Damion said.
Both are looking forward to helping the Sea Kings progress as far as
possible in the CIF Southern Section Division I playoffs. But when the
team’s run comes to an end, they’ll get a crack at showing what they can
do in the CIF individual tournament, which begins Nov. 20.
“If we’re both playing well, I think we can do well,” Damion said.
“(The CIF individuals) gives us another chance to do well,” Griffith
said.
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