Oh so close.
Joseph Boo
CLAREMONT - Newport Harbor High’s girls tennis team fought
valiantly and almost pulled the match out in a CIF Division I final full
of heroics.
After Newport Harbor dropped all nine doubles sets in September’s meeting
in an 11-7 loss to Peninsula, seniors Kristen Case and Jenny Meyer swept
all three of their sets to almost carry the Sailors to the CIF title. But
Newport just fell short, 10-8, on Monday morning at the Claremont Club.
This is Peninsula’s ninth championship in 10 years and the third time it
beat the Sailors in the finals, the last time in 1996.
“They played very well,” Newport Harbor Coach Fletcher Olson said about
Case and Meyer. “Coming in, they knew they had to win two out of three
sets. And they ended up sweeping.”
It was a close match where Division I’s top ranked Peninsula (25-0) could
not put the Sailors, 19-2 and No. 2 in Division I, away. Unlike the
previous match in September, when Peninsula won 11-7, Newport singles
player and Peninsula’s doubles team did not dominate against each other.
Case and Meyer defeated Caitlin Blashaw and Christie Tjong, 6-3, in the
first round that closed Peninsula’s lead to 4-2 in the match. They kept
the Panthers off-balanced throughout the match with strong serves and
expertly mixed in net volleys and lobs.
“Jenny and I played very well,” Case said. “We knew it was our last
match. For our team to have a chance, we had to win our last three
(sets).”
That match followed an upset from Peninsula’s Colby Comstock, who took
advantage of Natalie Braverman’s slow start to win, 6-4. Comstock took a
quick 2-0 lead before Braverman, a sophomore who’s ranked in the top five
nationally in her age group, stormed back with three points in a row.
But Comstock chased down Braverman’s missiles, just hitting the ball in
play, extending the rallies, and surviving at the end.
“That was a major upset with Colby beating Braverman,” Peninsula Coach
Tom Cox said. “That offset us losing the doubles match.”
Despite the upset loss, there was no goat’s tag for Braverman. Had she
won, 6-0, the match would eventually have ended 9-9 with Penisula winning
on games, 75-71.
Braverman came back in her next set and crushed Shilpa Joshi, 6-1, and
Chelsea Godbey put away Jeannine Liang. Case and Meyer won their second
set to pull Newport to within one. That meant Adams had a chance to tie
the match with a win over Comstock.
With Adams up, 3-1, Comstock landed awkwardly while chasing a shot and
brought forth speculation that she might retire.
But Comstock put on an elastic support on her knee, came back, and won
three consecutive points to go up, 4-3.
“It was just a dull pain,” Comstock said. “It’s not too serious. But it’s
the last match, and I was going to play, no matter what.
“I moved a little slower, and I was lucky my shots landed in.”
After being flustered a little, Adams regrouped and took advantage of
Comstock with powerful shots down the line. Adams came back to take a 5-4
lead, and ultimately won, 7-5.
“Colby got right out there and played the way she always played,” Adams
said. “I tried to make her run around and take advantage.”
While Adams and Comstock were still playing, Peninsula captured two
doubles points by identical scores of 6-1. With Peninsula leading by 12
in games at that point, Newport had to win each set by large margins, or
the match outright.
The Sailors got two big wins to keep pace. Braverman notched another 6-1
win in her final set. Case and Meyer won their third set, 6-2, and the
match was tied, 8-8, with a three-point margin separating the two.
The crucial set was Godbey and Comstock. With Comstock slowed by the
injury, a Godbey win was definitely possible and it would’ve given
Newport control of the match.
Instead, Comstock came through with the best performance of the day.
Keeping the ball in play with almost every swing, she easily won, 6-0, to
clinch the championship for Peninsula.
“I had a lot of confidence going into that set,” Comstock said. “My
teammates tried to tell me it wouldn’t clinch the match, but I figured it
out.”
“That was two 6-0 defeats we would have had if she retired,” Cox said.
“We would have been down in sets and games. That would have been the
match.”
Instead, Comstock stayed in and won the match, nullifying a huge effort
from the Sailors.
“I’m very proud,” Olson said. “We did a great job and left everything on
the court. It’s sad for our seniors not to win, but we gave Peninsula a
run.”
“We played with heart,” Case said. “We all did. We came so close. It
could have gone either way.”
This match also marks the end of an impressive career for Newport
Harbor’s seniors. Seven of them, Adams, Case, Godbey, Amanda Collopy,
Allison Schneider, Sarah Barker and Erica Buder came in as one of the
most heralded freshmen class in tennis. Meyer, another senior,
transferred from Corona del Mar in her sophomore year.
“It’s just been incredible,” Godbey said about her four years on the
team. “We were the closest team around. We did everything together. We’ll
never have an experience like this again.”
CIF DIVISION I CHAMPIONSHIP
(at Claremont Club)
Peninsula 10, Newport Harbor 8
Singles: Braverman (NH) lost to Comstock, 4-6; def. Liang, 6-1; def.
Joshi, 6-1; Adams (NH) won, 7-5, 6-2, lost, 4-6; Godbey (NH) lost, 0-6,
won, 6-3, lost, 3-6.
Doubles: Case-Meyer (NH) def. Blashaw-Tjong, 6-3; def. Ursich-Pagliano,
6-2; def. LeBrucherie-Setian, 6-4; Collopy-Hawkins (NH) lost, 2-6, 2-6,
1-6; Barker-Schneider (NH) lost, 1-6, 2-6, 1-6.
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