Tennis: CdM loaded again
Richard Dunn
CORONA DEL MAR - As defending CIF Southern Section Division I boys
tennis champions, Corona del Mar High’s Sea Kings realize everyone will
be aiming at them this season.
And it won’t just be the teams in their new Pacific Coast League, or
other top contenders in CIF Division I, pointing rackets at them.
This year, with the launching of the CdMHS-Pavilions National High School
All-American Team Invitational, hosted by CdM March 16-18, some of the
best programs in the nation will put a target on the back of the Sea
Kings.
CdM, which features three nationally ranked players and returns a total
of five from last year’s title team, has added two top players -- a
transfer from Texas and an exchange student from Australia.
Of the three players ranked among the nation’s best in the boys 16s, one
did not play for Coach Tim Mang’s Sea Kings in 1999, when they finished
22-1 and captured the school’s eighth CIF team championship in the sport
(but the first in 16 years).
If the proverb about a “strong team not rebuilding but reloading” rings a
bell, it’s because the 2000 version of the Sea Kings appears as solid as
ever with juniors Brian Morton, Randy Myers, Peter Kulmaticki, Michael
Bean and Robert Kennedy, and sophomore sensation Cameron Ball.
Add junior Hunter Jack to the mix -- a player ranked 75th nationally and
a former tennis academy student -- and Corona del Mar could rival last
year’s star-studded lineup.
“That’s what they’re shooting for,” Mang said. “They’re going to see how
close they can come to last year’s team, and it’s going to be tough,
because last year’s team had so much depth.”
Led by seniors Parker Collins (USC), Christian Jensen (USC) and Sam
Shahmardi, CdM finished the ’99 season ranked No. 2 in the nation,
according to the USA Today.
Corona del Mar was second in the Tournament of Champions at Overland
Park, Mo., which was won by Cardinal Gibbons of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The
team invitational in three weeks, directed by Mang and headquartered at
Palisades Tennis Club, will replace the now-defunct Tournament of
Champions on the national landscape.
“This isn’t your average prep event, and it’s the beginning of something
giant,” said Mang, executive director of the National High School Tennis
All-American Foundation, a nonprofit corporation -- created by Mang --
that will operate the event.
While the Pavilions National High School All-American Team Invitational
will provide plenty of early-season excitement and possibly decide this
year’s mythical national champion, CdM will also have its hands full in
Pacific Coast League action with University.
“Our new league will be really interesting,” said Mang, whose team
competed in the Sea View League for several years.
Morton, ranked 72nd nationally in the 16s, and Ball, ranked 140th and
playing a level above his age, are expected to be CdM’s top two singles
players, while Jack could play third singles, depending on how quickly he
recovers from a broken collarbone suffered during an early-January
snowboarding accident.
Last year, Morton played mostly doubles, compiling a 62-3 record.
“Brian and Cameron had fantastic summers in open tournament play,” Mang
said. “And, really great news with Brian is that he beat the No. 1 kid
from Peninsula (Goh Fukugaki) and also beat the No. 1-seeded player in
the 18s in Southern California (Fallbrook’s Ryan Redondo at the Fullerton
Open Tournament).”
Myers and Kulmaticki are two of Mang’s best doubles players, while
Kennedy, the exchange student from Australia, and Bean, a transfer from
Saint Stephen’s Academy in Texas, give Mang a lot of room for shuffling.
Vying for spots on the third doubles team are juniors Justin Ning, Shaan
Wadhwa, Ryan Stockwell, Landon Everson, senior Jay Reed and freshman Josh
Stuart.
“Our first and second doubles can be very strong, and I can’t see many
teams breaking them in Orange County right now,” Mang said. “And,
hopefully, our third doubles will be ready by the time the big time rolls
around.”
Last year, CdM knocked off Peninsula, 11-7, on the road at the Jack
Kramer Club in Rolling Hills in the CIF Division I semifinals, avenging
the Sea Kings’ earlier nonleague loss to the Panthers in games, 88-83,
after a 9-9 tie.
CdM faced Sea View rival Woodbridge in the Division I final and served up
a 12-6 hammering at the Palisades Club.
But the big test will come early this season for the Sea Kings, beginning
in the National High School All-American Team Invitational. Peninsula
will be seeded first, while the Sea Kings will be seeded second.
The event is sanctioned by the National High School Tennis All-American
Foundation and highlight many of the nation’s top teams, according to the
USA Today’s final 1999 rankings. The field includes several private
schools and teams from Arizona, Florida, Virginia, New York, Oregon,
Colorado and Connecticut, as well as California.
The event, which kicks off with opening ceremonies March 16, will be
played at several clubs in the area, with Palisades hosting the March 18
title match.
Proceeds from the tournament go toward recognizing high school tennis
All-Americans via the National High School Tennis All-American
Foundation.
Tickets are available through ETM at Vons and Pavilions stores. Call
(888) ETM-TIXS or purchase tickets online at www.etm.com.
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