Tennis: Pro circuit can be rude awakening
Richard Dunn
The competition in tennis, like any sport, will determine when or
if you should turn professional.
As some local players get ready to walk the vicious plank of the pro
satellite circuits in the summer of 2000, with the grueling travel and
tough schedules, other area-bred players continue to strive for stardom.
Brandis Braverman, 20, and Alexandra McGoodwin, 15, are playing on the
women’s challenger and satellite tours, while Taylor Dent, 19, is making
strides on the men’s circuit. All three players are from Newport Beach.
McGoodwin, who has yet to officially turn pro, has decided to play
strictly International Tennis Federation events, while trying to become
one of the world’s top juniors.
“Two years from now, she’ll know where she’s at -- whether she’s one
of the top juniors in the world, or ‘Let me go to college,”’ said
McGoodwin’s longtime mentor and former coach, Rance Brown of the Newport
Beach Marriott Hotel and Tennis Club, where the teen phenom grew up
playing.
McGoodwin, who lives and trains at a tennis academy in Florida,
recently advanced to the second round of the Italian Open Juniors, an ITF
event in which McGoodwin faced opponents up to three years her elder.
For aspiring pros, playing ITF events -- especially at McGoodwin’s age
-- is a path better suited for players with lofty ambitions of making the
big time, according to Newport Beach Marriott Director of Tennis Robyn
Ray.
“I don’t think high school tennis and college tennis is the best
system to introduce players to the next level,” said Ray, who played
briefly on the men’s tour in the early 1970s. “International play is
where the Europeans get exposed to this tournament lifestyle for players
16, 17 and 18. For many of our (Newport-Mesa players), it’s a rude
awakening on the pro circuit.”
When the NCAA individual championships end, Stanford senior sensation
Geoff Abrams (Newport Harbor High) will give the pro tour a shot. The key
words here are tour and shot. But at least Abrams has an edge, having
played ITF events throughout his junior career.
“Some (top juniors) don’t see the value of playing intercollegiate
tennis, as opposed to, ‘Get out on the circuit now,’ because it takes a
couple of years to get used to that,” Ray said. “It’s not good or bad.
It’s just the way it is ... all of the sudden, you’re all alone. Maybe
someday you can afford to have your own coach travel with you, but for
starters, you’ve got to go out there all alone.”
Former Corona del Mar High and UCLA standout Keri Phebus quit the
women’s pro challenger and satellite circuits after two years because she
detested the lonely, globe-trotting lifestyle.
“What Keri did was tough, doing it on her own,” Ray said. “You need
that support system.”
Brown, the UCLA women’s assistant tennis coach who helped launch
McGoodwin’s career at the Marriott, was named the Intercollegiate Tennis
Association’s National Assistant Coach of the Year.
Although he’s a hot commodity, Brown said he’s happy at UCLA under
Stella Sampras and doesn’t intend to seek a head coaching job somewhere.
Phebus has been named the boys and girls tennis coach at new Sage Hill
High School in Newport Beach.
Phebus, the 1995 NCAA women’s singles and doubles champion for UCLA,
has been working as an instructor since retiring from pro tennis in
October 1998.
Jon Flagg, teaching pro at Lido Isle, recently won the Anaheim Hills
Tennis Tournament, beating Chris Ganz in the finals, 7-6, 6-2.
Flagg finished the 1999 campaign ranked No. 1 in Southern California
in the men’s 30s singles.
At a recent high school boys tennis match, in which host Corona del
Mar defeated Dana Hills, 13-5, in the CIF Southern Section Division I
quarterfinals, there was a special Davis Cup feel in the audience.
Syd Ball, former Australian Davis Cup member, and Sashi Menon, a
longtime Davis Cup great for India, had sons playing on opposing teams:
Cameron Ball for CdM, Sumil Menon for Dana Hills. Both are sophomores.
Syd Ball and Sashi Menon faced each other in Davis Cup doubles in the
1970s.
Newport Harbor High senior tennis standouts Audra Adams, University of
Mississippi-bound, and Kristen Case, headed for Cal, were among the
honorees Thursday morning at the 39th annual Athletic Awards Breakfast
hosted by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce at the Sutton Place
Hotel.
Nadia Vaughan of Corona del Mar made it three Back Bay girl tennis
players to be recognized. Vaughan is headed for Southern Methodist.
Adams and her mother, Dorsey, are the nation’s top-ranked
mother-daughter team.
Leslie Damion and her mother, Patricia, of Corona del Mar, could take
over as the nation’s No. 1 team after Audra Adams goes away to school.
The Adamses defeated the Damions last fall in the finals of the USTA
National Mother-Daughter Hardcourt Championships in Texas. It was the
third USTA gold ball for the Adamses.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.