Tennis: Big Mac tops Noah
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Sitting alone on a stage in front of dozens of fans
in a so-called press conference, Yannick Noah didn’t want to discuss his
so-called collapse in the “so-called championship tie-breaker,” which is
the way the chair umpire announced it Friday night.
While Success Magazine Champions Tour promoters might have cringed at
the umpire’s “so-called” reference, they probably breathed a sigh of
relief when headliner John McEnroe came back from a 3-6 deficit in the
championship tie-breaker to beat Noah, 6-7 (6-8), 7-5, 10-8, in a
round-robin singles match at Newport Beach Tennis Club before an
estimated 1,750 fans.
“I was out of (the championship final Sunday) if I lost it,” said
McEnroe, referring to the tournament format that features the two
unbeaten players in the title match, which will be shown later on tape by
Fox Sports Net.
Noah, whose powerful serve was even quicker on the hardcourts at
Newport Beach, enjoyed triple match point, but missed a backhand passing
shot on the next point.
McEnroe followed with a winning volley on the run, then Noah missed
wide on a lob to deadlock the tie-breaker, 6-6.
Before McEnroe served at 7-7, he glared at boisterous fans in the
upper-deck bar area, then unleashed an ace.
Noah tied it back up, then McEnroe’s backhand cross-court winner gave
him another advantage.
“That passing shot at 8-8 was sweet,” McEnroe said.
Noah’s hitting error on a return of serve provided the clincher for
McEnroe.
“Why do you have to remind me?” Noah said, when asked by the lone
newspaper reporter about blowing triple match point. “I’m trying to
forget it with this beer here (in his hand).”
Noah reach triple match point with his 15th ace, but had no answer for
McEnroe’s rally.
Even though the crowd was less raucous Friday night than Thursday
night’s McEnroe-Scott Davis match, McEnroe had more angry stares at the
bar crowd in this one.
Another time, late in the second set, McEnroe tore into the chair
umpire with an expletive-laced tirade for making him wait on a serve
because a ball boy was moving in the back.
McEnroe, who plays Mats Wilander today in the final round-robin match
(following the 1 p.m. Pat Cash-Henri Leconte match), said he doesn’t mind
getting booed by fans. “It’s better than (fans) not doing anything at
all,” said McEnroe, interrupted by fans more than once Friday night, for
no apparent reason.
Once, a woman started laughing as McEnroe went into his serve. When he
stopped and looked up, a man in the audience blurted, “That’s my wife.”
McEnroe, who also said the hardcourts at Newport Beach are a little
faster than most surfaces, had plenty of fun with Noah, as well.
Noah, serving at 4-4 in the first set, lined up to serve left-handed,
then McEnroe rolled up his white shorts to the top of his thighs.
In the first set tie-breaker, Noah walked over to a linesman and tried
to brib him with cash as McEnroe prepared to serve.
“Every match is different with different types of conditions,” McEnroe
said, when asked why he seemed more animated Friday than Thursday.
McEnroe blew a 6-2 lead in the first set tie-breaker, or quadruple
match point.
Noah recorded his 10th ace to tie it, 6-6, then scored on a volley at
the net and cross-court forehand winner to climax the tie-breaker with
six unanswered points.
In a late match Friday, Pat Cash defeated John Lloyd, 2-6, 6-0, 12-10.
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