Double your pleasure
Rick Devereux
The style of play in tennis has evolved from serve and volley to more
baseline play. Technology in the rackets, athleticism of the
participants and the history of star players all factor in to the
modern game.
“All the guys from my generation that are 50 at this point and
time, we were brought up to be serve-and-volleyers,” War by the Shore
tournament director Bob Ogle said. “And then Bjorn Borg came along
and people started realizing, ‘Man, you can win from the baseline.’ I
think technology is a major part of it, but the overall conditioning
and fitness of the kids has played a huge part of it, too.”
Most participants in the 15th annual Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club
junior tennis tournament also hold the racket in a manner that is
more suited for ground shots than volleys.
“When you get down in a western grip, it allows a person to hit
the ball with more energy because they are putting more top spin on
the ball,” Ogle said. “They can hit it harder, keep the ball in play,
but, unfortunately you don’t see as many serve-and-volleyers in this
day and age because that type of grip doesn’t lend itself well with
going to the net.”
Along with the western grip, pros also typically teach the eastern
and continental grips for the three basic approaches to hitting.
Even in doubles, where volleys are traditionally the name of the
game, the modern matches resemble singles play with cross-court shots
becoming the norm and a player at the net waiting for an opportunity
to smash a ball. But tennis purists need not worry, because there are
some up-and-coming players that utilize and even prefer the way
doubles matches are played.
“I really like doubles because you get to serve and volley,” said
Cierra Gaytan-Leach from Corona del Mar. “I like to play at the net.”
Gaytan-Leach, 12, and Corona del Mar High sophomore-to-be Jillian
Braverman advanced to Thursday’s girls 18s doubles semifinals before
being eliminated by Bianca and Carissa Aboubakare, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4.
Gaytan-Leach and Braverman also excel in singles. Gaytan-Leach
will play today at 12:30 p.m. in the girls 14s singles final after
beating Chun Wing Sher, 6-2, 6-1, Thursday. Braverman will play at
the 2 p.m. girls 18s singles final following her, 6-1, 6-3, victory
over recent Newport Harbor High graduate, Diana Khoury.
“I really wanted to be in the 18s doubles and singles finals,”
Braverman said. “I’m not disappointed at all, but I would have liked
to play against Bonnie [Adams] and Vanessa [Dunlap] in the doubles
finals.”
The Newport duo of Adams-Dunlap advanced to the finals after a
hard-fought semifinal match against Khoury and Newport Beach’s
Jamison Steele, 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (3).
Melissa Matsuoka from Newport Beach and Hayley Miller from Laguna
Beach advanced to the girls 12s doubles final by beating the Tustin
tandem of Megan Heneghan and Kristen Hibbs, 6-3, 6-3. Matsuoka-Miller
will play today at 3:30 p.m.
Matsuoka will also play at 9:30 a.m. in the girls 12s singles
final, after having dispensed of Oceanside’s Lacey Smyth, 6-2, 7-5,
Thursday.
Charlie Corum from Corona del Mar and Connor Curry from Newport
Beach will play in today’s 3:30 p.m. boys 12s doubles final after
beating Chun Hun Kevin Wong and Long Fung Vincent Yau, 7-5, 6-0,
Thursday.
Corum will also play in the boys 12s singles final at 2 p.m.
because he defeated top-seeded Kwun Ho Kwong, 7-5, 7-5. Corum will
face No. 3 seed Joseph DiGiulio from Newport Beach in the final.
DiGiulio beat Curry in the Thursday semifinals, 6-3, 6-1.
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