Tennis: Launching pad
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Richard Dunn
In the heart of Tennis Town USA, even the novice players are
getting a piece of the action.
While much hype surrounds the area’s open junior players and top high
school teams, there’s a grass-roots movement headed by Newport Beach
Tennis Club teaching pro Dave Sherbeck.
Not everyone hears about the Penn League because it’s geared for
beginners, but, hey, they’ve got to start somewhere.
Of the three tiers of competition for juniors, it all starts with the
Penn League. From there, players can graduate to the satellite division,
then to open play.
“The Penn League is a steppingstone,” said Sherbeck, who launched the
Southern California Tennis Association-sponsored Penn League at NBTC six
years ago, and has enjoyed a “banner season” with the 12- and
15-and-under boys teams.
In the fall season that runs from October through December, NBTC
captured divisional titles on both levels and will play in the Penn
League regional finals Feb. 12-13 at UCLA.
If it’s considered a “developmental league,” then Sherbeck certainly
has his boys developing a winning approach.
The NBTC 12-and-under squad went 10-0 in the regular season, playing
clubs from throughout north and central Orange County in a 12-team
division, including Sunny Hills Racquet Club, Tustin Hills, Heritage Park
in Irvine and the North Orange County Tennis Association.
The top two teams in each of the eight divisions in Southern
California advance to the regional finals.
“It’s been pretty rewarding to have two teams winning it,” Sherbeck
said. “It’s extraordinary to have one (champion), but two ...”
Even to maintain a program every year isn’t easy. Sherbeck not only
fights other clubs and Penn League programs, but he struggles against
sports. “It’s a constant battle, but I think I’m winning it,” he said.
“Most of the kids are such good athletes in other sports, you put them
in tennis and, bang, they pick it up. But a lot of kids don’t even think
about (playing competitive junior tennis) unless one of their buddies is
doing it. Tennis often plays second or third fiddle to soccer and
baseball and football.”
The Newport Beach 12-and-under unit consists of singles players Parker
Rhodes, John Leonard and Kyle Schneekluth, and the doubles team of Cole
Pavlovich and Connor Whalen.
The 15-and-under squad has singles players Bo Weidner, Pat Ahearn and
Alex Jorion, and the doubles team of William Cole and Andrew Hinger, all
of whom made Sherbeck proud this year by making the Corona del Mar High
junior varsity team.
While Palisades Tennis Club member Lindsay Davenport created some
hometown exhilaration last week by beating Martina Hingis in the
Australian Open women’s final for her third Grand Slam title, another
Palisades member, Rick Leach, went on to win the men’s doubles
championship down under, and moments later was added to the U.S. Davis
Cup team, which faces Zimbabwe this weekend on the road.
Leach last played Davis Cup when the Palisades Club hosted the world
quarterfinal tie in April 1997 against the Netherlands.
Leach will play doubles with Alex O’Brien today (2 p.m. Harare,
Zimbabwe time) against Wayne Black and Kevin Ullyett, the match (or
“rubber” in Davis Cup terms) that could make the difference following
Friday’s split in singles.
At the Australian Open, Leach teamed with Ellis Ferreira of South
Africa to win the men’s doubles title over, ironically, Black and Andrew
Kratzmann.
Palisades owner/operator Ken Stuart said over 100 members were on hand
Jan. 28 to watch Davenport crush Hingis in the Aussie Open final. The
large gathering “caught us off guard,” Stuart said, who had eight pizzas
delivered to the club as members “cheered like crazy.”
Must have been quite an evening.
“Two world champions from one tennis club ... not bad for a small
beach town on the coast of California,” Stuart said.
Newport Beach’s Brandis Braverman, 19, was named this week to the 2000
USA Tennis Player Development Team, a collection of rookie and
second-year pros supported by the United States Tennis Association, which
supplies $10,000 grants to each player for annual travel expenses.
Braverman, formerly the USTA’s No. 1-ranked girl in the nation in the
18s, underwent successful arthroscopic right knee surgery Dec. 1 to
remove scar tissue, which had been irritating her for about 2 1/2 years.
“I’m expecting a big year ... I’m 100% healthy and I feel really
fresh,” said Braverman, who was out six weeks because of her knee and is
hopeful of wild card berths at upcoming WTA Tour stops in Oklahoma City,
the week of Feb. 21, and Indian Wells, March 6.
The Palisades Club is the host site of the inaugural Pavilions
National High School All-American Team Invitational March 16-18.
But it’s a group effort in terms of courts donated from five
Newport-Mesa clubs.
The Palisades Club, Newport Beach Tennis Club, Costa Mesa Tennis
Center, Park Newport and Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club are all donating
courts for competition March 17-18 (opening ceremonies are March 16).
“Not many areas are willing to do something great like this by
donating all these courts, and we really appreciate the clubs and its
members for doing it,” said Tim Mang, Corona del Mar High boys tennis
coach and executive director of the national invitational.
Mang has attracted some of the best tennis programs in the United
States and established what will be the most official national
championship anywhere.
Proceeds of 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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