Tennis: A coming out party for Dent
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Richard Dunn
Being in the right place at the right time, I was fortunate to
catch Taylor Dent’s Wimbledon-record 144 mph serve on TNT last week.
While watching the end of the fourth set on the newsroom television as
Dent played fifth-seeded Lleyton Hewitt in the second round at Wimbledon,
there was a definite star in the making in the 20-year-old from Newport
Beach.
Dent, who played one season at Corona del Mar High five years ago,
displayed such animation and energy that he fired up the capacity crowd
on Center Court at the All England Club.
Dent was the unseeded American who entered Wimbledon ranked 142nd on
the Association of Tennis Professionals Tour, while the heavily favored
Hewitt, also 20 but more experienced on the ATP Tour, is from Australia.
Americans and Australians in the audience, battling to see who could
cheer loudest, were so boisterous that Dent said they gave him chills.
In that unforgettable fourth set, Dent rallied to break Hewitt, saving
two match points after falling behind, 40-15, and forcing a tie-breaker.
Dent’s comeback seemed to shake Hewitt, who double-faulted twice to lose
the game.
With Dent pumped up in the tie-breaker, which he won, 7-2, he had
serves recorded at 142 and 144 mph, the latter the fastest ever at
Wimbledon.
For the young Dent, coming into his own on the ATP Tour, it was also
the second-fastest serve recorded anywhere in the 10 years since such
things have been chronicled. Greg Rusedski of Great Britain once had a
serve timed at 149.
“(Dent) reminds me of Mark Philippoussis,” a colleague and tennis fan
said, as Dent powered his way to a fifth set with the fifth seed in the
world’s biggest tennis tournament on grass.
But it wasn’t just Dent and his powerful serving and ground strokes
that got everyone’s attention. His lofty ambition and well-poised
temperament in the match against the high-profile Hewitt showed the
tennis world that the 1996 CIF Southern Section singles champion is ready
for a breakthrough season.
Last year, at times, Dent uncorked signs of potential greatness, but
inconsistency would haunt him. So Dent decided to work harder to reach
his goal of cracking the top 10.
“Both (Dent and 18-year-old American Andy Roddick) have a great chance
of being in the top 10 and winning Grand Slam titles, but the reality is
that neither one has done that at this point,” said Eliot Teltscher, who
left his position as a national coach for the United States Tennis
Association to coach Dent exclusively.
“We get excited very quickly when anybody does almost anything.
There’s almost a desperation. If we had 10 guys like Roddick and Taylor,
then we wouldn’t be making that big a deal about any of them.”
Dent, easygoing, hard-working and good-looking, has great tennis
genes. Both his father, Phil Dent, and mother, Betty Ann Grout, were
professional players. Furthermore, Dent is hungry like a lion.
“I’m not No. 1, so I’m not happy ...,” Dent said after last season.
“But I made a lot of progress and I’m excited for (2001). I’m improving
every year I go out, but I wish I could leapfrog like Lleyton Hewitt (No.
4 on the ATP Tour after playing juniors only a few years ago).
“But I’ll take 30 Grand Slams if it means being patient. I’ll take the
slow route if that’s what it takes to get there. I’ll bust my butt to get
there and stay there.”
Dent, who turned pro in 1998 when his former CdM High classmates were
juniors, earlier this season pushed No. 2 Andre Agassi at the Ericsson
Open in Miami and No. 1 Gustavo Kuerten at the Tennis Masters Series in
Indian Wells before losing.
In the first game of his match against Agassi, Dent hit a 142-mph
serve, the fastest of the year on the ATP Tour -- and lost the point.
Before facing Kuerten at Indian Wells, Dent defeated Wayne Ferreira of
South Africa, 6-3, 6-0, in the first round.
In January, Dent upset top-seeded Magnus Norman at the Gold Flake Open
in Madras, India, giving the Swedish star a wake-up call.
Part of Dent’s success this year, he said, has come from a coaching
change. Dent had trained with his father, a 1974 Australian Open
finalist, for several years. But Taylor approached Teltscher looking for
a change. Teltscher agreed to a two-year contract with him and left the
USTA.
“(The decision) was hard,” Dent said. “The father-son relationship is
a good thing. We had a great relationship, but for me to get to the next
level I just needed to mature.”
U.S. Davis Cup captain Patrick McEnroe has also considered Dent for
the team this year.
“I’m encouraged by Taylor Dent having some good wins and playing a
good, competitive match with Agassi down in Miami,” said McEnroe, who
added he’s committed to younger players for the Davis Cup.
Prior to Wimbledon, Dent won on the international challenger circuit,
capturing a $50,000 grass-court event at Surbiton, Great Britain.
“The line is so fine (between the world’s top-10 players and those in
the top 200), it’s undefinable,” Dent said. “The difference for Hewitt
(and his quick rise to the top) was fitness. For me, it’s (going to be)
consistency.”
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