ADVERTISEMENT:
|
Men's Tennis Players Flourish at Open
Published On
Tuesday, February 20, 2007 12:19 AM
Contributing Writer
Great Scott!
Co-captain
Scott Denenberg had outstanding results in the singles draw of the
Harvard Open Tournament, reaching the semifinals before dropping a
contest in straight sets to No. 1 seed Ville Liukko.
|
The Harvard men's tennis team hosted the Harvard Open Tournament and
its members posted impressive individual results at the Murr Center
this weekend.
Three Crimson players reached the quarterfinals and co-captain
Scott Denenberg advanced to the semifinals in a tournament fielding 47
singles players and 16 doubles teams, ranging from high-school students
to college graduates to young professionals.
Denenberg mounted an overall record of 3-1 at the Open before
losing a tough match against No. 1 seed Ville Liukko, who was once
ranked 117th in the world. The No. 4 seed got down early in the first
set against the defending tournament champion and eventual runner-up
but appeared rejuvenated in the second set, opening with two winners
and an ace.
Despite hitting some hard balls, Denenberg could not counter Liukko's shot selection, losing 6-1, 6-1.
"It's not so much nerves, but playing someone that good,"�
Denenberg said. "Maybe my movement was a little sluggish, but playing
someone at that level makes you over-hit balls. But that's what Federer
does right? He makes you hit at his level."�
Both Denenberg and Crimson head coach Dave Fish '72 see the
match and the tournament as an opportunity for improvement before Ivy
League season play begins in April.
"You need to have someone talented beat you so that you can
see how to hit the ball at the next level,"� Fish said. "That's the
beauty of a tournament like this. It's not just playing college players
who might lose their mind over the smallest thing, but playing guys
that are accomplished, know how to keep their mind focused, and know
how to deal with something that's disappointing and then come back and
play."�
Before Denenberg could move to the semifinals, he had to
emerge victorious from an all-Harvard quarterfinal against teammate
Ashwin Kumar. It took just one break for Denenberg to secure the first
set 6-3 against his teammate. Despite remaining on serve early in the
second set, Kumar slowed at 4-3, allowing Denenberg to capture the
semifinal spot with one more break of service to win the match 6-3,
6-3.
"We play each other almost everyday,"� Denenberg said, "so it's just a matter of who plays a little better that particular day."�
In the other half of the draw, Dan Nguyen struggled to match
the speed of his opponent, No. 2 seed and eventual tournament champion
Rupesh Roy, a 2007 Australian Open junior doubles finalist. Nguyen lost
his first set, 6-0, but late in the second set, a clip of the net and a
winner down the line from Nguyen allowed for a break back at 4-3.
"Dan did great in the second set; they were going toe-to-toe,"�
Fish said. "Dan played some great points. His confidence is better;
it's just getting up to that speed."�
Although Nguyen moved quickly through his first two matches,
he saw the end of his eight-match winning streak in the quarterfinals,
losing 6-0, 6-3.
Rounding out the Harvard-dominated quarterfinals, No. 3 seed
Chris Clayton dropped a tough first set, 6-4. Clayton quickly
regrouped, breaking his opponent early in the second set, but failed to
convert a game point at 6-5 that would have forced a tiebreak.
"In the second set, I warmed up,"� Clayton said. "I had the
lead for a while, but then he started serving better and I missed a lot
of first serves. He had an aggressive game style that kept me on the
defense most of the time."�
After an impressive variety of shots from both players, Clayton lost 6-4, 7-5 to University of Virginia graduate Brian Hunter.
Among other Crimson players in the tournament, co-captain
Gideon Valkin swept into the third round before losing 6-3, 6-4;
freshman Michael Hayes and Junior Gareth Doran were eliminated in the
second round; and sophomore Michael Kalfayan lost his opening match.
In the final yesterday, the second-seeded Roy outlasted
Liukko to win 2-6, 6-3, 6-0. Liukko, who had taught tennis for two
hours earlier in the morning, took the first set with ease and built a
3-2 lead in the second set when he ran out of steam. Roy took advantage
of his fresh legs and swept the final ten games of the match.
Roy also took the doubles championship, teaming with his coach
Johan Durant to beat former world No. 1 Don Johnson and his partner
Andrew Rueb '95, 7-6, 7-6.
|
ADVERTISEMENT:
|