Five Seeds Fall in Opening Round of USTA/ITA Indoor Intercollegiate Championships
©Colette Lewis 2012—
Flushing Meadows, NY—
The effects of the storm that brought winter to New York
Wednesday were still being felt at the USTA/ITA Indoor Intercollegiate Championships,
with several players and officials still not at the USTA Billie
Jean King National Tennis Center when Thursday’s first round of play began at 9 a.m.
All of the seeded singles players were present and accounted
for at the start of play, but five of them were eliminated, with the No. 2 and
No. 3 seeds in both the men's and women's draws falling in afternoon play.
One of the toughest first round matchups featured No. 3 seed
Matija Pecotic of Princeton against Mac Styslinger of Virginia. Both had reached the quarterfinals at
the ITA All-American last month, and in the meantime Pecotic had won the
Northeastern Regional title, while Styslinger had qualified for last week’s $75,000
Charlottesville Challenger.
It was Styslinger who prevailed Thursday, taking a 6-2, 3-6,
6-2 decision, and the freshman from Birmingham Alabama traced his string of good results
back to Tulsa.
“I think it all started at All-Americans,” Styslinger said.
“I put some good wins together, then got rolling at the challenger last week.
It definitely gave me some confidence.”
Styslinger thought missed opportunities in the first game of
the second set cost him a chance for a straight-set win.
“I had three or four break points, I know I was up 40-0 in
the first game of the second set,” Styslinger said. “I didn’t convert, missed
some easy forehands, so I was a little frustrated and that kind of carried over
into the next game. But after that, he just played a solid set, he came up with
the goods when he needed to.”
In the third set, Styslinger took a 3-0 lead, but Pecotic
won the next two games to get back on serve. Styslinger picked up his level
when it looked as if Pecotic was going to mount his comeback, breaking, then
holding easily to make it 5-2.
“Returning in the last game of the match, I think he was a
little out of it at that point, so I just had to play soild,” Styslinger said.
“I’m very happy, but I don’t think I can be satisfied. I need to keep getting
better each match.”
Styslinger’s teammates Alex Domijan, the No. 1 seed, and
Jarmere Jenkins, the No. 6 seed, also advanced, with Domijan defeating Esben
Hess-Olesen of North Carolina 6-3, 6-2 and Jenkins downing Ashok Narayana of
Columbia, who received entry when Oklahoma’s Guillermo Alcorta was unable to
make it.
Three of the 16 men’s matches Thursday were decided in
third-set tiebreakers, with No. 2 seed Peter Kobelt of Ohio State dropping one
of them. Kobelt, the All-American finalist, lost to Jonas Lutjen of Ole Miss,
the All-American consolation winner, 3-6, 6-2, 7-6(1). No. 5 seed Marcos Giron
of UCLA survived the challenge of Elon’s Cameron Silverman 7-5, 3-6, 7-6(2),
and Mississippi State’s Romain Bogaerts defeated Ryan Lipman of Vanderbilt 2-6,
7-5, 7-6(2).
No. 8 seed KU Singh of Georgia was the third seed on the
men’s side to lose in the first round, dropping a 7-6(6), 6-4 decision to wild
card Sebastian Fanselow of Pepperdine.
No. 2 seed Cristina Sanchez-Quintanar of Texas A&M lost
to Danielle Lao of Southern California 6-1, 6-2. Lao, a semifinalist at the
Riviera All-American Championships this year, said that her mental game was
most responsible for her victory over Sanchez-Quintanar.
“I was just ready for anything, really patient,” said the
senior, who had never played Sanchez-Quintanar before. “We had a lot of deuces
and a lot of long games, and I just stuck in there. When you do stick in there
in those long games, it just makes all the difference. It mentally wears on
your opponent. It was not so much my good tennis, but more like my head.”
Lao’s teammate Zoe Scandalis, the No. 3 seed, lost to
Tennessee’s Brynn Boren 6-1, 6-2. USC’s Sabrina Santamaria gave the Women of
Troy another representative in the round of 16, with a 6-0, 7-5 victory over
wild card Gina Suarez-Malaguti of North Carolina.
Top seed Lauren Embree of Florida needed two hours and five
minutes to get past Caroline Rohde-Moe of Ole, 6-3, 7-5. Embree, the
All-American champion, served for the match at 5-4, had two match points at
40-15, but double faulted twice, the last one to lose the game. Her return game
was strong in breaking Rohde-Moe for a 6-5 lead, and after one more match point
saved by Rohde-Moe, Embree finished it.
With two doubles teams from Oklahoma unable to get to New
York, the scramble for alternate teams began around 10:00 p.m. on Wednesday
night.
David Holiner and Chris Camillone of Texas were still in
Austin when coach Michael Center called them to ask if they wanted to fly to
New York first thing Thursday morning to take one of the two places that had opened in the
draw.
“Of course I’m not going to say no,” said Camillone. “I
hadn’t talked to any teachers, but that was just irrelevant at that point. He
said he didn’t know if he could get us there, because Laguardia was shut down
yesterday, but he called his travel agent, called me back and we got an 8:30
flight out this morning.”
Holiner and Camillone had a connection in Dallas and didn’t
arrive in New York until 4 p.m., but they got a chance to hit before their 6:30
p.m. match with Moritz Buerchner and Norbert Nemcsek of North Florida, who had
already played and won a first round match Thursday morning.
“We’re just going out there to have fun and just see what
happens,” said Holiner. “We feel like we can beat anyone.”
“But not many people come into a tournament, walk into the
facility two hours before their match,” said Camillone. “It’s almost like you
haven’t let the atmosphere hit you. I was in Austin at 7:30 this morning—I had
an 8 o’clock class. I’d rather be here than an 8 o’clock class, but it’s all
just kind of a whirlwind.”
While Camillone and Holiner won their match 8-6 over North
Florida, the other team that didn’t arrive until early this afternoon,
Illinois’ Tim Kopinski and Farris Gosea, weren’t as fortunate. They lost to
Armstrong Atlantic’s Dan Regan and Georgi Rumenov 8-5 in another match scheduled for 6:30 p.m. in order to allow them as much time as possible for travel.
The other spot in the doubles draw went to the Ole Miss team
of Lutjen and Nik Scholtz, who were already in New York for singles. They also
advanced to the quarterfinals, beating Virginia Tech’s Andreas Bjerrehus and
Amerigo Contini 8-2.
Friday's schedule will feature one round of doubles and two rounds of singles, as well as consolation matches.
Complete results are available at the ITF tournament page, which also includes links to the Live Chat and Live Scoring. Ken Thomas will be providing webcasting at radiotennis.com.
8 comments:
Did host Columbia end up with 2 WC spots for Lin and Narayana? Maybe I am wrong, but I didn't see that Lin qualified on his own. I am sure other players/coaches applied for that coveted WC spot and I don't think that decision was just weather based. If not already there, I am sure players would have scrambled to get there like a dubs team did. Host override or am I missing something?
Lin was a regional finialist and therefore an alternate. When he got in, that freed the wild card for Narayana.
Why is Evan King not playing at Indoors? Is Mitchell Frank coming back for the spring season? Any impact freshmen starting 2nd semester (or even later like Novikov did last year)?
King didn't qualify for the Indoor. Mitchell Frank will be back for the dual match season.
Colette, why was Fanselow not seeded? He was pre-season #3 and just missed one big event. In his case, why were the fall results all that mattered and his fall ranking disregarded?
Lots of comments on the seeding among those here, but it is a tough job, especially when someone is returning from injury.
I thought it was a little funny that the guys from Oklahoma couldn't make it, but 2 guys from Austin,TX could leave at last second Thursday morning.
Yes, College Tennis, I was wondering about that too. You can make it from Texas but not Oklahoma? Maybe drive over to Dallas to catch a flight then? Colette, do you know anything about why that might have happened?
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