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Men's Tennis Beats Field at Intersession Invite
Published On
Tuesday, January 30, 2007 11:57 PM
Crimson Staff Writer
The No. 75 Harvard men’s tennis team had little time to recover from
finals as it began its spring season a few days after exam period ended
at home in the Murr Center with the Harvard Intersession Invitational,
while also sending two players to New York City for the Columbia
Classic.
But if the Crimson felt any fatigue from exams or rust from
the long layoff between seasons, it didn’t show. Harvard players took
both the singles and doubles titles at the Invitational while battling
hard against tough competition at Columbia.
“I was very pleased with the start because [playing] after
exams is really hard for any Harvard team,” said Crimson coach Dave
Fish ’72.
HARVARD INTERSESSION INVITATIONAL
Facing opponents from Boston College, Marist, and Princeton,
Harvard excelled in singles and doubles throughout the three-day
tournament, winning in the finals in both events on Monday.
Co-captain Gideon Valkin took the crown in singles, beating
the Tigers’ Peter Capkovic, the top-seeded player in the tournament,
7-6, 2-6, 6-4.
“It was a very big win,” Valkin said. “I was the underdog, but
I knew that I was good enough to beat the guy. I rose to the occasion
and played well.”
The South African went 5-0 overall, losing only three sets.
Fish likened Valkin’s performance to the play of Boston-area athletes
from a different sport.
“He was a little like the New England Patriots today,” Fish said. “He kept playing within himself through the weekend.
“He was doing it with a consistency that allowed him to compete with clearly one of the best guys in the league and beat him.”
Crimson junior Dan Nguyen also had success in singles play. He
won against Marist’s Christian Cooley, 6-0, 6-2, and B.C.’s Thomas
Nolan, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4. Nguyen eventually lost to the No. 4 seed, B.C.’s
Soma Kesthely, 6-4, 2-6, 6-3, but went 2-1 overall.
Harvard found itself in a win-win situation in the doubles
final, as junior Ashwin Kumar and freshman Michael Hayes faced off
against Nguyen and junior Kieran Burke.
Kumar and Hayes came out on top, 8-6, to win the title.
“That’s a good sign that we had both of the finalists,” Valkin
said. “Nguyen and Burke had never played together before. [Kumar and
Hayes] make a great team together.”
Fish had praise for Hayes, and also noted that the rookie is still improving.
“He’s trying to sharpen his weapons and become much clearer
about his shot selection,” Fish said. “It’s like a piano player trying
to play a piece so well that his fingers just walk on the keys. A
tennis player tries to make his shots so well that he knows where
they’re going.”
COLUMBIA CLASSIC
The Crimson sent co-captain Scott Denenberg and sophomore Chris
Clayton to New York to play in the Columbia Classic, another three-day
event that ended on Sunday. The tournament featured tough competition
from some of the best players in the Northeast, and Fish felt that
Denenberg and Clayton would benefit from the challenge.
“That was the level of play that they both needed,” Fish said.
Denenberg went 0-2 in singles play, losing to Louis Desmarteaux
of St. John’s, 6-4, 5-7, 6-1 in the first round and Yale’s Michael
Caldwell, 6-3, 3-6, 7-6.
Fish was not discouraged by the losses though, stressing Denenberg’s ability to stay competitive with talented players.
“Scott went three sets with a guy who got to the finals. Then
he played the No. 3 guy at Yale and lost 7-6 in the third set,” Fish
said. “It was a good tournament for him—probably a little hard on him
not to get the brass ring at the end,” he said.
Clayton had a little more success at Columbia, going 1-1 in
singles competition. He beat Phillip Stephens from Fairleigh Dickinson,
2-6, 7-5, 6-1, before losing a hard-fought three set battle to
Columbia’s Mark Clemente, 7-5, 6-7, 7-5. Clemente went on to take the
singles title.
“He lost to the guy who won the tournament,” Fish said. “It’s
not bad to get denied early and see if it teaches you what to do later
in the season.”
The Harvard duo then teamed up for doubles play, making it to
the quarterfinals where they lost to Manhattan College’s Bogdan Borta
and Mihai Nichifor by a score of 9-8.
After big wins in Cambridge and a good showing at Columbia, Denenberg attributed his team’s success to solid preparation.
“I think we prepared much more professionally this year than in
past years,” he said. “You can see that from the results of this
weekend’s tournaments.”
—Staff writer Loren Amor can be reached at lamor@fas.harvard.edu.
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