Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Men Host NCAA Regional

Last Friday, Saturday, and Sunday teams from all across the nation descended upon Whitewater to compete in the NCAA Team Tournament. This is UWW's second straight year hosting, and many of the foes were familiar. The 'Hawks were given the #3 seed in our region, and had a bye on Friday which set-up for a great second round match against #2 seed Gustavus Adolphus. The 'Hawks and the Golden Gusties had met once before this year with GAC comign away victorious. This time the 'Hawks were not going to go down quite so easy.

On Saturday the 'Hawks rose and got ready for the match, but due to inclement weather the match was forced inside the Four Lakes Athletic Club. Regardless of where the match was being played the 'Hawks were going to be ready. As the match started it was clear both teams were going to fight extremely hard for this match, and it was going to be intense. 1 and 2 doubles was a tale of two matches. At 1 doubles Shklyar/Osborne made 4 quick volley errors to get broken in the first game, while McGlashen/Bayliss used some volley errors from the opponents to break the first game. One thing remained the same between 1 and 2 doubles, the team that grabbed that first break jumped out to an early lead, and both teams eventually went on to win the match. 3 doubles was a little tighter. Balkin/Humphreys had come out and played well early, but both teams were on serve till the 'Hawks made their move at 3-2, breaking then holding to make the score 5-2. Form there each teams traded holds until the 'Hawks came out victorious 8-5 at 3 doubles. This meant that the Warhawks had the 2-1 lead heading into singles (only the second time this year the 'Hawks have lead a nationally ranked team in doubles). 

The energy in FLAC was electric and the guys were looking to close out Gustavus for only the second time in school history (first time in the NCAA tournament). As the first sets in single unfolded the 'Hawks had to feel pretty good about themselves. The 'Hawks were able to pick up first sets at the 1, 3, 4, and 6 singles positions. Only Balkin at 2 and Bayliss at 5 were unable to pull out their first set. Eventually Bayliss fell at 5 singles, and the match was tied at 2-2. Around this time Byron was making a comeback to grab the second set. Unfortunately for the 'Hawks though the Gusties were making their charge to grab the second sets at 3, 4, and 6 singles. Eventually the Gusties captured those second sets and 4 of the remaining 5 matches on went to a decisive third set. The one match still in the second set was Shklyar at 1 singles. He had fallen behind in the first set to his opponent 2-5, but came storming back to win the set in a breaker, so needless to say he was a little behind the crowd. McGlashen soon added another loss to the 'Hawks falling in a third set at 3 singles. Now Gustavus had the 3-2 lead, but soon after Shklyar finished off his second set at 1 singles to tie the match back up at 3-3. All eyes now turned to Balkin, Humphreys, and Osborne who were in the heart of their third sets when Shklyar tied up the match at 3-3. Whichever team could come away with two of these matches would be the victor. At 6 singles Osborne had been fighting off cramps since the end of the second set, and he found himself at 3-3 before falling the next 3 games to fall in the third set 3-6. This meant Gustavus had the 4-3 lead. At 4 singles Humphreys had regained his from after a tough second set, and he was close to getting a break. At 2 singles Balkin got a big break at 4-4, and had an opportunity to serve out the match at 5-4. He fell down early 0-30, but fought it back to 30-30. On that 30-all point Balkin put in a great first serve, but his opponent was unscathed hitting a huge return in the corner to win the point and eventually the game. Now Balkin was at 5-5 in the third and his opponent didn't blink holding quickly forcing Balkin now to serve to stay in the match. Over at 4 singles around this time Humphreys got the break he'd been looking for the whole match to make it 5-3, but Balkin fell quickly at 5-6 and the Gusties walked away from the match victorious 5-3.

To see individual match scores click here

Overall, it was a tough match. We fought hard and had the chances, but just couldn't come up with them. I am extremely pleased with the guy's effort. It was one of the hardest fought matches from our team that I've seen in a long time, and that's what Warhawk Tennis is about. The 'Hawks showed a lot of heart this weekend, and hopefully it carries them on to next year.

Guest Post from Frank Barnes about Women's NCAA's

Women’s 2013 NCAA D-III first three rounds.

On Friday the team piled in a couple vans along with myself and Coach Scanlan.  Energy was high and we had a great trip down.  We made it to the host site (University of Chicago) by around 4pm for our practice session.  It was cold (about 40 degrees) and windy, but that did not stop us from working hard and getting ready for Saturday match against the winner of Carleton/Grinnell.  We had a first round bye, and Carleton beat Grinnell on Friday, so this set up a rematch of an earlier match this year when we edged Carleton 5-4 back in April.

Carleton is loaded with talent, so we were prepared for a battle.  In doubles we started off down in all three positions.  We were down a break at #1, down 2-4 at #2 and down 0-3 at #3, each team fought back and we cruised to 8-5 and 8-6 wins at #2 and #3.  Now all eyes were on the top court as Divelbiss/Bayliss battled Carleton’s top pair that has been selected as an NCAA individual qualifying doubles team as one of the region’s top four teams.  The score was 6-6 and the teams fought a long game, but the Hawks were broken and were unable to break back, losing 8-6, but team still held a 2-1 lead heading into singles.  In singles week took four of the first sets, so the tables were set.  Sydney took the first set at #1, Bayliss took the first set at #2, Kasten at #4, and Williams at #6.  Bayliss was the first to solidify with her straight sets win, followed by Kasten, while Vitale and Aguilar each lost their matches putting the team score at 4-3.  So we needed either Williams to close it out, or Sydney who had just split sets to win in three.  Williams soon clinched it with a 6-3, 6-2 win at 6 for a 5-3 win.  At the NCAA tournament the remaining matches are stopped when one team gets to 5.

This second round win put the Warhawks into the round of 16 for the second consecutive year against the University of Chicago.  UChicago is the top ranked team in the region and #8 in the nation, so we knew we would have to play great tennis to beat them.  We did play very well and certainly pushed them in what ended up being a 3 hour 45 minute battle.  In doubles the Hawks fell pretty routinely at #2 and #3, but Divelbiss/Bayliss found themselves in another great battle.  This time it was against the top ranked double team in the region.  It was back and forth the entire way, until the Hawks took a break lead 7-6, but the Maroons broke back to make it 7-7. The Lady Hawk duo dug in and played some terrific net play taking the final two games to win 9-7 and keep the team alive only down 2-1 heading into singles.  We needed four points to steal the win, and we had 4 battles going a couple hours later.  Divelbiss had lost the first set, but was up 3-0 in the second set.  Bayliss was about to close out her match after winning the first set, and Kasten and Aguilar were in three setters.  Divelbiss was impressively battling and her match against top ranked Megan Tang and it went to 4-4 before she finally lost the fight.  Vitale and Williams had already lost so the team score was 5-1 and the other matches were stopped.

To see all the individual scores from the tournament, click here

What a terrific year for the Lady Hawks!!  To get 21 wins and finish in the sweet sixteen with such a difficult schedule is a testament to this team and our senior leaders.  It was sad to see the season end and the careers of 4 wonderful seniors (Lauren Aguilar, Sydney Divelbiss, Kelly Foster, and Megan Kasten), but it was nice to share this moment with all of our great families on Mother’s Day