Westwood Back on Top of UP D2 Tennis

May 28, 2014

By Craig Remsburg
Special to Second Half
 

ISHPEMING — They’re b-a-a-a-a-c-k. 

After a year’s absence, the Ishpeming Westwood boys tennis Patriots can again call themselves MHSAA Upper Peninsula Division 2 champions.

Winning all three flights they placed in championship matches, the Patriots came away with 13 points to beat runner-up and defending champion Iron River West Iron County by two on Wednesday. 

Gwinn and Munising tied for third with 10 points, followed by Iron Mountain (8), Ishpeming (2) and Norway (0) in action held at Westwood High School.

“We definitely thought it was possible for us to win,” Patriots coach Chris Jackson said, “but it didn’t play out as we thought. We thought we’d need more points to win. 

“We had some help. It was more than a two-horse race, and there were four teams with at least 10 points each.”

Jackson said consistency and a non-champion, Westwood No. 1 singles player Quinn LeRoy, were keys to Wednesday’s title win — the Patriots’ second in three years. 

“Everyone held their serve — their flight,” he said. “All three of our No. 1 seeds won. The fact we could hold our flights was big.

“LeRoy was a No. 2 seed and faced a good player in West Iron County’s Ryan Rogers. Quinn was able to go out there and get that point.” 

Westwood got wins from Brett Fredrickson at No. 4 singles, Mitch Messing and Tristan Vitale at No. 3 doubles and Brandon Benda and Hunter Roose at No. 4 doubles.

Fredrickson said he was shaky in his first set of a 6-3, 6-0 win over West Iron’s Erick Upperstrom. 

“But Coach (Jackson) told me there were some things I needed to focus on, like hitting off my front foot and not my back, and not getting my hips into the shot,” Fredrickson said. “I also let the other guy make some mistakes.”

Benda and Roose knocked off West Iron’s Ryan Peterson and Tristan Nelson, 6-2, 6-0. 

“We were nervous at the start, but as time went on, we got better,” Roose said. “Our ball placement was really good.”

Added Benda: “After the fourth game (of the first set), we played with more confidence. We also tried to keep the ball in play.” 

Munising’s Noah Ackerman capped an undefeated season with a win at No. 1 singles over Gwinn’s Inigo Cepeda, 6-3, 6-0. 

“I was shaky at the start and started slow,” Ackerman said. “(Cepeda) started approaching the net, and I knew I couldn’t outhit him because he’s a great player and hits good strokes. 

“So I tipped (the ball) up and when he approached the net, I started to pass him down the line.”

It worked as Ackerman overcame a 2-2 start to win going away for his second straight Upper Peninsula Division 2 individual title. 

A senior, Ackerman said Cepeda — an exchange student from Madrid, Spain — started losing confidence midway through the first set, enabling the Mustangs netter to “focus on what I was doing.”

Cepeda might have been unsettled on the court. He broke the strings on his racket in the first set and had to use that of No. 2 singles teammate Micah Heat the rest of the match. 

“Inigo is more of a clay player, too,” Gwinn coach Dan Turecky said. “He plays a European style with more power. But (Ackerman’s) control won today.”

West Iron got wins from Andrew Peterson at No. 2 singles and Adam Newby at No. 3. 

“We both rallied well in the first set,” Peterson said of his 7-5, 6-3 win over Micah Heath of Gwinn. “We both had good ground strokes. 

“In the second set, he was up 2-1. Then I just tried to hit the ball as hard as I could.”

West Iron coach Joe Serbentas, whose Wykons have won a U.P. title six times in the last 10 years, said he and his netters were “disappointed” in their runner-up finish. 

“A couple of our flights in doubles didn’t perform as well as we wanted,” he said. “My No. 1 and No. 2 were top seeds, but didn’t get any points. We struggled there.”

Gwinn placed four flights in the finals, but managed to win just one — a 6-2, 6-4 triumph at No. 2 doubles by Mason Bruce and Erik Asplund over Munising’s Joel Werner and Nick Cerone. 

“Our serving was good today. We had a lot of aces,” said Bruce, who left the courts immediately afterward to play baseball Wednesday evening for the Channing American Legion baseball team. “Our net play was good, too.”

Turecky said he was “very pleased” with having four Gwinn flights in the finals. 

“But we only won one. We didn’t pull through those points, ” he lamented. “We went up against some good players. ”

Iron Mountain picked up a win at No. 1 doubles as Sawyer Kujala and Danny Willman outlasted Gwinn’s Jesse Mottes and Nick Bjork, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-2.

Click for championship match results.

PHOTOS: (Top) Munising's Noah Ackerman returns the ball to his Gwinn No. 1 singles opponent during the Division 2 U.P. Finals on Wednesday at Westwood High School. (Middle) Iron Mountain's Sawyer Kujala hits the ball back to his Gwinn No. 1 doubles opponents on the way to winning the flight. (Photos by Adelle Whitefoot).

Okemos, Genschaw Earn D2 Celebrations

By Pam Shebest
Special for MHSAA.com

October 21, 2017

KALAMAZOO — Okemos went home with the team trophy Saturday, but no one celebrated an individual medal with more exuberance than Grand Rapids Forest Hills Central senior Connor Genschaw at No. 1 singles.

The Chiefs won their first Lower Peninsula Division 2 title in 10 years before the finals even started at Kalamazoo College.

No. 3 doubles clinched the championship in the semifinals when top seeds Deniz Kalfa and Druv Talluri defeated Midland Dow’s fifth seeds, Ryan Killmaster and Kevin Kraef, 6-3, 6-0, to seal the win.

Kalfa and Talluri were two of six Chiefs who ended the season without losing a match. 

“I don’t take a lot of credit for that (state title),” Okemos coach Chris Silker said. “These kids have worked really, really hard.

“We have an incredibly vested community that is behind the kids 110 percent. I think that’s the key to our success.”

Okemos dominated with 36 points. Birmingham Groves and Midland Dow tied for second with 21 each and Forest Hills Central was fourth with 20. Birmingham Seaholm (18) rounded out the top five.

Genschaw, the second seed, was bolstered by the roar of the crowd cheering on every winner and carrying him to a 6-0, 4-6, 6-1 win over top seed Gabe Liss of Birmingham Groves in the final.

Genschaw was swamped by teammates on the court after the match.

“It’s a culmination of all four years going into this match,” Genschaw said. “I had to cap it off with this one. It means so much to me emotionally.

“Now I’m not going into my life saying, ‘Oh, I lost in the finals in my senior year.’ Now I can say I got a state championship my senior year, and it’s awesome.”

Genschaw breezed through the first set but by the second, “I think I exhausted myself playing so well in the first set. I was honestly on fire in the first set, and I got really tired in the second set.

“Then the last set, I was like, this is my senior year. I’ve got to push as hard as I could. I ended up winning the last set, 6-1. It was all mental at that point.”

“Expecting it would be more than I would say coming in, but I sure hoped he could do it,” Central coach Dan Bolhouse added. “He played well throughout the tournament.

“He plays a lot of tournaments out of season so he was mentally prepared to play some tough opponents.”

Liss said he knew the match would be a challenge.

“He’s a senior, and he was thriving in the atmosphere,” the Groves junior said. “He had the crowd firing him up. It was his last year, and he was playing the best he could.”

After dropping the first set at love, “I just tried taking it one game at a time,” Liss added. “I knew the score was 6-0, but the games were closer and I was still in the match and (I knew) that I could keep fighting back for every point.”

No. 2 and 3 singles also featured Groves players with second seed Gabe Vidinas defeating top seed Josh Portnoy of Okemos, 6-1, 7-5, at No. 2 and Jonah Liss losing to top seed Shrey Patel of Okemos, 6-2, 6-4.

Portnoy and Patel are both freshmen.

“Shrey and Josh have been a big part of our success,” Silker said. “They both went undefeated this season until Josh’s final loss today against Gabe Vidinas.

“Even though (Portnoy) had a win over him during the season, Gabe played much better today and I think a little bit of that was his veteran experience.”

Vidinas’ match featured such long points that his two-setter took as long as the first flight’s three.

After streaking to a 4-0 lead to start the match, Vidinas won 6-1 but then had to fight for the second set.

I played him twice before and he grinds; he’s very tough to play,” Vidinas said of Portnoy. “Every time I always have to be playing my best to beat him. It was a tough match. 

“I could tell he wasn’t playing his best in the first set. I did my best to play my game.”

Vidinas, a junior, called for a trainer at 6-5 of the second set.

“I was cramping quite a bit,” he said. “Luckily I aced him to get to the changeover. I just held it in and toughed it out (to win).”

With teammates playing next to him, “The energy of my teammates makes me play better and I can be shouting and hollering all the time and my teammates can support me,” Vidinas said. “It’s always nice.”

Portnoy a freshman, said he knew what happened in the first set and tried to change it for the second.

“I was playing too offensive,” he said. “I kept missing deep. I think I should have played safer.”

By the second set, “I just decided his forehand is really strong,” Liss said. “His backhand wasn’t as good, but it was still pretty good.

“I’m like, I’ll just keep it to his backhand and he won’t be able to attack as much. It worked.”

The Patel match featured two freshmen in the third-flight final.

“I had to stay calm, be confident and move (Jonah Liss) around,” Patel said. “He played a lot better in the second set.”

Liss said playing on one of the front courts was “cool.”

“I’ve watched a few (USTA) national tournaments here,” he said. “It felt really cool. I’ve seen a lot of great players play here.”

Portage Central senior Vishu Ghantasala, the second seed at No. 4 singles, expected a tough opponent and he got it, losing to Okemos top-seeded junior Daniel Gorelik, 6-0, 6-1.

Ghantasala got a look at Gorelik during the semis.

“I saw Daniel playing next to me and he was done a good hour, hour and a half before me, so I knew it was going to be really tough when I had to play just a half hour after I was done,” Ghantasala said.

“A couple of my teammates have played him and they gave me some tips, but in the end it was really hard.”

Although his team already had the team trophy, Gorelik, who lost just three games the entire tournament, said that did not affect his play.

“The mindset was still just go out there and do your job, not let up,” he said. “You’ve got to get to the ultimate goal.”

Gorelik, who finished the season undefeated, said his teammates pushed each other all year.

“We have a lot of talent on the team this year and it makes it much better when you have a lot of good people to hit with,” he said.

Okemos’ No. 3 doubles team featured a senior (Kalfa) and a freshman (Talluri) who went undefeated all season.

Playing in his first state tournament, “It feels crazy,” Talluri said. “It’s just a crazy time. Everything just happened so fast. It was so much fun with the team.”

Kalfa felt a bit of pressure.

“This match was a lot different than any other match I’ve played knowing it’s my last high school match,” he said.

Partnering all season, “Mentally we became more than friends, more than partners, like brothers almost,” Kalfa said of Talluri. 

“We always brought each other up, even today when we were both down mentally, the other one was trying their best to bring us up. He’s the best partner I could ask for.”

The duo defeated Seaholm’s second seeds, Aidan O’Neill and Max Levitsky, 7-5, 5-7, 6-0, in the final.

Okemos swept the doubles flights.

Other winners were second seeds Dinakar Talluri and Zal Chinoy at No. 1, top seeds Rohan Shah and Siddharth Agisetty, who did not lose a match all season, at No. 2; and second seeds Karthik Kolisetty and Aditya Kandula at No. 4.

Click for full results

PHOTOS: (Top) Okemos celebrates its Division 2 championship Saturday at Kalamazoo College. (Middle) Forest Hills Central's Connor Genschaw returns a volley during his No. 1 singles match. (Top photo by HighSchoolSportsScene.com; bottom photo by Pam Shebest.)