Friday, May 31, 2013

We Ended On A High Note! We Finished Our '13 Tennis Season at 13-9. *update 6/3/13 - State Singles Tourney Results & Link @ End*

We did get one piece of press,  moreover, I felt strongly that this was a very good story which you guys just wrote yourselves.  Three wins over the two previous seasons, then your a  South Group 1 semi-finalist this season.  If that isn't a feel good story then I don't know what one is.  We tried to get more, by contacting the Inquirer and Courier Post.   Our story next season could be one they can't ignore, and I assure you it will be in both papers, if we make the Sectional Title match. 

  You have the very realistic opportunity to make history for your tennis program.  Like I said a few weeks ago, after hearing that your girls tennis team could and should play for that same sectional title next season.  Imagine if you could bookend the 2013-2014 school year with a boys title in the Spring to go with a girls NJSIAA South Group 1 sectional title in the Fall.  If this happens, both teams would have made that special trip on an equally special day to Mercer County Park, to play for a state championship. 

 I want you all to be able to experience that moment, but now you have to individually put the effort in, starting now, to assure that happening.  Ryan will be up there this weekend competing in the state singles tourney, so he'll get the first taste of the experience and I hope report back to us what he observed and felt.   I know you, this Audubon boys tennis team can make that history happen, and then be able to tell one heck of a story, that will no doubt find its way into those two same newspapers.    You can see the blurb below at this link.  http://blog.nj.com/southjerseyhssports/2013/05/boys_tennis_notebook_south_jer.html


RIDING THE WAVE: Audubon has 10 wins on the season and reached the South Jersey Group I semifinal using a lineup that includes many players who were part of a winless season two years ago.
Contact Bill Evans at 856-686-3636 or bevans@southjerseymedia.com









This post with pictures included, which I cut and pasted below, is from my Paul VI tennis blog.  The story has many similarities as our 2013 story.  I put it here as a reminder of the power of writing down and or vocalizing a goal.  My goal for our tennis team, at the start of the season, was to win two playoff matches, wherein winning both would have you arrive at a NJSIAA Group 1 Semi-Final match.  You heard me voice this goal during  a meeting in coach's classroom, well before the start of the season. We did just that, and in the story below the same thing happened.  In both instances a team goal was identified and then accomplished.

I also set similar playoff goals for my PVI boys team and they were successfully reached 2 out of my 3 seasons as head boys tennis coach.   I had learned about the importance of writing down pre-season team goals from many books and articles on coaching, but I now firmly believe that there was great power in identifying a reasonable team goal and then continue to remind the team and its members of such.   I hope each one of you who will be on the team next season will now identify individual goals, with  your improvement over the summer in mind.  (ex-grip change)  The summer is the most important time for you to improve.

The goal next season is for our team to play in the finals, for a South Jersey Sectional title.  We made it to the semi-finals this season, so this is a more than reasonable goal.  You could be the first boys tennis team, since the 1940s from what I have been told, to win a sectional crown.   Finishing strong is what we did this season, wherein how much time you sacrifice to improve your tennis game over the summer and then in the fall and winter, when I know it will be tougher to find the time,  will ultimately determine if you win that sectional title match. 



My first experience coaching an actual team was in '07 when I filled in for Mrs Smith who was taking the fall off due to the birth of her second child. I was skeptical at first, as I was only going to be there a season, and wondered how much I could really get accomplished in 4 months. So knowing that, and then taking the job and responsibility of a team, I jumped in with gusto. I knew I had to work hard and fast, with purpose, if my time there was to mean anything for the future.

This was my first note(see below), before emails or blogs, that I ever wrote to some of the members on the team at the end of the '07 season. I used to photo copy articles back then, and give them to the team once a week. The Heights AD Joe Cramp, always looked at me funny as I sat in his office burning through his printer ink. Mr Eppright, the boys soccer coach, was equally annoyed, as all he wanted to do was make a few copies.

Anyway the girls and I had our ups and downs, as some of you may imagine. I was only doing what I thought and know to be right, even if they didn't see it at the time. I'm doing it the same way right here and right now. I wanted to make tennis a bit more relevant to them. I wanted them come to practice everyday and work hard, even if some had taken different paths to get to tennis. I knew tennis may not have been their first choice, or first sport.

I established a goal of making the playoffs in '07, which we did and won a round. I hoped that would help them start to see the sport of tennis as desirable thus could be a fulfilling conduit toward team and individual goals. I wanted their hearts in the sport, with me knowing that they could have a skill and experience that was worth more than I could clearly show them at that moment.

The honest truth is that these girls had more heart and determination than I initially gave them credit for. I thought they had some, but like you guys at times, I would leave practice thinking that they may not had thought the experience that useful or meaningful. I kept at it and tried to motivate them by various means. By the end of that season I began to see that heart and determination come out on the court. I could start to see some confidence being projected and a little brashness, which I hope would rub off from me to them. It was the last match against Audubon, a match we lost earlier that season. They were starting to believe, so I decided I needed to set a goal for them to work towards next year, as the baton was going to be passed back to Mrs. Smith.

I penned the short letter and gave it to Jackie, Gina, Alex and Kara, at the season's end Colonial Conference tournament. The letter references a Courier Post article that details all the high school tennis teams vying for South Jersey Sectional Championships, that fall of '07. The article isn't included here.


This was the last time I had the privilege of calling myself their coach. I gave the letter to them along with a three ring binder, that they would put the accumulation of the season's 'tennis articles' in, which I had them bring that day. The binder could protect them for the future. I was really curious to see who had actually saved them and who had not or used them as scrap paper. Each one had saved all their articles, which was impressive.

They are a very special group of young ladies, that I will never forget. They truly taught me more than I ever taught them. I just lit a little spark. I fanned that spark in various ways till my last moment there. The next year, as you'll read in the Philadelphia Inquirer article here, they carried the torch the hard final leg, in the clutch as the underdog. They upset the #2 seed Haddon Township at their place, as such was a big obstacle for them the previous year.

I remember quickly exiting after they won the match, leaving them and their coach to celebrate. I was so excited, running away from the courts and down the street, that I forgot where I parked my car. They then won their semi-final match 4 days latter at Middle Township. They finished their run against Haddonfield, in the '08 SJ Group 2 Final. This wasn't a tennis match per say, but a deserved moment in the sun and a celebration of a team and their journey.

They had made history for their school's tennis program, and got a great article in the Philadelphia Inquirer. This helped substantiate that someone did notice their accomplishments. It also laid proof that what they were doing as a tennis team, and what I was trying to encourage them towards did really matter. This article was in the paper the same day the Phillies won the National League Pennant in '08. I thought this was doubly cool, as many people would have read the 'Inky' that day.




Oh Yeah! Here is proof that 'Doppelgangers' do exist.  With this discovery, which many of us on the team quickly noticed during introductions against Sterling, we got one step closer to helping Ryan find his.  It is a timeless, some would say mindless quest, but who knows what we might learn about ourselves and the world around us on such a journey.   I know Ryan has been enlightened with our discovery.   Ask him his reflections now on this chance meeting.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doppelganger

*Update 6/3/13*

The 2013 state singles tournament continues with the round of 32 and 16 on Sunday. The quarterfinal round is scheduled for June 4, the semifinals on June 5 and the final on Thursday, June 6, all of which will be held just at Mercer County Park. The seeds for the 2013 bracket are below.
NJSIAA Singles Tournament
1-Maverick Lin, Highland Park
2-Nick Bradley, Waldwick
3-Kenny Zheng, Hopewell Valley
4-Ryan Dickerson, Moorestown
5-8 Alphabetically
Michael Chen, Holmdel
Michael Liu, Ridge
Tyler Schick, Millburn
Daniel Wright, Saddle River Day
9-16 Alphabetically
Justin Burris, St. Rose
Anthony Caputo, Livingston
Justin Kang, Shawnee
Dylan Karchere-Sun, South Brunswick
Dean Koman, Millburn
Derek Liu, Holmdel
Aiden McNulty, Don Bosco
Richard Rangga, Clifton


First Round - NJSIAA State Singles Tournament - June 1, 2013 - Mercer County Park - Bottom Half Of Boys Bracket
Oberholtzer d. Jeremy Van Herwarde, Pope John, 6-1, 6-1;  Novick d. Ivan Romano, Monmouth, 6-0, 6-3; Persson d. Karthik Paka, Robbinsville, 6-0, 6-0; Murugesan d. Zachary Castagna, Pitman, 6-1, 6-4; Lefkandinos d. Jai Mali, St. Peter’s Prep, 6-3, 6-0; Weiss d. Trevor Johnson, Hopewell Valley, 6-2, 6-0; Eatroff d. Tyler Blessing, Moorestown, 6-0, 6-0; DelRey Rodriguez d. Matt Resnikoff, Shore, 6-4, 6-3; Song d. Dean Sponholz, Glen Rock, 6-3, 6-0; Wright d. Ryan Schaffer, Audobon, 6-0, 6-5; Rose d. Brett Gilman, Mahwah, 6-0, 6-4; Lugtu d. Teddy Apt, Bernards, 6-3, 6-2; Boyle d. Chris Sciancalepore, Hasbrouck Heights, 6-1, 6-0; Paredes d. Ethan Fischer, Mainland, 6-4, 4-6, (10-0); Wozniczka d. Brian Dylla, Msgr. Donovan, 6-0, 6-1; Hu d. Peter Wylie, Cedar Grove, 6-0, 6-0; Montanelli d. Cody Cassise, Seneca, 6-2, 6-4; Paradis d. Sam Choi, Bergen Tech, 6-0, 6-1; Tai won by defaul over Gerard Giordano, Point Pleasant Beach; Uchida d. Spencer Kelly, Moorestown Friends, 6-4, 6-3; Hove d. Peter Brennan, Kingsway, 6-0, 6-1; McDonald d. Marish Shah, Toms River North, 6-1, 6-3; Hingorani d. Chris Popso, Florence, 6-3, 6-1; Mohanty d. Paul Caruso, Holy Cross, 6-3, 6-1; Bokhari d. Eric Tecce, Shawnee, 7-5, 7-6, (10-5); Oringer d. Louis Abenante, St. Augustine, 6-7 (5), 6-0, (10-6); d. Emir Hamzie, Long Branch, 6-0, 6-1.

seeding & first round results were cut & pasted above, from these article links
http://www.nj.com/hssports/blog/boystennis/index.ssf/2013/05/boys_tennis_state_singles_tournament_preview.html - seeding of his opponent Daniel Wright

http://www.nj.com/hssports/blog/boystennis/index.ssf/2013/06/njsiaa_singles_tournament_opening_day.html - Ryan's result at bottom of the page.

Ryan had a very impressive showing, playing tough in the heat, while giving a serious 2nd set scare to one of the best singles players in the state.  It appears that this set was so closely contested, that NJ.com(read Ryan's result at link) still wasn't prepared to declare a winner of this best 2nd set of the first round of the 2013 tournament. That award was a no-brainer, but sincerely give the boy a hi-five when you see him next.  The numbers never lie, right?  BUT not really, wherein what has been highlighted here, in whatever equation you wanna make-up, it shouldn't be understated, how impressive that result really was. 

No comments:

Post a Comment