Coco has advantage at home
NEWPORT BEACH â Coco Vandeweghe lives just down the street from The Tennis Club Newport Beach.
The professional tennis player said for the past year and a half sheâs lived full-time in the Big Canyon community of Newport Beach. So Thursday night was like a home match for the 19-year-old, even though she was playing for the visiting Boston Lobsters.
Vandeweghe made sure she didnât disappoint her large contingent of friends and family in attendance. She played mixed doubles, womenâs doubles and womenâs singles.
The Lobsters won all three sets, part of a 22-14 victory that secured their spot in Friday nightâs Eastern Conference Finals in Charleston, S.C. Theyâll play undefeated Washington.
Newport Beach finished a tough World Team Tennis season with a 4-10 record.
Vandewegheâs mother, Tauna, was one of her loudest supporters Thursday. Tauna won Olympic silver medals in swimming (1976) and volleyball (1984). Cocoâs uncle, Kiki, and grandfather, Ernie, both played in the NBA.
â[I had] family members, friends, and Jan-Michael [Gambill] also had a big group with him,â Coco Vandeweghe said. âWe made it kind of a Boston crowd even though we were at home in Newport Beach. I live just down the street, and I have a big family. Theyâre loud and noisy, because they grew up in basketball and in arenas. They come out full-force.â
The Lobstersâ Gambill has family that lives in Tustin. It added up to a large amount of Boston supporters. They saw the Lobsters rally after Newport Beachâs Lester Cook defeated Gambill, 5-2, in menâs singles in the opening set of the night.
Gambill and Eric Butorac came back to defeat Cook and Travis Rettenmaier by the same 5-2 score in menâs doubles. Then Vandeweghe, who is coached by Palisades Tennis Club pro Robert Vanât Hof, did her part.
Vandeweghe and Butorac defeated Rettenmaier and Marie-Eve Pelletier, 5-3, in mixed doubles. Then Boston (7-7) poured it on, as Vandeweghe and Mashona Washington defeated Pelletier and Anne Keothavong, 5-1, in womenâs doubles.
Vandeweghe had the spotlight in the final set, and she defeated Keothavong, 5-1, in womenâs singles.
âI looked at the schedule and I saw Newport Beach,â said Vandeweghe, who is headed to qualifying for the Stanford tournament this weekend. âI said, âPick which half of the season you want me to play, the first or second half, but Iâm playing Newport Beach. I wanted to play here since they havenât drafted me yet, even though I live here. Iâve given [Coach] Trevor [Kronemann] a little bit of crap about it.â
The league decided who played on the Breakers this year, not Kronemann. But a player like Vandeweghe might prove useful to the Breakers, though statistically their first overall pick in this yearâs WTT draft â Keothavong â was their best player. Womenâs singles was the only set the Breakers finished over .500 for the season, in terms of games won.
The statistics also didnât paint a pretty picture for the Breakers in terms of crucial three-all points, Kronemann said.
âIf we had any Achilles heel this year itâd be three-all points,â Kronemann said. âI think you saw that tonight. We were all sitting there talking about it. We just couldnât win those big points for some reason. Thereâs no real excuse; itâs just what it comes down to.â
The Breakers have now missed the playoffs in four of the last five years. Kronemann said he hopes to continue to be involved with the team moving forward.
âItâs never too early [to look at next year],â Kronemann said. âWe want to get right back on promoting the team and finding a way to make it better. That starts [Friday], for me anyway. Itâs a passion I have and something I find just as important as my everyday life of being a college menâs coach [at UC Irvine].
âItâs tough not to be disappointed. You want to win; you want to go to the playoffs. I want to be on the plane going to Charleston. Obviously for me itâs a huge disappointment, but I think it is for everybody involved. You know, disappointed is a strong word. We worked hard and did the best we could, and thatâs just how it goes. I understand thereâs more to it than winning and losing, and thatâs hopefully what these guys have learned from me and moving forward.â
On the final night of their season, though, the Breakers shared the spotlight with Vandeweghe. She couldnât feel too bad about beating her hometown team after helping Boston clinch a playoff spot. If the Lobsters had lost, the New York Sportimes would have made the playoffs.
âI love World Team Tennis,â said Vandeweghe, ranked No. 99 in the world. âIt gives you the opportunity to have a lot of matches, where youâd have to be in Europe still playing to get matches right now. I just did my first European swing of Wimbledon and the French Open, and I was two months away from home. So, Iâm like, âIâm staying home and playing World Team Tennis.â Itâs a great venue, and I get to do things I donât normally get to do.â
The St. Louis Aces earned the top seed in Saturdayâs Western Conference Finals and will play against Sacramento.
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