Athlete of the Week: Brittany Reitz -- Mutual feelings
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Richard Dunn
With home schooling, private tutors and tennis instruction, along
with the usual travel on the Southern California Tennis Association
junior circuit, Brittany Reitz was a one-girl band.
Now, she’s jamming with an entire orchestra.
“I’d always heard about high school tennis in general and it always
appealed to me. I’d always wanted to participate on a team,” said Reitz,
a junior who played No. 2 singles this season for Corona del Mar, which
captured the CIF Southern Section Division IV championship last week.
Last year, the Newport Coast resident played three nonleague matches
for Mater Dei, but lasted only 28 days at the Santa Ana-based parochial
school and even less time on the tennis team.
Things didn’t mix at Mater Dei, so Reitz, who was home schooled during
eighth and ninth grades, transferred to St. Margaret’s in San Juan
Capistrano. Not to play tennis, but for academics.
Reitz was comfortable at the private St. Margaret’s, where she
attended fifth through seventh grades. But a 30-minute drive each way to
daily tennis practice was too grueling, so Reitz finally decided to
transfer to CdM, which was more than happy to accommodate the highly
touted junior on its team.
But CIF section officials balked and forced Reitz to sit out until
Oct. 16, before giving her permission to play on Coach Andy Stewart’s
squad, ranked No. 1 wire-to-wire in Orange County and CIF Division IV in
2000.
“Would we have won CIF without (Reitz)? I don’t know. But she lost
only one match in the CIF playoffs,” said Stewart, whose team already had
a standout in sophomore Anne Yelsey, before Reitz joined the team.
Reitz posted a 34-5 record this season, including three losses by
default when she came down with bronchitis against University.
Her only other setbacks were against San Marino’s Luana Magnani and
CdM teammate Yelsey for the Pacific Coast League singles title Nov. 2,
with Yelsey winning a riveting decision, 3-6, 6-1, 6-0, in 2:15 and one
game in the second set featuring 13 deuces.
Reitz, still alive in the CIF individual singles championships
Thursday and Friday at the Claremont Club, provided CdM with an
incredible one-two punch at first and second singles in the second half
of the season.
“With Brittany and Anne, I feel pretty solid in singles, going up
against any team in Southern California,” said Stewart, whose program was
relegated to Division IV this year, after decades in the largest (or
seemingly toughest) division in the section, because section officials
prohibited move-ups in sports with enrollment-based playoffs.
Reitz, meanwhile, had her own issues this year.
“I transferred from Mater Dei to St. Margaret’s last year strictly for
academics and not related to tennis, but they (CIF officials) viewed it
differently,” she said. “They didn’t want people changing from school to
school, like someone wanting to go to a better football team or whatever.
I think they used me as a scapegoat. I thought it was unfair (to be
ineligible until Oct. 16).
“I wanted to play tennis for Corona del Mar and they prevented me from
doing that the first half of the season.”
Reitz, whose goals include playing tennis at a top college and one day
running her own corporation, is polished on the court and in the
classroom.
But she isn’t one of those child protege stories, where youngsters are
born with rackets in hand and pro tour on the agenda.
No, Reitz instead was a swimmer and soccer player. Then, one day, her
parents stuck a tennis racket in her hand at age 9 and she fell in love.
Ojai-based Skip Redondo was Reitz’s first private coach. She still
trains with Redondo, but also is coached by Scott Davis of Newport Beach
Tennis Club. Reitz’s introduction to tennis came under former junior
director Sam Olson at the Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club.
Now, after sweeping her three sets in the CIF Division IV finals
against Calabasas last week at the Claremont Club, 6-0, 6-1, 6-0, Reitz
has been able to experience the zenith of team play.
“I’m just glad I could be able to go out and help Corona del Mar High
School any way I could,” said Reitz, the Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week.
“We have some great players on the team. There isn’t any doubt in
anybody’s mind that we could play against the top competition in any
division. I really love the girls on the team and it’s just a privilege
to play for Corona del Mar High School.”
At this point, with set and match in hand, the feelings are mutual.
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