Corona del Mar doubles duo teams up well
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Chris Yemma
A team of two can be an army of one.
That is the case with Corona del Mar High’s doubles teammates Jill
Damion and Allie Walters.
Together they formed a tennis duo that made it all the way to the
semifinals of the CIF Southern Section individual girls tennis
championships. And together they came one set away from advancing to
the finals and probably winning the whole shebang.
But unfortunately for the teammates, they faced a tougher opponent
in the semis than they most likely would have faced in the finals.
The CdM girls fell to Amber Harper and Jen Kaswick of
Harvard-Westlake -- a doubles team that has been playing together the
entire season.
Damion and Walters have been playing together since the Pacific
Coast League finals about a month ago. Sea Kings’ Coach Brian Ricker
teamed them together then so they would have a better shot at making
it to the individual tennis championships.
Because the league is so strong in singles, Ricker said, Damion or
Walters probably wouldn’t have made it playing solo.
Laguna Beach’s Claire Reitsch was the singles league champion this
year, defeating Tesoro’s McCall Jones, who is considered one of the
top singles players in the nation. Jones, a freshman, and Reitsch, a
junior, are both expected to challenge for the league title next
season.
So for Damion and Walters to get a chance to play in the
individual championships, Ricker discussed it with them, and they all
decided it would be best to team together.
“They weren’t familiar with each other’s styles whatsoever,”
Ricker said. “Damion plays kind of a freelance style, so there was a
bigger learning curve for Walters to see what Damion would do.”
Ricker said Damion’s unpredictable style was one of the reasons
why the duo was so powerful.
But despite not playing together before and not knowing each
other’s styles, both have experience playing double tennis. That,
coupled with the fact they’re both skilled singles players, made for
a team that melded quickly.
It also made for a team that lost in a semifinal match that could
have gone either way. In the best-of-three match against the
Harvard-Westlake girls, Damion and Walters lost the first set, won
the second set convincingly and had a chance to go up
three-games-to-none in the final set, but missed the opportunity.
Prior to that loss, the CdM girls had won nine-consecutive matches
without a loss dating back to the league finals. And in those
matches, they hadn’t lost a single set.
“They’re just good,” Ricker said. “When you put two top singles
players like that together, the [doubles] team has more talent than
everybody else.”
Both Damion and Walters were top singles players for the Corona
del Mar team. Walters played doubles for a portion of the year when
she was injured, but played singles the other portion. Damion was the
team’s No. 1 singles player, finishing the season with a 45-10
overall record.
All of her losses were against players ranked higher than her, as
were some of her wins. She defeated Troy’s Alison Ramos, ranked in
the top 10 in the nation in 14s; defeated Harvard-Westlake’s Hilary
Barte, then ranked 34th in the nation; and defeated Christina Tan of
Dana Hills, who went on to be the South Coast League individual
champion.
But for Damion and Walters both, it was a little bit of a
disappointment to not win the doubles championship.
“I honestly thought we should have won the finals,” Walters said.
“We’re both very competitive players.
Said Damion: “I really wanted us to do well and I thought we could
win. I thought if we could have gotten to the finals we definitely
could have won.”
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