Sooners Win (Photo By Ty Russell – SoonerSports) |
The Oklahoma/Georgia match was originally scheduled to start at 4 p.m. central time but due to periodic showers it was put on hold while Virginia and Cal went indoors with a 5:25 p.m. central start. The reason Virginia and Cal couldn’t start until 5:25 was because the second women’s semifinal didn’t finish until 4:20 and neither Virginia or Cal had been able to hit since the morning so they needed an hour to get warmed up. Since Virginia was the highest remaining seed they were given the earlier start time which meant Oklahoma and Georgia had the chance to go outdoors if it dried up. The official starting time of 7 p.m. wasn’t announced until close to 6 p.m. so a lot of the local OU fans probably didn’t get the memo because the crowds weren’t anywhere near what I thought they would be. Coincidentally the paid attendance of 1197 was actually the best this week but many of those fans came for the Oklahoma State women’s match at 10 a.m. and were long gone by the time the men’s matches started.
Oklahoma didn’t have nearly the home court advantage that I thought it would plus Georgia’s play early on in doubles kept most of the noise at bay. Georgia’s Wayne Montgomery and Emil Reinberg broke the Austin Siegel serve to start the match at No. 3 and then Reinberg held on the deciding point for 2-0.
Georgia’s Ben Wagland and Austin Smith went up 15-40 on Andrew Harris’s opening service game at No. 1 but Harris was able to battle back and hold for 1-0. After that opening game, neither team would get get much traction on the others service return with very few service games even reaching 40-30.
Break opportunities at No. 2 doubles were few and far between as well with each player holding serve pretty easily until OU’s Alex Ghilea faced a pair of break points at 3-3, 30-40. Ghilea was able to get the hold for 4-3 with a pair of service winners.
Meanwhile back at No. 3, Georgia had maintained its break advantage and led 4-2 but Biro would hold from 40-15 for 3-4 and then Montgomery would find himself in a 15-40 hole. Montgomery and Reinberg got it to the deciding point but OU would get the break when they attacked the net and put one down at Reinberg’s feet which he was unable to scoop up. Siegel would get a quick hold for 5-4 and all of a sudden Reinberg was serving to stay in the match.
While Georgia’s lead at No. 3 had evaporated the Bulldogs were also in some trouble at No. 2 with Paul Oosterbaan serving at 4-5, 30-30. OU’s Alex Ghilea hit a forehand that hit the net cord and kicked up over the head of the 6′ 7″ Oosterbaan and landed perfectly on the back line for a winner which gave OU a pair of match points. Oosterbaan fought off the first match point but he couldn’t fight off the second after Spencer Papa drilled a return at his feet and OU had the 6-4 win.
Papa/Ghilea break Oosterbaan on the 40/40 point and @OU_MTennis wins 6-4 on 2 pic.twitter.com/EXKSaCIK1eBobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 24, 2016
Less than 45 seconds later the doubles point would be over because after falling behind 15-40, Emil Reinberg would double fault at 30-40 to give OU the 6-4 win.
Reinberg double faults from 30/40 and @OU_MTennis wins 6-4 at #3 pic.twitter.com/2rDAfa1Er6Bobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 24, 2016
After the way Georgia started off I really thought they were going to take the doubles point because they seemingly had the upper hand the majority of the time but they just couldn’t take advantage of the opportunities that were presented to them. Oklahoma’s guys didn’t get a ton of break opportunities but they made sure to convert the few that they got and ultimately that was the difference.
This was the third match in a row that Oklahoma had won the doubles point so that had to be a confidence booster for them knowing they had the extra point in the bank.
Once singles got underway the break point opportunities that were few and far between in doubles were plentiful in singles. Oklahoma’s Andrew Harris jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead on Austin Smith at No. 1 while Axel Alvarez went up 3-1 against Wayne Montgomery at No. 2. Georgia’s Paul Oosterbaan broke Spencer Papa for a 3-2 at No. 3 while Oklahoma’s Florin Bragusi and Andre Biro went up 4-2 on Jan Zielinski and Nick Wood.
Andrew Harris’s 2-0 lead at No. 1 quickly evaporated as Austin Smith won the next eight games to take the opening set 6-2 and go up a break at 2-0 in the second. Harris would finally stop the streak by breaking Smith for 1-2 but Smith would break back and then hold for 4-1. Smith would get broke serving for the match up 5-3 but he’d break Harris from 30-40, on a double fault, to close it out 6-2, 6-4. Coincidently Harris also double faulted the first set away as well.
WATCH: @asmith7504 delivers a big win for the Bulldogs at No. 1. We are tied at 1-1. #GoDawgs #NCAATennis pic.twitter.com/KuvchawMLeGeorgia Tennis (@UGAtennis) May 24, 2016
Georgia’s Paul Oosterbaan would put the Bulldogs ahead 2-1 after he got past Spencer Papa at No. 3. Ooosterbaan served extremely well all night long and after going up that break at 3-2 in the first he’d hold to take the opening set 6-4. Oosterbaan would break Papa’s 5-5 service game in the second set and then he’d serve it out from 40-15 to win 6-4, 7-5. Of the 12 guys playing singles Oosterbaan was the only one not to get broke all night long.
Someone I missed this one too – here was Oosterbaan serving it out to beat Papa. pic.twitter.com/5dggbcOnaHBobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 24, 2016
So Georgia had it’s first lead of the night but it still needed to find two more courts if it was going to win the match.
One of the courts that Georgia was banking on was at No. 6 as senior Nick Wood was battling OU freshman Andre Biro. Biro won the deciding match against UCLA in the quarterfinals and it looked like that added confidence was giving him a boost because he played from ahead virtually the entire night. Biro broke Wood to go up 4-2 in the opening set but Wood broke back on the deciding point to make it 3-4. It would stay on serve until the tiebreak though Biro had to hold on the deciding point for 6-5 while Wood fought off two set points to hold on the deciding point for 6-6. Wood was up 5-3* in the tiebreak but Biro won the last four points to take the opening set 7-6(5). Biro broke Wood to go up 3-2 in the second but Wood broke back for 3-3. Biro would break again for 4-3 but once again Wood broke back for 4-4. After consecutive holds Biro would break Wood to go up 6-5 and then he’d serve it out to win it 7-6(5), 7-5.
MATCH TIED! Biro wins 7-6, 7-5! 2-all! #NCAATennis #Sooners
LIVE: https://t.co/G5VdEW3hEU pic.twitter.com/CF6lx69Mo8Oklahoma Tennis (@OU_MTennis) May 24, 2016
The team match was now tied at 2-2 but it looked like Oklahoma was going to close it out any minute because Axel Alvarez was serving for the match at No. 2 up 5-4 in the third while Florin Bragusi was receiving up 5-2 in the third at No. 5.
Bragusi got off to a quick start in his match at No. 5 against Georgia freshman Jan Zielinski by going up an early break at 4-2 and he’d break Zielinski again to take the opening set 6-2. Zielinski went up a break at 3-2 in the second but Bragusi would break back and hold for 4-3. Zielinski would then hold, break, and hold again to send the match to a third set. Bragusi quickly turned it around and won the opening three games of the third set including a hold on the deciding point for 3-0. Zielinski held for 1-3 and then he had a break point on the deciding point but Bragusi fought it off to May 24, 2016
“>hold for 4-1. Zielinski held for 2-4 and then once again he’d have a break point on the deciding point but Bragusi hit a service winner to go up 5-2. Bragusi jumped out to a 15-40 lead on Zielinski’s serve and would break to win it by showing a tremendous of hustle – watch the clip below.
Here was Bragusi’s match point from earlier pic.twitter.com/blGXkceJm0Bobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 24, 2016
Bragusi’s win put OU ahead 3-2 but Georgia wasn’t done yet because Wayne Montgomery would break Axel Alvarez from 15-40 to even it at 5-5. Montgomery held for 6-5 and then he’d break Alvarez at love to win it 1-6, 6-2, 7-5.
WATCH: Wayne Montgomery evens the match at 3-3. It’s all down to Walker Duncan at Court No. 4. pic.twitter.com/uonGGifcJLGeorgia Tennis (@UGAtennis) May 24, 2016
With the match tied at 3-3 it’d come to a third set at No. 4 between Oklahoma junior Alex “The Machine” Ghilea and Georgia freshman Walker Duncan. Ghilea and Duncan played an epic first set that took an hour and eight minutes to complete with Duncan taking it 10-8 in the tiebreak. Ghilea actually served for the first set up 5-4 and 6-5 but Duncan broke back on both occasions. Ghilea broke Duncan on the deciding point to go up 3-1 in the second but Duncan broke back on the deciding point and then held for 3-3. Ghilea would hold, break, and hold again to take the second set 6-3.
Ghilea would break Duncan to open the third set and then he’d hold for 2-0. Duncan went up 40-0 on his 0-2 service game but it took a forehand winner on the deciding point to get the hold for 1-2.
Duncan was up 40-0 and holds from 40/40 – Ghilea will serve 2-1 pic.twitter.com/yBb35VTEiqBobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 24, 2016
Ghilea held from 40-15 for 3-1 and then he’d break Duncan from 15-40 with a laser forehand that he hit on the run.
Ghilea breaks for 4-1 pic.twitter.com/8cZZSfh5hOBobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 24, 2016
Ghilea would hold on the deciding point for 5-1 after hitting a big forehand and then following it up with a volley winner at the net.
Bobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 24, 2016
Duncan would hold from 40-15 for 2-5 but Ghilea would serve it out from 40-30 to sent Oklahoma back to the NCAA Championship match for the third year in a row. The first clip is mine, the second is OUs, and the third is the NCAAs (best one).
Alex Ghilea clinches the win for Oklahoma pic.twitter.com/bAYWAuegnHBobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 24, 2016
Oklahoma Tennis (@OU_MTennis) May 24, 2016
NCAA Tennis (@NCAATennis) May 24, 2016
This was a fantastic 3 hour and 12 minute thriller that teetered back and forth. There was a good 15-20 minute period where Georgia really seemed to be taking over because they had just got wins on 1 and 3 plus Montgomery and Zielinski had earned splits on 2 and 5. Plus at that time Duncan was still up a set at 3 and Wood had close to forcing a third set at 6. Oklahoma was able to ride it out and the Machine was able to use his big-match experience to stay calm and bring it home.
I know someone of you aren’t big twitter users but if you want to check out a slew of video clips from the match you can go back through my timeline to watch them. I linked several here but there were probably about 75 that I didn’t.
Order of Finish: 1, 3, 6, 2, 5, 4
to go up a break in the second, and Florin (Bragusi) was up a break in the third. You look, and that’s when Alex (Ghilea) hadn’t won the second set yet. It looks good, and you’re hoping to close it out so it doesn’t come down to that. But we’ve seen all these matches before, and to close out three matches against three very good Georgia players is a big ask. That’s what I told Alex. I said you have to dig in here, and there’s a very good chance that you’re going to be the guy here. That’s what he wants. He loves that. Florin and Alex, our two remains, have won probably more clinching matches than anyone in OU history. Either one of them out on the court is who we want to have out there. Alex loves that position, as you can see. He did a good job of taking control of that third set early.
it’s been a huge boost to play. We’ve spent a lot of time, and Florin can attest to it, in the last three or four weeks just focusing on doubles, and not knowing if that’s enough time or not to really see a big improvement, and it’s been I’m proud of the guys to be able to come on this stage and be able to start executing a lot of different things. We just decided we had to do something different, because what we were doing wasn’t working.
Georgia Head Coach Manuel Diaz
While the nightcap was a barnburner the early match was a relative walk in the park for the top-seed Virginia. Cal really needed to get off to a quick start to have any chance but Virginia was able to jump on them in doubles at both No. 2 and No. 3.
Collin Altamirano and J.C. Aragone broke Mads Engsted on the deciding point to go up 3-2 and then they’d break J.T. Nishimura on another deciding point to go up 5-2. Altamirano would serve it out from 40-30 to win it 6-2.
6-2 UVA on 3 pic.twitter.com/lkJ4n9plpuBobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 23, 2016
Thai-Son Kwiatkowski and Mac Styslinger broke Oskar Wikberg from 15-40 to go up 4-2 and then Styslinger would hold for 5-2. Goransson held for 3-5 and then Kwiatkowski held on the deciding point to give Virginia the 6-3 win and early 1-0 lead in the match (video clarity wasn’t the best – sorry about that I needed to be about 25 feet closer to get a better shot).
Kwiatkowski holds on the 40/40 point to win 6-3 on 2 – Virginia leads 1-0 pic.twitter.com/TNccAtysLqBobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 23, 2016
The doubles point took 28 minutes and after a 10 minute break singles would get underway. Virginia came out of the shoot pretty quickly and went up breaks on five of six courts.
Thai-Son Kwiatkowski would only need 48 minutes to roll over Billy Griffith 6-3, 6-0 at No. 4. Kwiatkowski jumped out to a 4-1 lead in the opening set then made that lead hold up the rest of the way.
Virginia now up 2-0 – Kwiatkowski def. Griffith 6-3, 6-0 pic.twitter.com/Ja4Cx4ar0JBobby Knight (@College10s2day) May 23, 2016
J.C. Aragone needed just an hour and two minutes to defeat Oskar Wikberg 6-3, 6-4 at No. 5 and then two minutes later Henrik Wiersholm would close out Mads Engsted 6-3, 6-4 at No. 6. All said and done the match last 1 hour and 42 minutes.
#1 Virginia (29-4) def. #13 California (21-7), 4-0
Order of Finish: 3, 5, 6
“Congratulations to Cal-Berkeley on a tremendous season. Making a run to the Final Four is a great accomplishment. I’m sure they would have liked to have gone further, but they fought hard today. I was just pleased with how well we played throughout the entire match.
On having played in last year’s championship match and how that will help in tomorrow’s match…
“I think that just having the experience from being in the finals last year and coming out on top helps. We have always had a target on our back all year long, and embracing that is something we have gotten comfortable with. You can never really put it into words, but we are just grateful to be in this position. We are all really excited.
California Head Coach Peter Wright
It definitely came down to doubles. I think Alvarez let his slip away yet Montgomery battled and battled. Montgomery showed that good things happen when you battle.<br /><br />Give OU's bottom of the lineup credit in that they battled like Montgomery.
It felt like a kick to the gut – it's definitely easier to write about a great win for your school than a loss but it's not like they gave it away. It would have been really bad had they had a big lead and let it slip but several OU's guys stepped up and seized the moment. I really felt if Georgia took the doubles point they had it. <br />
Bobby, how big of a heartbreaker was that for the Georgia fan side of you? Also big props to you for taking your fandom out of the recaps
Yeah I agree. Virginia did not have a great regular season. Lost to UNC twice, were not conference champions and hell lost to Illinois for God's sake. Yet somehow thanks to the kooky formulas got to be #1 and then got the easiest path possible to the final where they get to face a dead tired Oklahoma team?
If Virginia wins, it would have had to beat the #16, 9, 13, and 11 seeds. Has there ever been an easier road to the championship, at least according to seeding numbers? This is not to discredit Virginia, which can only play the teams presented to them, but it does raise questions about the seeding process, and how Virginia got seeded #1 again. And I know it will have to beat the (very tired) team that beat UCLA and Georgia, and the overachieving team that beat TCU, but those three teams would have probably done just as well if they had the same path as Virginia. Just sayin. Maybe the tennis gods are making it up to Virginia for all those heartbreaking losses in the past NCAAs when they were the favorites.
"The sky is falling, the sky is falling" after all of the panic about no-ad. It's still UVA-OKL