The
2014 Season started – Boucherville
The hard road back
After
all the pain I went through since the injury back in November, the new season
made finally its debut with the nice and cozy Boucherville tournament, played
again at the Sani Sport facilities.
Olivier Borlée |
The
hard and fast, synthetic rubber surface; is not among the most appreciated one at
least among the 40+ gang. Nevertheless a reasonable number of players showed
up. Among the most prominent: Olivier (Oly) Borlée and Carlos (Charlie) Montoto.
Both these guys have been #1, and indeed they are currently the contenders for
the top spot for this year as well.
For
me coming back from 9-10 weeks of not playing a match was hard. Only the Friday
prior to the tournament I did a few serves to check that the shoulder and the
lower trapezius would hold during a match.
As
I was seeded second, I had my first round bye. Something I particularly dislike
on these courts, as the more you play, the better you adapt to its speed, and
during the wintertime, Montreal is a hard place to book hard courts. Anyways,
you can’t have it all. My objective was to make a similar run to last year
where I stop in the semis, but I had many doubts as I said, I hadn’t played a
match since November and all the training I did was on clay… Not a very
promising scenario.
I
was set for a re-match with Shariff Cabarcas-Ramos. We’ve known each other for
almost 10 years now, but funny story, we only played couple of times. Officially
to this date, Shariff beat me at my debut in the AVTQ league in Côte St-Luc
2012. It was a close to 3 hours match under a blasting Sun. 7-5 in that last
set was the score. Conditions for this occasion could not be more different
though. For starters, he had a match under his belt from the previous round he'd
won in straight sets; he is also best suited for fast surfaces due to his
almost flat technique on both wings. Yet, I’m not the same player I was in
2012.
Shariff
started at full steam, not engaging in rallies and going for winners from the
first ball. I was able to have a decent start, and at one point even breaking
Shariff to take a 2-1 lead. But that was as far as I was able to go. Could not
keep the pace and paid the price. I was convinced I had more to offer into the
match; just had to try extending the points a little bit more. By doing that,
and with some help from my opponent that lost focus at the start of the second
set, I was able to force a last partial. By then, I was in command of the
action, Shariff tried to come back, but it was too late by then. 2-6, 6-3, 6-2
final score and making history…
Oussama
Azizi on the 35+ had an early exit, losing against Mike Hamryszak in straight
sets. Knowing both players, I would have assumed Oussama as the heavy favorite;
but the surface, an inspired opponent, and a bad night can call for the shower
sooner than expected. I’m sure “Roger”
will bounce back in the next challenges.
Making history
The
semifinals in Boucherville 2014 will mark a milestone in the AVTQ history. For
the first time, two Argentinians would face each other to secure at least a
runner-up. Carlos is a good friend that I met recently, but I been following
him for years. Still have a few magazines that show him among the top in the junior’s
rankings of Argentina. When we grew up older and started playing the local senior tour, Charlie was a top ten player and contender on each tournament. On my
end, I had to earn my way through the qualifications and after a lot of work
raised to top 30 in the country.
We
played some friendly tie-breaks since we met and was able to experience his
ball speed and great vision of the court. That is basically the difference
between a good player, and those top guys that run the show: Montoto, Borlée,
Blaettler, etc… Other guys may have more power, or even better stamina, but
these three are of a different class.
I
prepared my strategy to play Charlie and off I went. I was surprised to see
that I could keep the pace with him, and on certain passages, I had more power.
How was that possible? Carlos had a slow start, was able to hang there based on
his experience and good technique and waited with patience till the moment his
aching body would tell him to put down the foot. We had nice exchanges and
good points. But there is a gap among us, and still today he’s the
better man. I was still happy despite losing 6-3, 6-2. When I reviewed the
stats, Charlie made 55% of the points (to my 45%); he won 15 extra points
throughout the match, almost 1 extra point per game in average. May not sounds as
much, but it is a hefty difference.
Patrick Frappier |
From the
other side of the draw, Olivier (Oly) Borlée was advancing on skates. The guy
is super smooth, top 50 in the Rogers Open Ranking, 11 in Québec Open, top 3
among the vets, and freaking top 25 in the World in +40s!! And that is only for
singles… Add up his doubles and you have a Terminator T-4000. He dismissed all
his adversaries quickly, and without mercy. Oly was all business. In the semis
he beat the revelation of the tournament, Patrick Frappier.
Pat knew Borlée from
last years’ Easter Canadian Championships played at CDL, but this time the
surface played a little bit more in his favor as he has a first serve that
delivers some sting. Still far to become a real menace for the top seeded,
Patrick earned a few more games this time, as he went down 6-1,6-2. It was a great
effort for the first-time semifinalist.
And
we got the main course for the finals, the current champion (Montoto) defending
his crown against an ambitious opponent that is in the mission for #1 (Borlée)
I
thought that Charlie and I had had great one-hand backhand exchanges… but what
these guys gave in the final was a real concerto. Top-spin, slice, side-spin,
volleys, great services, drops… you name it. Oly started as an Indy car going
for the pole. Charlie’s pride answered on the second set coming
back strong and making a statement: “I will die out there… but I’ll give it
all” Oly put more pressure in his turbo and got the pole position and best of the third set.
Final score: 6-1, 4-6, 6-2 for Borlée. Great match, to play, fantastic to watch
from the sidelines.
The
new rankings were published a few days after the tourney, and showed that
Borlée took the #2 spot and breathing down Alex Blaettler's neck, Felipe Heck down to #3, I got back one spot to #5, and Charlie
is still at #8. For a full listing of the rankings, you can visit http://www.tennis-veterans-quebec.com/classement/
The doubles adventure
This
year I’ve decided to put more emphasis on the singles rather than doubles,
so I told my usual partner, Oussama Azizi, to get a new player to match him. My
injuries last year could not give us enough regularity that we needed as a team
to play and practice. Oussama found a great player, Tarik El-Akhbari, and soon
they will be winning matches and sooner than later, tournaments. In
Boucherville in particular, Oussama and Tarik had bad luck, they got the first
seeded team in the first round. Not much for the analysis, rather than the
longer the match went, the better they started interacting. Good stuff for the
future.
On
my end, I was extremely lucky to be pared with Yohan Botbol. A true doubles
dynamo. I know him well as he kicked my butt twice in this specialty in 2013. So
I was very happy to have him for once, on this side of the net.
Due
to the small number of players for the doubles, Lucien Desmarais decided to
join the 35+ to 45+ groups together, making a nice field. With Rousseau /
Simard as the first seeded of the tournament, and a bunch of good players
spread out, it looked more a mine field than a draw if you ask me.
Our
first match was against Richard Lacombe / Mike Hamryszak. We got an excellent start
with good serve and volley action, and decent returns. First set we got our break and
went on to win 6-3, but on the second we lost focus and found ourselves in a
tough situation at 2-5 and our serve. Slowly but surely we climbed back to tie
the set at 5-all and stormed away with Yohan playing like Michael Llodra! A
feast at the net. Great win, fantastic comeback.
Next
match was against Scott Hill (lefty) / Rodrigo Cordova. Rodrigo is a Chilean player
with a very classic style of play, one-hand backhand, plenty of top spin, nice
serve and tremendous speed. Rodrigo is a former professional player, still
playing in the open group in Québec. Scott
on his end possesses a great first serve that he explodes to the limit and is a
smart player that volleys very well. We simply played the best we could,
considering the almost non-existent experience as a team. Yohan was sublime in his interventions at the net;
I returned pretty well from both sides, was solid with my serve, and did not
make mistakes at the net. The match was of great quality; Scott was slightly
slower than usual. Not a surprise as he had to battle the previous days in the
singles draw of 45+ (made it to semis) on some long grueling matches. Rodrigo
was a little off with his serve and had a couple of situations that were simple
bad luck. We showed control of the situation since we got our first break and
kept the foot down for a 6-3, 6-2 win.
The
semifinal versus the top seeded team was something else. Danny Rousseau is a
guy that probably serves as hard as a good professional player. My guess is
that the first serve is in the orbit of the 190/200 clicks. You need to keep it
cool to face a guy like this on a rubber surface. This is his turf, definitely.
I
was happy to see that despite Danny winning his serve games with some ease, we
were able to hang in until the very end. The only break in the first set came
in the 9th game. We lost Yohan serve for the first time in the
tournament, by just a couple of balls. The second set was a different story.
They got more relaxed and varied more the points, there we got a little mixed
up and confused for the lack of practice as a team. We went down 6-4, 6-2 but I
was very pleased with our promising form. It turned out to be in fact the match
for the tournament, as the runner-up team, did not showed up for the final…
Ahhh… maybe next time!
What
is the pipeline?
The
league will go to Québec city, but this is a tournament that is not very
popular among the players from Montréal, so won’t be there again this year. Toronto seemed to
be a good challenge, and was eager to go, but a late unfortunate injury on my
arm is bothering me enough to seriously consider not playing. I’ve registered,
but this upcoming weekend is going to be the final test to make the call. If
not playing that one, then I will have to wait until April for Carrefour
Multisport.
See
you in the hunt.
Yours,
Iron
Gaucho
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