Published by the Students of Johns Hopkins since 1896
May 6, 2024

Tennis turns tables on Haverford, 4-3

By Andy Lee | April 17, 2003

This past week, the Hopkins Men's Tennis team bounced back
from its disappointing loss to Muhlenburg by defeating Haverford 4-3.
Behind the strong play of senior Kevin Alford, freshmen Krisna Potarazu
and freshman Michael Kelly-Sell, the Jays were able to topple the
Haverford Fords in Pennsylvania.

The men's team got off to a quick start, taking two of the three doubles
matches. Alford and sophomore Justin Belisario had a little trouble in
the No. 1 doubles match, but were able to pull through, winning 8-6.
Though junior Justin Chan and freshman Krishna Potarazu fell 8-6 in the
No. 2 doubles, senior Grant Roch and Michael Kelly-Sell finished
strong, winning the match 8-2 and the doubles point for Hopkins.

The doubles matches ended up making the difference for the Jays as the
Fords were able to split the six single matches. They defeated No. 2
Chan 6-1 6-0 and needed three sets to beat No.3 Belisario 3-6 6-3 6-4
and No.4 Roch 4-6 6-4 7-6 (3).

Fortunately, Alford anchored the singles by winning the No. 1 singles
7-6 (7), 7-6 (1). Potarazu and Kelly-Sell picked up the rest of the
slack, easily handling their opponents, with Potarazu winning the No. 4
singles 6-2 6-2 and No. 6 singles Kelly-Sell dominating his opponent
6-0 6-0.

The Jays were able to avenge last year's loss to the Fords. Ironically,
the score was reversed last year, with Haverford winning 4-3. The
singles split and the doubles again made the difference.

Said Belasario, "[Haverford] was really tough, we lost last year. This
year, it came down to the last couple matches, making it pretty
dramatic." Adding, "It was a big win for us. Our freshmen really
stepped it up as they have this whole year."

The consistently strong play of the freshmen have greatly helped the
Blue Jays to their current standing of 5-4 overall and 4-2 in the
conference.

Meanwhile, the women split their two games this past week, suffering
defeat at the hands of Swarthmore and winning their matchup against
Haverford

The powerful Swarthmore team swept Hopkins, winning every single match.
No.1 sophomore Vandna Jerath lost 7-6 (5), 6-1, while Michelle Liang
lost at No.2 6-2, 6-3. Junior Cara Loeys was defeated 6-0, 6-1 at No.3.

Even the usually undefeatable freshman Amanda Leese was downed 6-1, 1-6,
7-5 at No.4. At No.5, junior Liz Crowe was topped 6-2, 6-1 and freshman
Pauline Pelletier fell 6-0, 7-5 at No. 6.

The doubles fared no better, dropping all three matches.

Fortunately, the women had better luck against Haverford, beating them
5-4. Like men, the women took two of the three doubles matches and
split the six singles matches.

In doubles, Jerath and freshman Jill Seidman downed their opponents 8-2
for No.2 doubles, while Liz Crowe and Amanda Leese teamed up as the No.
3 duo to win 8-3. Haverford was able to steal one, as they defeated
Loeys and sophomore Michelle Liang 8-4 in the No. 1 doubles.

On the singles side, Vandna Jerath, Amanda Leese, and Pauline Pelletier
all won, at the one, four and six seeds, respectively. Jerath won her
match, 7-5, while Leese defeated her opponent 6-4, 7-6 (2). Pelletier
easily handled her opponent 6-2, 6-2.

The Fords didn't concede, however, as they took the rest of the singles,
defeating No. 2 Liang, No. 3 Loeys, and No. 5 Crowe. Liang was bested
6-3, 7-6 (4), while Loeys lost 7-6 (3), 7-5. Liz Crowe put forth a
valiant effort, but was outlasted by her opponent, 7-5, 3-6, 10-4.

At the end of it all, the women are 5-5 overall with a record of 5-2 in the Centennial Conference.

Although this year has been a bit of a disappointment, it is a
rebuilding year. And with the strong play of freshmen such as Leese
for the women, and Potarazu and Kelly-Sell for the men, we can expect a
strong tennis program for at least the next three years.

Continued on Page A10

By Jamie Spangler

The Johns Hopkins News-Letter

After surprisingly losing both games of a doubleheader to
Franklin & Marshall last Saturday afternoon in Pennsylvania, the
Johns Hopkins Baseball team rebounded with decisive victories on both
Monday and Tuesday against Centennial Conference opponents.

As a result, the Blue Jays now sport a 19-4 overall record and a 7-2
mark in conference play. With a 15-3 victory over first-place McDaniel
in Westminster, Maryland on Tuesday afternoon, Hopkins is now within
one game of first place in the conference. Another win against the
Green Terror on Friday would bring the Blue Jays into a tie for the top
slot.

"We still feel pretty confident about winning conference," noted senior
starting pitcher and co-captain Jeremy Brown. "It's the nature of the
game that you're going to lose sometimes, but the best team usually
comes out on top."

The Blue Jays had an offensive explosion against McDaniel. They cruised
to a 12-run victory, compliments of a 21-hit outburst and dominant
pitching. Hopkins has now scored ten or more runs in nearly half of its
contests this year and now averages 10.2 runs per game in '03.

Another impressive pitching performance from Hopkins' staff lowered the
team ERA to 3.54. The win allowed the Jays to breathe a sigh of relief
after uncharacteristically dropping two in a row last Saturday to
F&M. Hopkins appears to be back on track, and just in time. The
Jays are heading into a stretch of eight games, six of which are
against conference opponents, in the next seven days.

The Blue Jays started out slowly, allowing the McDaniel to grab a 2-0
lead after two innings. However, in the top of the third, the offense
produced seven runs on five hits and two errors. Senior outfielder and
co-captain Joe Urban commenced the rally with a single, while junior
catcher Doug Hitchner then drew a walk and scored after senior
outfielder Jay Cieri smashed a two-run triple.

Sophomore second baseman Mike Spiciarich reached safely on an error by
McDaniel's shortstop, bringing home Cieri. Sophomore outfielder Paul
Winterling followed up with his team-best tenth home run of the season.
Junior outfielder Craig Cetta kept the inning alive with a double and
was along for the ride on sophomore first baseman Mike Durgala's
two-run home run.

Hopkins would increase its lead to 8-2 in the subsequent inning,
courtesy of an RBI double from freshman shortstop Corey Gleason.
McDaniel added a run in the bottom of the sixth, but Hopkins responded
with three runs in the top of the seventh to maintain a commanding
lead.

Durgala drove in two of three runs with a double and then scored himself
on a single by Urban. Cetta drove in junior shortstop Tim Casale with a
single in the top of the eighth inning and Durgala forced in a run
after getting hit by the pitch in the same half-inning. Hopkins
finished off the scoring in the top of the ninth inning, tallying up
two more runs on hits by junior catcher Bryan Eberle, sophomore
outfielder Eric Nigro, and freshman outfielder Gary Rosenberg.

Junior Sven Stafford earned the victory, pitching six strong innings and
giving up just three runs (two earned). The relief pitching of Matt
Righter was just as dominant, as he silenced McDaniel's offense for the
final three innings to seal a 15-3 victory for the Blue Jays.

This win came on the heels of Hopkins' record-setting 32-run outburst on
Monday, April 13 against Washington College. Hopkins belted eight home
runs on the day, three of which came off the red-hot bat of Winterling.
Washington only brought home two runs.

Included in Winterling's Ruthian performance were two grand slams,
making him just the ninth player in NCAA Division III history to hit a
pair of grand slams in a single game. Winterling also knocked in eleven
runs, one short of the Centennial Conference record. Though Winterling
stole the show, the rest of the Blue Jays excelled at the plate. 15
different players got at least one hit and 13 different Blue Jays
recorded at least one RBI.

Junior pitcher Russell Berger held Washington College to two runs in six
innings to improve his record to 4-0 on the season. Sophomore Jason
Hochfelder and junior Adam Josephart combined for three scoreless
innings of relief to seal the 32-2 victory for Hopkins.

"I think after suffering such tough losses last weekend, it was
important for us to come back strong against Washington," remarked
Brown, who took the loss in the first game of the doubleheader against
the Diplomats last Saturday, despite surrendering just two runs in six
innings of work.

The Blue Jays' offense could not string together any rallies in the 2-1
loss. Franklin & Marshall scored first in the bottom of the second
inning, but Hopkins tied the score in the top of the sixth inning with
an RBI single from Durgala. Nevertheless, Franklin & Marshall
regained the lead in the bottom of the inning on a wild pitch and held
on in the top of the seventh to attain the victory.

The Blue Jays' bats struggled again in the second game, and they lost by
the same score. Although they came out aggressively, putting multiple
players on base in the opening inning, Hopkins managed to score only
one run. This would be the extent of the Blue Jays' scoring and the
Diplomats scored the winning run in the bottom of the seventh inning,
handing sophomore Ryan McConnell his first loss of the year. McConnell
pitched six-and-one-third innings, allowing just two runs, but could
not get any run support from his teammates.

One main reason for the Blue Jays' struggles was the one-week period of
inactivity. All games were scratched from the schedule because of
inclement weather.

"Basically, it was just tough because we hadn't played in a week due to
the rain. We just couldn't hit the ball," stated Hitchner. "Our
pitchers pitched well. We simply beat ourselves."

Brown felt that the team had been a bit too confident going into the
games and hoped that these losses would serve as a reminder to the Blue
Jays to take every game seriously.

"Other teams go into games against us thinking it is their biggest game
of the year and get excited for it," he said. "We go into the games
assuming that we will win and we don't really get excited when we do.
We need to reevaluate our approach to the Centennial Conference. We
thought we had the title in a lockbox, but on any given day, we could
lose our home-field advantage or even our playoff spot if we don't play
our best."

Hopkins dropped five slots in the rankings to No. 11 after its two
losses on Saturday, but the team recovered quickly with the big wins
over Washington and McDaniel.

Hopkins returns to the diamond on Friday at 3 p.m., as they host
McDaniel. The Blue Jays then head to Haverford for a conference
doubleheader on Saturday. They wrap up their week with a doubleheader
away at Ursinus and a non-conference opponent, Gwynedd Mercy, on
Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. in Baltimore.

Continued on Page A11

Nathan Bates/File Photo

Junior catcher Doug Hitchner takes a swing as the Blue Jays look to improve their 7-2 conference record.

Liz Steinberg/news-letter

Sophomore midfielder Benson Erwin scrambles for the ball while
sophomore attacker Peter LeSueur and senior defender Michael Peyser
look on.

In a low scoring affair, the No. 1 Blue Jays topped the Terrapins with an overtime goal

Tennis turns tables on Haverford, 4-3

Saturday

Men's Lacrosse vs. Navy 1 p.m. at Homewood Field

Michael
Jordan played his final NBA game last night. It marks the third time
that the legendary player has retired from professional basketball.


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