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MASTER
STROKE: Kim led the team to a first-place finish
and claimed a singles title.
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Jeff
Blake
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ALEX KIM wasn't
thinking about an encore after beating the No. 1 and No. 2
tennis players in the NCAA team finals on consecutive days.
He had a national title to celebrate and a huge sigh of
relief to let out. But the junior managed to outdo himself,
cruising to the NCAA singles title in Athens, Ga., just days
after leading the Cardinal to its fifth team crown in six
years.
Kim, who played No. 4 singles on the Stanford team that
fell to Baylor in the third round in 1999, dominated the
team tournament from the No. 1 spot this year. He knocked
off top-ranked Jeff Morrison of Florida in the semifinals
and No. 2 Daniel Andersson of Virginia Commonwealth in the
finals, both in straight sets. He then blew through the
singles draw, besting sophomore teammate K.J. Hippensteel in
the semifinals before winning the title 6-1, 6-1 over
unseeded Kentucky player Carlos Drada. Kim's teammates were
equally impressive, dropping just one point in six
tournament matches en route to Stanford's record 17th men's
tennis title.
"This is one of the most unbelievable feelings. To come
down here and win the team and individual titles . . . is
something I never imagined," Kim said after the match. "It's
great to keep up the Stanford tradition."
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He's Out of
the Racket
HIS
TEAM FELL to Georgia in his final national
title match, but don't cry for Frank Brennan. He
already has enough rings for both hands. Brennan,
who has coached women's tennis at Stanford since
1979, retired at the end of this season to spend
more time with his family. The second-winningest
women's coach in NCAA tennis history, Brennan
compiled a 510-50 record on the Farm. His teams won
10 national titles and 13 Pac-10 crowns, and he was
named coach of the year four times by the
Intercollegiate Tennis Association. "These years at
Stanford have been the best 21 years of my life,"
Brennan says. Longtime assistant Lele Forood, '78,
will replace him.
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The Cardinal women, playing in Malibu, Calif., barely
missed a title of their own. But freshman Laura Granville
made sure they didn't go home empty-handed. The team rolled
to a 30-0 regular-season record before falling to Georgia in
the championship match. After Stanford took the Bulldogs to
the wire -- losing on a heartbreaking tie-breaker in the
final doubles match -- Granville faced sophomore teammate
Marissa Irvin in an all-Cardinal singles final. It was the
first time in tournament history that both finalists hailed
from the same school. Granville beat top-ranked Irvin 6-0,
6-4, becoming the ninth Stanford women's player to win the
ncaa singles title. Her win, coupled with Kim's, gave
Stanford its first-ever sweep of ncaa singles.
"Having Laura and Marissa advance to the championship
makes a strong statement about the quality of the women's
tennis program at Stanford," says women's head coach Frank
Brennan, who announced his retirement four days after the
match (see box). "Laura has been on a roll, and she played
with tremendous confidence and composure."
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