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FRIENDLY COMPETITION: Burdette
and Barnes faced teammates in the finals.
Gonzalesphoto.com |
The women’s tennis team needs more
space.
“We don’t have room for it in our trophy case,” head
coach Lele Forood says about the hefty championship award her
team brought home in May, when it won the NCAA team title.
For the fourth time in five years.
Until the downstairs trophy case can be expanded, the new
hardware will reside in the upstairs lounge of the tennis
complex—a reminder of another perfect season (27-0).
The Cardinal beat 11th-seeded Texas 4-0 at the University of
Georgia to earn its 14th NCAA title.
Co-captains Alice Barnes, who was named most outstanding
player of the tournament, and Erin Burdette brought home trophies
of their own, as winners of the NCAA doubles championship.
Gabriela Lastra and Lauren Kalvaria captured the doubles
title as seniors in 2002 for the Cardinal, but you have to
go back to 1990 to find the kind of all-Stanford scenario Barnes, ’06,
and Burdette, ’05, faced in the finals on May 28: they
looked across the net and saw teammates and fellow All-Americans
Amber Liu, ’06, and Anne Yelsey, ’07.
“They’d won a team championship together five
days before, and it was very hard going into the match,” says
Forood, ’78. “It was a big title on the line, and
they all wanted to win desperately.”
The moment the match-up became clear, Forood says, she “stopped
talking to everybody about everything.” The
four players quietly sorted out who would wear what combination
of red and white, and when the match finally got underway,
there were none of the typical fired-up, encouraging yells
between partners. The crowd also was subdued, applauding
good points and seemingly not wanting to take sides.
On the court, Burdette says, she and Barnes tried to focus
on their game: “We had opponents, but we tried not to
think about that part.” When the final point was played
and the unseeded duo had won, 6-3, 6-4, Barnes could contain
only some of her excitement. “I hugged Erin and wouldn’t
let go,” says the effusive native of the United Kingdom. “She’s
not very emotional, so I figured this was the only hug I was
going to get, and I held on tight.”
Going into the NCAAs, which Forood calls “the tournament
that never ends,” the coach didn’t know for sure
which players would compete. Liu, the two-time defending
NCAA singles champion, and Burdette had been sidelined
with shoulder injuries; freshman Whitney Deason had a back
problem; and freshman Lejla Hodzic had turned her ankle. “We
were pasting it together as we went into and through the regionals,
and when we got [to Georgia], we did an inventory,” says
Forood, who has a record of 138-3 in five years as head coach. “We
decided to put our best team on the court our first day and
play that way as long as we held up.”
Once the Cardinal secured the team championship on May
22, the physical toll began to register. Liu and Burdette withdrew
from singles competition to prepare for doubles, where
they’d have to serve half as often.
After the final showdown against their Stanford teammates,
Barnes said she was “thrilled” that Burdette won
a national title in her senior year: “She played brilliantly.”
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