McNally siblings into Easter Bowl semis; Haskins, Blake win 16s titles

April 9, 2016 12:58 PM

By Steve Pratt, special to USTA.com

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. – The young ASICS Easter Bowl giant slayer was at it again on Friday, as Cincinnati’s Caty McNally shocked the top-seeded player in the girls’ 18s singles division for the second straight year.

“I don’t know, I just love it here,” said the No. 9-seeded McNally after her 6-4, 6-4 win over No. 1 Maria Mateas of Braintree, Mass. “And when I play the top-seeded player, or anybody, I just try to play like there’s nothing to lose, and there’s no pressure. I just seem to stay very focused when I play the top players.”

McNally, playing her singles match in front of USTA Director of Coaching Jose Higueras and USTA Head of Women’s Tennis Ola Malmqvist, also advanced to the doubles semifinals. Her brother John, the 2014 16s ASICS Easter Bowl champion, joined her in the semifinals by toppling last week’s Carson USTA International Spring Championships winner Liam Caruana, 6-4, 7-5.

Caty McNally was happy to escape the match just minutes ahead of a downpour that led to a nearly three-hour rain delay.

“When the lines were getting slippery, I was just like, ‘Oh, no. I do not want to stop. I’m playing too well,’” she said.

John said the decision for both players to skip Carson and focus on the ASICS Easter Bowl has been a good one.

“We both had long trips to South America, so I think the rest has helped,” he said. “It was nice to get that extra training on the hard courts again after coming off the clay. That transition from hard courts to clay is difficult, so it was definitely better to get that rest and training. And we’re both playing pretty solid tennis, so it’s definitely worked.”

John said he and his sister are taking a professional approach this week.

“It’s just another day at the office,” he said. “We don’t go back to the hotel and talk about it. I mean, obviously it’s more fun to win, and everyone is a little happier at dinner and back at the hotel, but we are just trying to take it one match at a time.”

Caty will face No. 13 seed Ellie Douglas in one semifinal, starting at 10 a.m. PT on Saturday, while No. 8 Alexandra Sanford will meet unseeded Hanna Chang at the same time.

John McNally, the No. 4-seeded player, will take on No. 6 Vasil Kirkov in a match to follow.

John also teamed with his Cincinnati partner J.J. Wolf to reach the doubles semifinals, while Caty fell in her quarterfinal doubles match.
 
Both Caty and John are being coached this week by mother Lynn Nabors-McNally. A renowned junior coach in Cincinnati, Lynn is a member of the Cincinnati Tennis Hall of Fame and played at Northwestern University and on the pro tour.

In the boys’ 16s singles final, top-seeded Carson Haskins (pictured above left) of Ballwin, Mo., forced a third set right before the rains came and then returned three hours later to beat a game opponent in No. 11 Lukas Greif of Evansville, Ind., 4-6, 6-3, 6-1.

“First thing I did was to get stretched out and make sure I was loose,” said Haskins. “Then I got something to eat because I wasn’t able to eat with all that was going on.”

Haskins, who has trained at the Miller Tennis Academy in Chesterfield, Mo., since he started playing tennis seven years ago at age 9, still plays high school tennis.

“I go home, and then I think I have a match on Monday,” he said.

Haskins said he checked out the past ASICS Easter Bowl 16s winners online on Friday and saw former USTA Missouri Valley Section junior star and current ATP player Jack Sock among the past winners.

“It’s weird now being on that list,” he said. “Two years ago, I was here playing in the 14s and watched Zeke Clark playing John McNally in the 16s final. I was watching it and remember thinking, ‘God, these players are so good.’ I was in the 14s, and I won a couple rounds, and I was feeling pretty good. But if you would have told me then that I would be winning this tournament now, I would have been like, ‘You’re crazy.’”

Greif is 16 and trains at the Smith Academy in Indianapolis.

“It was very tough in between, just all the thoughts and thinking about the third set,” said Greif of the rain delay. “He just came out better, came out hitting some unbelievable shots down the stretch on important points, and that’s what did it. It was a really good week for me. It’s going to help my confidence and my game.”

In the girls’ 16s singles final, No. 7 Angelica Blake (pictured above right), 15, of Boca Raton, Fla., outlasted No. 8 Abigail Forbes of Raleigh, N.C., in straight sets, 6-2, 7-6 (3), before the rains came. Blake owns a 3-0 record now against Forbes, whom she beat in a super tiebreak for fifth place at the USTA Winter Nationals to start the year. Blake trains at the Saviano Tennis in Florida.

“I had a great time playing in the final against a good friend,” Blake said. “I’ll look forward to coming back doing it again next year.”

Like Blake, Forbes admitted to battling some nerves from the outset.

“I was a little jittery at the start, a few butterflies,” said Forbes, who trains at N.C. State at the Jon Choboy Tennis Academy. “I was definitely playing great tennis. I was just trying to move forward.”

To keep up with all the ASICS Easter Bowl news, visit www.easterbowl.com, and check out the tournament on Facebook and Twitter.

 
 

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