Published Saturday
| October 13, 2007
State Tennis: Unsung heroes boost Spartans
BY GRAHAM ARCHER
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
While the crowds gathered for the No. 1 singles final, Lincoln
East clinched its first state title since 1995, and yet it went unnoticed by
many at the Koch Family Tennis Center for the final day of the state tournament
on Friday.
Omaha Burke's Jackson Withrow won the No. 1 singles title with a
three-set victory over Papillion-La Vista South's John DeVose, the champion in
2005. "I just had to gain my composure back," Withrow said, "and
get into the third set and grind with him."
Just a short walk away, the Spartans' No. 2 doubles team scored
the match point against Omaha Creighton Prep to earn the gold medal and the two
points that guaranteed the Class A team title.
The 41Ú2-point Spartan team victory marked the end: Creighton Prep
relinquished the crown for the first time since 2001.
East's winning No. 2 doubles duo of Garth Hamilton and David
Meagher knew immediately that their win was huge, even if the fans didn't flock
to the matchup.
"There's no better feeling, clinching it for the team and
winning the gold after all we've been through and all we've worked
towards," said Meagher, runner-up at the 2006 tournament. "It's just
great."
"We just started high-fiving people," added Hamilton.
Omaha Burke freshman Jackson Withrow, the top seed in No. 1
singles, won the championship with a 6-2, 2-6, 6-1 victory over 2005 No. 1
singles champion John DeVose of Papillion-La Vista South.
It was their third meeting this season and Withrow's third
victory.
He jumped out to a 6-2 first-set victory with consistently
well-placed shots. DeVose fought back in the second set with his powerful serve
and by cutting down on mistakes to win by the same margin. Then the Bulldog bit
back in the third set to complete an undefeated season.
"It's always a little exciting to win the first set and build
a little bit of momentum going into the second set," Withrow said.
"But he crawled back into it, and I just had to gain my composure back and
get into the third set and grind with him."
In the No. 1 doubles final, Andrew Mellen of Omaha Westside
claimed his third straight gold medal, this one with teammate Ke Arkfeld. They
fought back in three sets to defeat Lincoln Southeast's Seth Garnett and Seth
Shimerda, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1. That helped the Warriors finish third in the team race
with 36 points.
"I'm just glad that I can say that I made a difference for
the team," Mellen said.
Lincoln East came into the day with a four-point lead over the
Junior Jays, and used a pair of third-place victories at No. 1 and No. 2
singles, a fourth-place finish at No. 1 doubles and the No. 2 doubles title to
stay in front. A key upset win by Garnett and Shimerda over Prep's Alex Walls
and Dominic Cimino took away the Junior Jays' biggest opportunity to earn some
much-needed points. The Junior Jays finished in second with 37 points overall.
Prep coach Mike Higgins said he thought the tournament was a
learning experience. "I just hope the younger guys see how competitive it
is here," he said. "I hope they see that very small differences can
have a big impact."
Lincoln East features six multi-sport athletes. "This team
has so much heart," coach Jeff Hoham said. "They have that special
ingredient that lacks sometimes in smaller sports, too, and that's that they
had that athletic approach in wanting to finish it.
"They drew on past experiences in basketball playing in front
of big crowds and in soccer playing in front of 4,500 people in the state
final. They drew upon that and they had a common vision and a common goal, and
that's why we are standing here holding this trophy right now."