July 23, 2011
For the first time in tournament history, the top 4 seeds advanced to the semifinals. This is the first tournament without early upsets, despite some three set thrillers that pushed the top seeds to the brink.
And now that the number 1 seed has advanced to the finals we wait to see if the #2 seed joins them and we get to determine if Jim’s seeding was remarkably prescient or just lucky.
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July 23, 2011
The headlines around the country have been obsessed this past week with record temperatures and drought conditions. Cleveland has been a sweltering pool of misery, with temps in the 90′s and lawns drying to a crispy brown.
So we were pretty confident that this might be the year that we actually play a clay court tournament instead of a mostly-clay or partly-clay event.
Maybe next year.
Just after the start of play on the outdoor clay courts on Friday afternoon, Armageddon appeared in the western skies and advanced malevolently towards our courts. The lightning arrived first, immediately suspending play, and the downpour followed closely behind, drowning the courts and moving play inside to the hard courts.
From a fan perspective, the move indoors is disappointing. The character of clay court tennis is distinctly different from the game played on hard courts. Indoors the game is more reliant on raw power. Although it’s amazing to watch the speed, reflexes and brute force applied to their shots, I came to watch the clay court artistry.
We recruit players specifically for their clay court skills and expertise, and I feel badly for those teams that would challenge for the title if all play were conducted on the clay, but cannot compete with the pure overpowering play from the assorted young guns.
With luck, the rain will hit Cincinnati the rest of the weekend and leave us alone.
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