Date: Fri 06-Sep-1996
Date: Fri 06-Sep-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KIMH
Illustration: I
Quick Words:
Lance-White-Tennis-Doubles
Full Text:
Seven Stroock Titles In A Row For White & Lance
B Y K IM J. H ARMON
Fate . . . what else could it be?
When Wendy White and Shelby Lance played their first doubles match together
some eight years ago it could only have been fate - mythical Fate, weaving the
strands of their lives into a pattern where the two threads cross - because
their connection, their union, on the tennis court has been so natural.
White and Lance have played inter-club and USTA tennis at Candlewood and
Middlebury Racquet Clubs and have been the reigning Women's Doubles champions
at the Newtown Tennis Association's annual Bertram A. Stroock Tournament for
the past seven years.
The pair first met at the Candlewood Tennis Club while Lance was still living
in Danbury, in the process of moving with her family to Newtown. They played
singles and doubles against one another and then, one day, found themselves on
the same side of the net.
White, who has played in the Stroock tournament since its inception in 1974,
won the Women's Doubles championship with Debbie Rouatt in 1989, but since
then it has been White and Lance who have held that particular part of the
annual tournament in a stranglehold.
" I just know how to choose the right partners, " White laughed.
It didn't take much time or effort, either, for the two women to mesh their
games together.
It just happened.
" We have very similar games, " said Lance. " We both have strong serves and
we both move up well to the front to take the offensive position and we both
can put the shots away. We move very well together, starting back and moving
up, and return of serve has always been very good for both of us, which sets
up the other person. "
Things have worked so well for the pair that it seems they have rarely been
challenged in the finals of the Women's Doubles. In each of the last two
years, White and Lance recorded 6-0, 6-3 wins in the title match. Last year it
was against Kathleen Joyce and Claire Willis and this year it was against
Diane Gucciardo and Joanne Klopfenstein.
" We had anticipated that this would be our toughest match, " said White, "
but it didn't quite work out that way. I don't know, we must look intimidating
or something. I don't know what it is. "
It might have something to do, though, with being tournament ready. Despite
the small draw in the Stroock Tournament, the White/Lance team would still
have to be considered the favorites even in a larger draw because the pair
play and play and play. Out of the Middlebury Racquet Club, White and Lance
play in an inter-club competitive tennis league, traveling across the state
for competition, and in the spring they play USTA tennis out of Beaver Brook.
" We kind of look at how, over the years, " Lance said, " our game has
continued to improve, our strategy has improved, and how everything has
continued to get better. "
A lot of it, too, is instinct. While each is an accomplished singles player,
together they have the intuition and the confidence in each other to know who
is going to take care of a difficult ball that might fall between two players
less in sync with each other.
" It's a real feeling of just knowing each other's movement on the court, the
shadow of where the other person is, " said Lance, while White added, "" We
have learned each other's game. We know what our weaknesses our and our
strengths are. "
Sometimes it's the weaknesses, and not the strengths, which become the most
obvious things . . . even for a doubles team like White and Lance, which has
almost seemed infallible over the last several years.
" We have off days, too, " Lance said. " There are times when we can't hit a
ball. Our timing could be off, our concentration, everything, and we know,
within 10 minutes of our warmup, we know it's going to be a bad day. "
The move from the indoor court to the outdoor court slowed them down a little
early in the Stroock, but for two players who have connected so well indoors
or outdoors, it seemed nothing would keep the pair from an unprecedented
seventh consecutive Women's Doubles title.
As if it was simply fated to be.